In the 2005 movie Batman Begins, the caped guy appears out of nowhere
as Commissioner Gordon is taking out his trash. He delivers a cryptic
message: “Storm’s coming.You can siliconebracelet Moon yarns and fibers right here as instock.” Then, just as suddenly as he appeared, he is gone.
For the next two hours of the movie all hell breaks loose. Finally,Looking for the Best iphoneheadset?
peace is restored. After so much tumult and trouble, people can resume
their normal lives. And they discover that life after the storm is
better than it had been before.
We are no caped crusaders, but
we are here to warn you there is a storm coming. It has already started.
There will be tumult but, when the disruption subsides, life will be
better.
This imminent storm is no natural creation. Instead, it
is being created by thousands of people, some of them the world’s
smartest technologists and business strategists. Some work for tiny
startups; others represent the likes of GE, Walmart, Heineken, the NFL,
Apple Computer,This frameless rectangle features a silk screened fused
glass replica in a parkingsystem
tile and floral motif. Nike, Oakley, Google and Qualcomm, to name just a
few. They are investing billions of dollars in technology that will
change the world, including your particular part of it. They are
forward-thinking decision makers in banks, the military, government,
health, robotics, space exploration, marine biology and many other
categories.
These companies are among thousands of organizations
worldwide who are changing the lives of people as varied in their needs
as: skiers who wear goggles that give them realtime information as they
careen downhill; paraplegics who use robotic arms powered by their own
brainwaves; stadium fans who order food and beverages via a mobile app
and get delivery in express lines; and technologists who reduce energy
costs by billions of dollars a year by chatting in a social network with
jet engines in flight.
This is a storm of change and it is
extremely powerful. It’s already upon us and is growing ever more
powerful as you sit reading these words. It is going to change your
work, your life and the lives of the people you love or just casually
meet online or in the real world.
Perfect storms change the face
of the land when they hit. At first there’s havoc and debris. Then
there is rebuilding. The landscape heals, and very often the places hit
hardest end up better off than they were before the storm hit.
Our
storm is comprised not of three forces, but five. They are not natural.
They are technological, and they’re already causing havoc and making
waves. As separate entities each is already a part of your life today:
mobile devices; social media; big data; sensors; and location-based
services.Looking for the Best iphoneheadset? Together, they have created the conditions for an unstoppable perfect storm of epic proportion.
Each
of our five forces is growing exponentially in mass and velocity. But
that story has been told. What is new and different is that these five
forces are converging into one great superforce, one whose impact will
be far greater than the sum of its parts.
This superforce will
change work and life for most people in the developed world so
fundamentally and universally, that we believe it will usher in a new
age.
Robert Scoble and Shel Israel are two veteran Silicon Valley journalists,For the world leader in solarlight
base services and plastic injection products. covering two
interdependent communities. Picture them sitting on a fence looking out
in opposite directions.
Scoble looks out at the tech sector,
where he spends much of his time talking with innovators who build
little chunks of tomorrow for the rest of us. Collectively, they give
Scoble a good look at what technologists are building for tomorrow.
These
days, he is hearing considerable use of the buzzword context.
Investment dollars are pouring in. Big companies are recruiting
contextual technologists by the truckload. New products are coming to
market at an accelerating rate. There is great excitement.
Israel
looks out upon the other side of our virtual fence. He writes and
consults for the business community and in business publications such as
Forbes. He talks a lot to business people who are interested in how
technology can help them make customers happy and their companies more
profitable.
He is not seeing much excitement. Most business
people are still trying to push rocks up the hill into business
recovery. They know little or nothing about contextual technology. They
don’t think about how contextual tools and wearable computers will make
them more efficient and acquire them more customers and sales. No
manager we know has pondered what they should invest in context to make
their quarterly fiscal goals.
But they will and it will happen sooner than many people realize. In fact it is imminent.
When
the tech community is this unified in focus, and excited about what
they are building and introducing, it follows as surely as the day
follows the night that technologists make waves that invariably land on
the shores of business.
They invent the stuff that the rest of us use.
Sitting
on the fence, Scoble and Israel are currently in the eye of a
superstorm. The business community may sense nothing, but the winds of
fundamental change are blowing at them. Bracing for it is wiser than
trying to evacuate.
Like the good folk of Batman’s Gotham City,
the best option for you is to brace yourselves for this storm of change
and prepare to ride it out. It will be followed by good times in a new
age—the Age of Context.
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