(Not so) Wayback Wednesday: The Hall of Fallen Giants

The New York Times did a story recently on the future of the RIM BlackBerry called “The BlackBerry, Aiming to Avoid the Hall of Fallen Giants.” The article lists several products that were once the pinnacle of technology – everybody either had one or wanted on – but were superseded by other disruptive technologies.

For now the iPhone and iPad are the giants. I wonder what’s lurking just over the horizon that might make them obsolete?

From the article:

SONY WALKMAN (1979-2010)  Before the Walkman, “personal audio” meant holding a transistor radio to your ear. Sony’s invention created an entire category of devices and helped make the company the technology leader of the 1980s. New models (Thinner! Auto-reverse!) were eagerly anticipated, the LP was relegated to the attic and tender moments spent listening to mix tapes from that certain someone proliferated across teenage bedrooms. Sony seemed incapable of putting a foot wrong. It successfully moved the brand into compact discs with the Discman, then bought record labels and movie studios to bring about that illusory marriage of technology and content. When the digital revolution hit, Sony was too beholden to its proprietary formats, as well as to the inertia inside its media companies. Enter Apple and the iPod.

PAGERS (BORN 1951)  At first, pagers were attached to people who worked in fields where lives were on the line. That usually meant doctors, though the group expanded in the late 1980s to include drug dealers. Early beepers displayed only numbers, giving rise to a numerical lexicon that included codes like 911 (call me back immediately) and 07734, which resembles “hello” when read upside down. Pagers briefly gained fame in early 1990s hip-hop, showing up in songs like “Skypager,” by a Tribe Called Quest. The pager’s fall  was attributable to the disruptive and destructive powers of another technology: the mobile phone. Why beep when you can talk? And a pager message is so tiny that it makes a tweet look like “The Iliad.” The beeper does live on, in limited circles: its network remains more reliable than cell networks, making it useful to E.M.S. and other rescue workers.

PALM PILOT (1997-2007) Filofax brought personal organizers to their analog apogee in the early ’90s, but Palm brought them into the digital age. Palm Pilots were dazzling when they first appeared: all of your contacts, calendars and notes in one slim, pocket-size device. A touch screen, which required a stylus, made navigation easy. And you could add software, bought through an online store. Want a Zagat guide to go along with your personal data? No problem. In later years, Palm even added telephone features, creating a compelling, all-in-one gadget. Despite boardroom dramas that affected the company’s name and its ownership, Palm’s reputation as a source of innovative hardware and software endured until Jan. 9, 2007. Why that date? That’s when Apple introduced the iPhone.

POLAROID INSTANT CAMERAS (1948-2008) Edwin Land’s invention of instant-developing film in 1948 put a darkroom inside a handheld camera. That achievement gave his Polaroid Corporation a distinct advantage over traditional film cameras. By 1980, Polaroid was selling 7.8 million cameras a year in the United States — more than half of all the 15 million cameras, instant and traditional, sold that year. In 1985, it won a major patent-infringement suit, forcing Kodak to abandon its own instant-camera efforts. The victory was short-lived. The late ’80s brought the rise of the digital camera. By 2000, digital cameras began appearing on cellphones, placing  cameras in millions of pockets. Polaroid declared bankruptcy for the first time in 2001 and stopped making instant film in 2008. Kodak declared bankruptcy on Jan. 19.

ATARI 2600 (1977-c.1984) It wasn’t the first game console, but the Atari 2600 brought video games into the home and popular culture. Over its life span, more than 30 million were sold. Pong, Combat, Pitfall and Frogger soaked up children’s afternoons. Then came the PC, which could play games and do much more. Atari rushed out games, assuming that its customers would play whatever it released. They didn’t. Millions of unsold games and consoles were buried in a New Mexico landfill in 1983. Warner Communications, which bought Atari in 1976 for $28 million, sold it in 1984 for no cash.

More Smartphones Than PCs!

From Gizmodo:


It’s official. A study released by Google yesterday shows that mobile devices, and smart phones in particular, are now the dominant means of Internet connectivity in five key global markets.

Google conducted the study of smart phone versus feature phone ownership rates throughout last year, pulling data from the USA, the UK, France, Germany, and Japan. It found that, while smart phones were were quickly pushing out older feature phones—as you can see above—together, a full 10-percent more people own these connected mobile devices than PC’s or laptops (78-percent vs 68-percent). Tablets were counted separately and are owned by an average of 13-percent of people in these markets.

How about you? Have you made the switch to the mobile-only lifestyle? [AdAge via Textually]

Why the Clean Tech Boom Went Bust

Wired Magazine featured a story on “Why the Clean Tech Boom Went Bust” using the Solyndra failure as a case study. A long read, but well worth it, particularly if you believe that “clean and green” energy is just around the corner. I think this paragraph sums up the main point:

Perhaps the biggest force working against not just Solyndra but clean energy in general is this: Because natural gas has gotten so cheap, there is no longer a financial incentive to go with renewables. Technical advances in natural gas extraction from shale—including the controversial practice of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking—have opened up reserves so massive that the US has surpassed Russia as the world’s largest natural gas supplier.

Clean Tech isn’t going to replace fossil fuels just because it’s a good idea and better for the environment. As long as traditional energy is cheaper to produce and use, clean & green will remain on the edges. Large investments in clean tech haven’t produced the breakthroughs needed, and fossil fuel prices haven’t reached the tipping point where consumers will demand alternatives in profitable numbers.

Do energy prices impact your business? What do you think it will take to make clean & green viable?

Wayback Wednesday!

From time to time I like to post old predictions or early versions of current technology. This week I bring a look at 2011 – from a 1911 edition of the Ladies’ Home Journal. (Hat tip to Richard Watson at toptrends.nowandnext.com!)

What May Happen In The Next Hundred Years

Some of those predictions are almost startling in their accuracy!  Well, at least in broad strokes, if not the details.

What jumps out at you?

Three new technologies that will change the way you shop

Neat article from Ad Age Digital about three new technologies from the recent Consumer Electronics Show (CES).

The first is a Kinect-type 3D visualization tool that will allow online shoppers to virtually “try on” clothes:

The ability to try clothes on at the store has been a benefit catalogue or online channels have never been able to compete with. But now, the sophisticated depth-camera behind Kinect is being used to reveal how the clothes fit on your body-shoppers can evaluate a heat map output to see where the item is tight or loose fitting.

The second is a sort of indoor GPS that will allow shoppers to find specific items in a store and allow retailers to “push” information to consumers’ smartphones:

…enables in-store navigation to help the shopper find what they’re looking for with significant accuracy. The opportunity to have customized offers and loyalty rewards based on our proximity to the shelf will be transformative for both marketers and shoppers.

The third is printable MEMS:

Microelectro-mechanical systems are basically just very small electronic devices and they’ve redefined what even the tiniest of objects are capable of

While MEMS are not new, due to advances in printed electronics, they are increasingly enabling sensors in a range of devices and products. Nike Plus, Jawbone, FitBit and now Motorola have launched products that track your physical activity with precision. However, using MEMS for exercise, mood, sleep, and nutritional purposes is just a start. Expect to see printed sensors appearing on durable goods and disposable products – imagine the wine bottle that shows if it’s been kept at optimal temperatures, or the ability to combine automotive data with your purchase history to help you make smarter, more efficient shopping trips. Watch out because when it comes to shopping, micro sensors, not robots will inherit the earth.

Virtual dressing rooms, smart stores and smart stuff – coming soon to a retailer near you!

Is Apple’s new entry into e-texbooks a game changer?

Apple announced today that it is getting into the e-textbook business. Will students in the future trade a backpack full of textbooks for an iPad?

http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2012/01/engage-apple-books-ipad/ 

UPDATE:  according to this article in Fast Company, those on the leading edge of ed-tech think not.