

Embedded sensors and wireless networks will bring needed efficiency to our infrastructure
One of the big emerging trends over the next few decades will be the marriage of information technology and infrastructure. We're going to start seeing a lot more "smart" everything -- smart grids, smart roads, smart factories, smart trains, smart cities, etc. The increasing use of sensors, lightweight communications networks, and sophisticated computer models to anticipate and react to changing circumstances should enable far greater resource efficiency than we can achieve today.
The Times pulls together several of these threads in a recent "Business of Green" special section. An article that reads a bit like a brochure for I.B.M. details a range of initiatives:
This vision of a wired world isn't exactly new. Nerds have been dreaming of the day that the internet would slip it's personal computing bonds for a few decades now. As costs come down and standards develop, technical hurdles start to drop away. What's needed now is a compelling business driver. Climate change, population growth, and resource scarcity ensure a bright future for these technologies.
(Incidentally, the related articles are worth a read: more fuel-efficient flight, a nice graphic demonstrating how passive houses work, solar panels everywhere, and more.)
This piece originally appeared in The TerraPass Footprint.
Photo credit: Joyce Dopkeen for The New York Times.
Wiring the world and delegating tasks to computers is the only future worthy of the human race. The more we can take people out the wage slave game the better and this kind of stuff is the way to do.
Genetic algorithms and code that evolves, and systems that take care of them selves are the future and they are part of large web of change that will end, war, poverty and BULL SHIT. The future is now baby!
PS down with capitalism and the market economy... and money, total BS is money, total BS.
