MODULE-6
MODULE-6
Objectives
At the end of this module, learners are expected to:
• Identify what are the current and emerging trends in technology;
• Understand how technology affects culture and society trough through the different
advancements in technology;
• Asses the positive and negative effects of said advancement.
Lightbulbs, along with refrigerators, coffee makers, microwave ovens, baby monitors, security
cameras, speakers, televisions, and thermostats have, in the past few decades, transformed from
ordinary objects into conduits for the future. Embedded with sensors that see, hear, and touch the
world around them, they can turn physical information into digital data. Collectively, these devices—
and there are billions of them around the world—make up the “internet of things.”
Just about anything with network connectivity belongs to the internet of things, from security cameras
and speakers to smart watches and denim jackets. In the “smart home,” these internet-enabled
gadgets liberate us from our chores, give us back some of our time, and add a dash of novelty to
ordinary experiences. (“Alexa, turn on the disco lights.”) But the internet of things is about more than
just using your voice to preheat the oven or using your phone to turn off the lights.
The real promise of the internet of things is making our physical surroundings accessible to our digital
computers, putting sensors on everything in the world and translating it into a digital format. Internet-
connected objects could be the key to unlocking predictions about everything from consumer
behavior to climate events, but those same objects could invite hackers into personal spaces and
leak intimate data. Depending on who you ask, the growing internet of things either represents the
promise of technology—the thing that will reinvent modern life as we know it—or that which will be
our technological undoing.
The connectivity, networking and communication protocols used with these web-enabled devices
largely depend on the specific IoT applications deployed.
IoT can also make use of artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning to aid in making data
collecting processes easier and more dynamic.
IoT enables companies to automate processes and reduce labor costs. It also cuts down on waste
and improves service delivery, making it less expensive to manufacture and deliver goods, as well
as offering transparency into customer transactions.
As such, IoT is one of the most important technologies of everyday life, and it will continue to pick
up steam as more businesses realize the potential of connected devices to keep them competitive.
The new rule for the future is going to be, "Anything that can be connected, will be connected." But
why on earth would you want so many connected devices talking to each other? There are many
examples for what this might look like or what the potential value might be. Say for example you are
on your way to a meeting; your car could have access to your calendar and already know the best
route to take. If the traffic is heavy your car might send a text to the other party notifying them that
you will be late. What if your alarm clock wakes up you at 6 a.m. and then notifies your coffee maker
to start brewing coffee for you? What if your office equipment knew when it was running low on
supplies and automatically re-ordered more? What if the wearable device you used in the workplace
could tell you when and where you were most active and productive and shared that information with
other devices that you used while working?
On a broader scale, the IoT can be applied to things like transportation networks: "smart cities" which
can help us reduce waste and improve efficiency for things such as energy use; this helping us
understand and improve how we work and live. The reality is that the IoT allows for virtually endless
opportunities and connections to take place, many of which we can't even think of or fully understand
the impact of today.
1999
Kevin Ashton coins the term “internet of things” to describe the eyes and ears of a computer
2000
LG introduces its first connected refrigerator with a $20,000 pricetag
2008
The world’s first IoT conference is held in Zurich, Switzerland
2010
Tony Fadell founds Nest, maker of the smart thermostat
2013
Oxford Dictionary adds the term “internet of things”
2014
Amazon introduces the Echo speaker, along with the Alexa voice assistant—a new way to
2016
The Mirai botnet infects over 600,000 IoT devices with malware
2020
The number of internet-connected devices, by some estimates, exceeds 20 billion
The first internet-connected “thing” to make use of this new protocol was a toaster. John Romkey, a
software engineer and early internet evangelist, had built one for the 1990 showfloor of Interop, a
trade show for computers. Romkey dropped a few slices of bread into the toaster and, using a clunky
computer, turned the toaster on. It would still be a decade before anyone used the phrase “internet
of things,” but Romkey’s magic little toaster showed what a world of internet-connected things might
be like. (Of course, it wasn’t fully automated; a person still had to introduce the bread.) It was part
gimmick, part proof of concept—and fully a preview of what was to come.
The term “internet of things” itself was coined in 1999, when Kevin Ashton put it in a PowerPoint
presentation for Procter & Gamble. Ashton, who was then working in supply chain optimization,
described a system where sensors acted like the eyes and ears of a computer—an entirely new way
for computers to see, hear, touch, and interpret their surroundings.
As home internet became ubiquitous and Wi-Fi sped up, the dream of the smart home started to
look more like a reality. Companies began to introduce more and more of these inventions: “smart”
coffee makers to brew the perfect cup, ovens that bake cookies with precision timing, and
refrigerators that automatically restocked expired milk. The first of these, LG’s internet -connected
refrigerator, hit the market in 2000. It could take stock of shelf contents, mind expiration dates, and
for some reason, came with an MP3 player. It also cost $20,000. As sensors became cheaper, these
internet-connected devices became more affordable for more consumers. And the invention of smart
plugs, like those made by Belkin, meant that even ordinary objects could become “smart”—or, at
least, you could turn them on and off with your phone.
Any IoT system today contains a few basic components. First, there’s the thing outfitted with sensors.
These sensors could be anything that collects data, like a camera inside a smart refrigerator or an
accelerometer that tracks speed in a smart running shoe. In some cases, sensors are bundled
together to gather multiple data points: a Nest thermostat contains a thermometer, but also a motion
sensor; it can adjust the temperature of a room when it senses that nobody’s in it. To make sense of
this data, the device has some kind of network connectivity (Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, cellular, or satellite)
and a processor where it can be stored and analyzed. From there, the data can be used to trigger
an action—like ordering more milk when the carton in the smart refrigerator runs out, or adjusting
the temperature automatically given a set of rules.
Most people didn’t start building an ecosystem of “smart” devices in their homes until the mass
adoption of voice controls. In 2014, Amazon introduced the Echo, a speaker with a helpful voice
assistant named Alexa built in. Apple had introduced Siri, its own voice assistant, four years prior—
but Siri lived on your phone, while Alexa lived inside the speaker and could control all of the “smart”
devices in your house. Positioning a voice assistant as the centerpiece of the smart home had
several effects: It demystified the internet of things for consumers, encouraged them to buy more
internet-enabled gadgets, and encouraged developers to create more “skills,” or IoT commands, for
these voice assistants to learn
The same year that Amazon debuted Alexa, Apple came out with HomeKit, a system designed to
facilitate interactions between Apple-made smart devices, sending data back and forth to create a
By 2014, the number of internet-connected devices would surpass the number of people in the world.
David Evans, the former chief futurist at Cisco, estimated in 2015 that “an average 127 new things
are connected to the internet” every second. Today, there are over 20 billion connected things in the
world, according to estimates from Gartner. The excitement around the brave new internet-
connected world has been matched with concern. All of these objects, brought to life like Pinocchio,
have made the world easier to control: You can let the delivery man in the front door, or change the
temperature inside the house, all with a few taps on a smartphone.
Generally, IoT is most abundant in manufacturing, transportation and utility organizations, making
use of sensors and other IoT devices; however, it has also found use cases for organizations within
the agriculture, infrastructure and home automation industries, leading some organizations toward
digital transformation.
IoT can benefit farmers in agriculture by making their job easier. Sensors can collect data on rainfall,
humidity, temperature and soil content, as well as other factors, that would help automate farming
techniques.
The ability to monitor operations surrounding infrastructure is also a factor that IoT can help with.
Sensors, for example, could be used to monitor events or changes within structural buildings, bridges
and other infrastructure. This brings benefits with it, such as cost saving, saved time, quality-of-life
workflow changes and paperless workflow.
A home automation business can utilize IoT to monitor and manipulate mechanical and electrical
systems in a building. On a broader scale, smart cities can help citizens reduce waste and energy
consumption.
IoT touches every industry, including businesses within healthcare, finance, retail and
manufacturing.
Photo Imaging and Post Processing PAGE | 55
COMPUTER AND INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
Advantages of IoT
Disadvantages of IoT
• As the number of connected devices increases and more information is shared between
devices, the potential that a hacker could steal confidential information also increases.
• Enterprises may eventually have to deal with massive numbers -- maybe even millions -- of IoT
devices, and collecting and managing the data from all those devices will be challenging.
• If there's a bug in the system, it's likely that every connected device will become corrupted.
• Since there's no international standard of compatibility for IoT, it's difficult for devices from
different manufacturers to communicate with each other.
In the consumer segment, for example, smart homes that are equipped with smart thermostats,
smart appliances and connected heating, lighting and electronic devices can be controlled remotely
via computers and smartphones.
Wearable devices with sensors and software can collect and analyze user data, sending messages
to other technologies about the users with the aim of making users' lives easier and more
comfortable. Wearable devices are also used for public safety -- for example, improving first
responders' response times during emergencies by providing optimized routes to a location or by
tracking construction workers' or firefighters' vital signs at life-threatening sites.
In healthcare, IoT offers many benefits, including the ability to monitor patients more closely using
an analysis of the data that's generated. Hospitals often use IoT systems to complete tasks such as
inventory management for both pharmaceuticals and medical instruments.
Smart buildings can, for instance, reduce energy costs using sensors that detect how many
occupants are in a room. The temperature can adjust automatically -- for example, turning the air
conditioner on if sensors detect a conference room is full or turning the heat down if everyone in the
office has gone home.
In agriculture, IoT-based smart farming systems can help monitor, for instance, light, temperature,
humidity and soil moisture of crop fields using connected sensors. IoT is also instrumental in
automating irrigation systems.
Risk of bricking aside, connecting things to the internet also leaves those objects, and everything
else on your Wi-Fi network, more vulnerable to hackers. Laura DeNardis, in her recent book The
Internet in Everything, has called this threat to cybersecurity the greatest human rights issue of our
time. The risk isn’t just that some prankster breaks into your smart washing machine and upsets the
spin cycle, or that your Nest camera gets hijacked with a message to subscribe to PewDiePie’s
YouTube channel. (Yes, that really happened.) A hacked smart lock means someone can open your
front door. Hack into enough smart water heaters and you can send a city into a massive blackout.
And one vulnerable device can compromise the whole network. As WIRED’s Lily Hay Newman
points out, “IoT devices have been conscripted into massive botnets, compromised for nation-state
reconnaissance, hacked to mine cryptocurrency, and manipulated in assaults on power grids.”
The threat to internet-connected devices comes not just because they’re connected to the internet,
but because device manufacturers have not always designed their products with security as a
priority. In 2016, malware called Mirai exploited these kinds of vulnerabilities in over 600,000 IoT
devices to create a massive distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack. The following year, an attack
called Krack infected nearly every internet-connected device connected to Wi-Fi. The attack was
crippling and difficult to defend against, in part because the internet of things runs on so many
disparate operating systems. When a phone or a computer gets hit with a virus, software makers are
generally quick to issue a patch. But things like routers or internet-connected doorbells
Then there’s the question of privacy. If cameras and microphones are studded around your home,
they are definitely watching and listening to you. Everything in the internet of things collects data—
and all that data has value. In a recent study, researchers found that 72 of the 81 IoT devices they
surveyed had shared data with a third party unrelated to the original manufacturer. That means the
finer details of your personal life—as depicted by your smart toothbrush, your smart TV, or your
smart speaker—can be repackaged and sold to someone else. Google and Apple both admitted,
last year, that the recordings captured by their smart speakers are reviewed by contractors, including
awkward and intimate snippets of audio. Amazon has partnerships with over 400 police departments,
who use the footage from its Ring doorbell cameras to keep watch on neighborhoods. An ever-
expanding internet of things doesn’t just have consequences for personal privacy. It can create a
network of computer eyes and ears everywhere we go.
Because IoT devices are closely connected, all a hacker has to do is exploit one vulnerability to
manipulate all the data, rendering it unusable. Manufacturers that don't update their devices regularly
-- or at all -- leave them vulnerable to cybercriminals.
Additionally, connected devices often ask users to input their personal information, including names,
ages, addresses, phone numbers and even social media accounts -- information that's invaluable to
hackers.
Hackers aren't the only threat to the internet of things; privacy is another major concern for IoT users.
For instance, companies that make and distribute consumer IoT devices could use those devices to
obtain and sell users' personal data.
Beyond leaking personal data, IoT poses a risk to critical infrastructure, including electricity,
transportation and financial services.
respond to your movements in real time. That’s already starting to happen: In 2017, Google
announced Project Jacquard, an effort to create the connected wardrobe of the future.
This vision extends far beyond your clothes, and even your home. You’ll also have smart offices,
smart buildings, smart cities. Smart hospital rooms will have sensors to ensure that doctors wash
their hands, and airborne sensors will help cities predict mudslides and other natural disasters.
Autonomous vehicles will connect to the internet and drive along roads studded with sensors, and
governments will manage the demands on their energy grids by tracking household energy
consumption through the internet of things. The growth of the internet of things could also lead to
new kinds of cyber warfare; imagine a bad actor disabling every smart thermostat in the dead of
winter, or hacking into internet-connected pacemakers and insulin pumps. It could create new class
systems: those with robot maids, and those without. Or, as Ray Bradbury described in one short
story from 1950, all the people might disappear—but the smart homes, preparing meals and
sweeping the floors, will live on.
If we’re going to get there—whether we like “there” or not—we’re going to need faster internet. (Enter:
5G.) We’ll also need to keep all those devices from mucking up the airwaves, and we’ll need to find
a better way to secure the data that’s transmitted across those airwaves. Recently, the Swiss
cryptography firm Teserakt introduced an idea for a cryptographic implant for IoT devices, which
would protect the data that streams from these devices. There are also ideas for creating a better
standard for IoT devices, and plans to help them get along with each other, regardless of which
company makes them or which voice assistant lives inside.
Innovations in IT change internal company processes, but they are also altering the way customers
experience purchasing and support — not to mention basic practices in life, like locking up your home,
visiting the doctor, and storing files. The following trends in information technology are crucial areas to
watch in 2019 and viable considerations that could influence your future career choices.
a. Cloud Computing
Cloud computing is a network of resources a company can access, and this method of using a
digital drive increases the efficiency of organizations. Instead of local storage on computer hard
drives, companies will be freeing their space and conserving funds. According to Forbes, 83
percent of enterprise workloads will be in the cloud by 2020, which means 2019 will show an
increasing trend closing in on this statistic.
Cloud storage and sharing is a popular trend many companies have adopted and even
implemented for employee interaction. A company-wide network will help businesses save on
information technology infrastructure. Cloud services will also extend internal functions to gain
revenue. Organizations that offer cloud services will market these for external products and
continue their momentum.
Organizations will transfer their stored files across multiple sources using virtualization.
Companies are already using this level of virtualization, but will further embrace it in the year to
come. Less installation across company computers is another positive result of cloud computing
because the Internet allows direct access to shared technology and information. The freedom of
new products and services makes cloud computing a growing trend.
Mobile phones, tablets, and other devices have taken both the business world and the personal
realm by storm. Mobile usage and the number of applications generated have both skyrocketed
Big data is a trend that allows businesses to analyze extensive sets of information to achieve
variety in increasing volumes and growth of velocity. Big data has a high return on investment
that boosts the productivity of marketing campaigns, due to its ability to enable high-functioning
processing. Data mining is a way companies can predict growth opportunities and achieve future
success. Examination of data to understand markets and strategies is becoming more
manageable with advances in data analytic programs.
This practice in information technology can be observed for its potential in data management
positions for optimal organizations. Database maintenance is a growing sector of technology
careers. To convert various leads into paying customers, big data is an essential trend to
continue following in 2019.
d. Automation
Another current trend in the IT industry is automated processes. Automated processes can
collect information from vendors, customers, and other documentation. Automated processes
that check invoices and other accounts-payable aspects expedite customer interactions.
Machine processes can automate repetitive manual tasks, rather than assigning them to
employees. This increases organization-wide productivity, allowing employees to use their
valuable time wisely, rather than wasting it on tedious work.
Automation can even produce more job opportunities for IT professionals trained in supporting,
programming, and developing automated processes. Machine learning can enhance these
automated processes for a continually developing system. Automated processes for the future
will extend to groceries and other automatic payment methods to streamline the consumer
experience.
According to Encyclopedia, Artificial intelligence (AI), is the ability of a digital computer or computer-
controlled robot to perform tasks commonly associated with intelligent beings. The term is frequently
Artificial Intelligence, or AI, has already received a lot of buzz in recent years, but it continues to be
a trend to watch because its effects on how we live, work, and play are only in the early stages. In
addition, other branches of AI have developed, including Machine Learning, which we will go into
below. AI refers to computer systems built to mimic human intelligence and perform tasks such as
recognition of images, speech or patterns, and decision making. AI can do these tasks faster and
more accurately than humans.
Five out of six Americans use AI services in one form or another every day, including navigation
apps, streaming services, smartphone personal assistants, ride-sharing apps, home personal
assistants, and smart home devices. In addition to consumer use, AI is used to schedule trains,
assess business risk, predict maintenance, and improve energy efficiency, among many other
money-saving tasks.
In fact, Artificial intelligence are already being used in different organization to help solve problems
such as AI face recognition is beginning to help with missing people reports, and it even helps identify
individuals for criminal investigations when cameras have captured their images. According to the
National Institute of Standards and Technology, face recognition is most effective when AI systems
and forensic facial recognition experts’ team up. AI will continue to promote safety for citizens in the
future as software improvements shape these applications.
Medical AI is another trend that reflects surprising success. Given patient information and risk
factors, AI systems can anticipate the outcome of treatment and even estimate the length of a
hospital visit. Deep learning is one way AI technology gets applied to health records to find the
likelihood of a patient’s recovery and even mortality. Experts evaluate data to discover patterns in
the patient’s age, condition, records, and more.
Home AI systems are also increasingly popular to expedite daily tasks like listening to tunes, asking for
restaurant hours, getting directions, and even sending messages. Many problem-solving AI tools also
help in the workplace, and the helpfulness of this technology will continue to progress in 2020.
b. Virtual Reality
Virtual reality (VR), the use of computer modeling and simulation that enables a person to interact
with an artificial three-dimensional (3-D) visual or other sensory environment. VR applications
immerse the user in a computer-generated environment that simulates reality through the use of
interactive devices, which send and receive information and are worn as goggles, headsets, gloves,
or body suits. In a typical VR format, a user wearing a helmet with a stereoscopic screen views
animated images of a simulated environment. The illusion of “being there” (telepresence) is effected
by motion sensors that pick up the user’s movements and adjust the view on the screen accordingly,
usually in real time (the instant the user’s movement takes place). Thus, a user can tour a simulated
suite of rooms, experiencing changing viewpoints and perspectives that are convincingly related to
his own head turnings and steps. Wearing data gloves equipped with force-feedback devices that
provide the sensation of touch, the user can even pick up and manipulate objects that he sees in the
virtual environment.
For instance, CAVE automatic virtual environments actively display virtual content onto room-sized
screens. While they are fun for people in universities and big labs, consumer and industrial wearables
are the wild west.
With a multiplicity of emerging hardware and software options, the future of wearables is unfolding
but yet unknown. Concepts such as the HTC Vive Pro Eye, Oculus Quest and Playstation VR are
leading the way, but there are also players like Google, Apple, Samsung, Lenovo and others who
may surprise the industry with new levels of immersion and usability. Whomever comes out ahead,
the simplicity of buying a helmet-sized device that can work in a living-room, office, or factory floor
has made HMDs center stage when it comes to Virtual Reality technologies.
Whilst VR is known for transforming the gaming and entertainment industry in particular, with
consoles and handhelds adapting their games for VR the gaming experience has been utterly
transformed and improved all around. The connection between game and player becomes far closer
as gamers are completely immersed into their own gaming world.
VR is also beginning to revolutionize other industries such as healthcare, retail and education, which
is already aiding tasks in the sectors, from helping patients with anxiety relax, and helping students
learn more by experiencing what they are being educated on.
c. Augmented Reality
Augmented reality is a more versatile and practical version of virtual reality, as it does not fully
immerse individuals in an experience. Augmented reality features interactive scenarios that enhance
the real world with images and sounds that create an altered experience. The most common current
applications of this overlay of digital images on the surrounding environment include the recent
Pokémon Go fad.
As it happens, phones and tablets are the way augmented reality gets into most people's lives.
One of the most popular ways AR has infiltrated everyday life is through mobile games. In 2016,
the AR game "Pokémon Go" became a sensation worldwide, with over 100 million estimated users
at its peak, according to CNET. It ended up making more than $2 billion and counting, according
to Forbes. The game allowed users to see Pokémon characters bouncing around in their own
town. The goal was to capture these pocket monsters using your smartphone camera, and then
use them to battle others, locally, in AR gyms.
Another app called Layar uses the smartphone's GPS and its camera to collect information about
the user's surroundings. It then displays information about nearby restaurants, stores and points
of interest.
Augmented reality can impact many industries in useful ways. Airports are implementing
augmented-reality guides to help people get through their checks and terminals as quickly and
efficiently as possible. Retail and cosmetics are also using augmented reality to let customers test
products, and furniture stores are using this mode to lay out new interior design options.
This doesn't mean that phones and tablets will be the only venue for AR. Research continues
apace on including AR functionality in contact lenses, and other wearable devices. The ultimate
goal of augmented reality is to create a convenient and natural immersion, so there's a sense that
phones and tablets will get replaced, though it isn't clear what those replacements will be. Even
glasses might take on a new form, as "smart glasses" are developed for blind people.
Like any new technology, AR has a lot of political and ethical issues. Google Glass, for example,
raised privacy concerns. Some worried that conversations might be surreptitiously recorded or
pictures snapped, or thought that they might be identified by face recognition software. AR
glasses, contacts and more, like the Glass - X and Google Lens, though, are moving ahead in
production and sales.
The possibilities for augmented reality in the future revolve around mobile applications and health
care solutions. Careers in mobile app development and design will be abundant, and information
technology professionals can put their expertise to use in these interactive experiences.
d. Blockchain Data
Blockchain data, like the new cryptocurrency Bitcoin, is a secure method that will continue to grow
in popularity and use in 2019. This system allows you to input additional data without changing,
replacing, or deleting anything. In the influx of shared data systems like cloud storage and resources,
protecting original data without losing important information is crucial.
Blockchain in simple terms is a system of recording information in a way that makes it difficult or
impossible to change, hack, or cheat the system. A blockchain is essentially a digital ledger of
transactions that is duplicated and distributed across the entire network of computer systems on the
blockchain.
The authority of many parties keeps the data accounted for without turning over too much
responsibility to certain employees or management staff. For transaction purposes, blockchain data
offers a safe and straightforward way to do business with suppliers and customers. Private data is
particularly secure with blockchain systems, and the medical and information technology industries
can benefit equally from added protection.
e. Internet of Things
The Internet of Things (IoT) is an emerging movement of products with integrated Wi-Fi
and network connectivity abilities. Cars, homes, appliances, and other products can now
connect to the Internet, making activities around the home and on the road an enhanced
experience. Use of IoT allows people to turn on music hands-free with a simple
command, or lock and unlock their doors even from a distance.
IoT enriches the IT industry, especially in job creation. Within the next few years,
IoT-related careers will increase, and there will be a need for 200,000 additional IT
workers, according to IT Pro Today . Design, troubleshooting, and support of IoT
products need extensive training and a specific set of skills.
f. 5G
5G is the 5th generation mobile network. It is a new global wireless standard after 1G, 2G, 3G, and
4G networks. 5G enables a new kind of network that is designed to connect virtually everyone and
everything together including machines, objects, and devices.
5G wireless technology is meant to deliver higher multi-Gbps peak data speeds, ultra low latency,
more reliability, massive network capacity, increased availability, and a more uniform user
experience to more users. Higher performance and improved efficiency empower new user
experiences and connects new industries.
5G is a unified, more capable air interface. It has been designed with an extended capacity to enable
Broadly speaking, 5G is used across three main types of connected services, including enhanced
mobile broadband, mission-critical communications, and the massive IoT. A defining capability of 5G
is that it is designed for forward compatibility—the ability to flexibly support future services that are
unknown today.
Enhanced mobile broadband In addition to making our smartphones better, 5G mobile technology
can usher in new immersive experiences such as VR and AR with faster, more uniform data rates,
lower latency, and lower cost-per-bit.
Mission-critical communications 5G can enable new services that can transform industries with
ultra-reliable, available, low-latency links like remote control of critical infrastructure, vehicles, and
medical procedures. Massive
IoT
5G is meant to seamlessly connect a massive number of embedded sensors in virtually everything
through the ability to scale down in data rates, power, and mobility—providing extremely lean and
low-cost connectivity solutions.
Referrences
• https://internetofthingsagenda.techtarget.com/definition/Internet-of-Things-IoT
• https://www.wired.com/story/wired-guide-internet-of-things/
• https://www.forbes.com/sites/jacobmorgan/2014/05/13/simple-explanation-internet-
things-that-anyone-can-understand/#16d8137b1d09
• https://www.vistacollege.edu/blog/careers/it/trends-in-information-technology-for-2019/
• https://www.simplilearn.com/top-technology-trends-and-jobs-article
• https://thebossmagazine.com/future-virtual-reality/
• https://www.livescience.com/34843-augmented-reality.html
• https://www.qualcomm.com/invention/5g/what-is-5g
Assessment
1. Enumerate 5 IoT devices and discuss what smart abilities do they
have. a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
2. Differentiate virtual reality technology and augmented technology from one another.
3. What are the positive and negative implications of these emerging trends to our culture
and society.