eg: UK or Brides UK or Classical Art or Buy Music or Spirituality
 
eg: UK or Brides UK or Classical Art or Buy Music or Spirituality
 

Your Online Guide » Guide to Technology » Guide to The Internet

[I211]In The Coming Years
by Burk Pendergrass, Bur
At various times in man's history all human kind including the Computer Man have been bitten with the bug of a time warp, a space warp, and time travel. Sometimes it was to travel back in time in an attempt to change historical facts and outcomes one did not like. Other times it was a search for a mode of travel into the future in an effort to understand what the seers of earlier generations predicted and when and why such things should befall us.

So, wherever you stand, buckle your seatbelts if you are not a technophile. The Tennessee Mountain Man and Remote Helpdesk 1 are going to try to take you on a swift run through time to the year 2020. Admittedly it is not that far away and the glimpse at the future may not be as shocking as it would have been just seven short years ago at the turn of the century.

Dacomputerman recalls when Seagate introduced the first hard drive available to the general public in 1980 if you could afford it. At that time the best minds thought it was not possible to build a bigger one for micro computers.

The Seagate hard drive held all of 5 Mega Bytes of data! It had been beaten to the market seven years earlier by the Winchester which in 1973 had built a larger sealed hard drive boasting a 30MB capacity for commercial use. After all, who could or would ever need so much data storage capacity?

Each time a capacity milestone was breached, it was believed that it could not be surpassed. But alas we know the end of that story. Not only was mass storage capacity ever on the increase but accomplished on smaller and smaller hard drives. Unfortunately, we also know the engineers have been so obsessed with capacity that they have not made the necessary improvements in performance.

When I purchased my first 1.2 gigabyte hard drive I thought I had reached Heaven. I promised my wife no more expensive toys. I assured her I could never fill that hard drive. Now I run four (count them...four) 500 GB hard drives on my desktop plus a USB external, and, yes, four of them are about 75 percent full. The "c" drive is about 50 percent of capacity. My laptop runs a 100 G with a 500 G USB external.

My wife has long since stopped believing I won't want, need or buy anything bigger, faster, newer. That is both comforting in that she is off my back and frightening as there are so many advances coming so swiftly that the old computerman could live long enough to spend a lot more money on these contraptions. They really are addictive, you know?

They are also scary. Scary mainly because of the less stable among us. Teenage and young adult males have traditionally been the threat then in the early 80s the law enforcement community noted that females were swiftly becoming more and more aggressive.

Then came the fundamentalist religious wars with Islamic Jihadist winning the recruiting war among the world's disenfranchised. Filled with hate they were soon using children and women to carry out their nefarious activities on unsuspecting and trusting civilians world wide.

The advances in physics, modern medicines, nuclear sciences, and computer capabilities have allowed them to strike from a safe distance while inflicting maximum damage. Today there is bird flu, suit case nukes, a deadly variation of the common cold, and a manual few have heard of first published in 1998 on bio-hacking and oriented towards those who gave us the computer virus.

Remote computer repair now fixes your computer over the internet. Just as easily a hacker can now destroy your data while you sleep or work or even while you watch helplessly. How long do you actually think it will be before they can do much worse? even things that can burn or explode your house or office? give you a dreaded disease? or kill you from a safe place half way around the world?

In July, 2000, Chris Oaks, in an article hosted by Wired dot com put it this way:

"The hardest trick could be to stay sane amid a snowstorm of paradigm shifts.

"People (being able) to learn throughout their lives is going to be absolutely crucial if we're going to keep abreast of this -- and keep our mental health," said Stanley Williams, director of the quantum structures research initiative at Hewlett-Packard Labs.

Watch for struggles with human identity as machines on the other end of the phone acquire the thinking and responsive capacity of the human brain. Be prepared for a time when your doctor will be able to map your personal genome as fast as he draws blood.

And as far as our darling computer is concerned -- well, you and your spanking new Pentium IV aren't so hot.

"I can safely say that the age of computing hasn't even begun yet," Williams said. "We're still playing around in essentially Stone Age times technologically." "

He continued, "In 2020, "our electronics will be 10,000 times as capable as they are today," Williams said."

Needless to say by the year 2020 there are things on the horizon that our grand and great grandchildren must face which makes our history with electronics and technology seem as little more than pablum, and that is where I am actually headed.

Someone has said, success is when preparation meets opportunity. With cloning and human organ purchases at hand, I wonder what we will call it when man's greed and his dark side meets technology? Next time...

Those of you who have followed us for the last
several years should know that this is an old
theme for us, but one which is gaining more and
more currency with investors globally. When big
firms with a global following are pushing 75 page
research reports to their wealthy clients about
the demand from China and India for base metals
and energy, you know a lot of buying will follow
in these areas.

By the way, they raised their price objective for
gold and the platinum group metals for 2007 and
2008 as well. We believe a large part of the
increased demand for precious metals will come
from the increased purchases by Chinese and other
Asians [especially Indians] as they grow in
wealth.

All of this continues to argue for a long-term
increase in the huge quantity of assets, which
will be invested in these areas in coming years.
By these areas, we mean precious metals, energy
and base metals.

Once the freight train of big money gets rolling
into an investment theme, it is hard to stop.

These articles are for informational purposes
only and are not intended to be a solicitation,
offering or recommendation of any security. Guild
Investment Management does not represent that the
securities, products, or services discussed in
this web site are suitable or appropriate for all
investors. Any market analysis constitutes an
opinion that may not be correct. Readers must
make their own independent investment decisions.

The information in this article is not intended
for distribution to, or use by, any person or
entity in any jurisdiction or country where such
distribution or use would be contrary to law or
regulation, or which would subject Guild
Investment Management to any registration
requirement within such jurisdiction or country.

Any opinions expressed herein, are subject to
change without notice. In addition, there are
many market, currency, economic, political,
business, technological and other risks that are
beyond our control. We make reasonable efforts to
provide accurate content in these articles;
however, some content and some of the assumptions,
formulas, algorithms and other data that impact
the content may be inaccurate, outdated, or
otherwise inappropriate. In addition, we may have
conflicts of interest with respect to any
investments mentioned. Our principals and our
clients may hold positions in investments
mentioned on the site or we may take positions
contrary to investments mentioned.

Guild's current and past market commentaries are
protected by copyright. Apart from any use
permitted under the Copyright Act, you must not
copy, frame, modify, transmit or distribute the
market commentaries, without seeking the prior
consent of Guild.

Article Source : Pg. 22

About Author
Both Burk Pendergrass & Monty Guild are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Burk Pendergrass has sinced written about articles on various topics from Computers and The Internet, Current Affairs and Writing. Submitted by: . Burk Pendergrass's top article generates over 33100 views. to your Favourites.

Monty Guild has sinced written about articles on various topics from Investing and Trading, Investments and Stock. Monty Guild founded Guild Investment Management in 1971. Prior to founding the company he was an analyst at a bank and a hedge fund. For more information on global investment opportunities visit. Monty Guild's top article generates over 12100 views. to your Favourites.
EditorialToday Guide to Technology has 3 sub sections. Such as Technology, Increase Adsense Revenue and Information & Technology. With over 20,000 authors and writers, we are a well known online resource and editorial services site in United Kingdom, Canada & America . Here, we cover all the major topics from self help guide to A Guide to Business, Guide to Finance, Ideas for Marketing, Legal Guide, Lettre De Motivation, Guide to Insurance, Guide to Health, Guide to Medical, Military Service, Guide to Women, Pet Guide, Politics and Policy , Guide to Technology, The Travel Guide, Information on Cars, Entertainment Guide, Family Guide to, Hobbies and Interests, Quality Home Improvement, Arts & Humanities and many more.
About Editorial Today | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Submit an Article | Our Authors