By 2030, advances in technology promise to reshape computing, work and daily life in ways previously considered science fiction, says Barry Neethling, CTO of First Technology Group.
Moore’s Law, the principle that computing power doubles roughly every two years, is often said to be "dead", as the rapid pace of technological change has now outstripped its original definition. By 2030, advances in technology promise to reshape computing, work and daily life in ways previously considered science fiction.
“If you connect the dots between several key advances, you’ll see things are happening now that were literally science fiction just 10 years ago. The scale and pace at which things are changing means the technology we use today is destined to be obsolete in just three years, and we face future unknowns with a combination of excitement, fear and anticipation.
With processors already reaching 3nm to 7nm nodes, compute power is set to grow exponentially. "Over the next five years, we could see a fivefold increase in compute power," Neethling notes. Neethling says newer operating systems will be more tightly integrated with generative AI applications and likely have immersive and highly interactive features and revolutionary interfaces. “The experience will change completely and there's the potential of entering an AR and VR environment.
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