Top Tech Advances of the Last 10 Years

What better time then, to look at some of the top advances
over the last 10 years in a bid to take stock. This is just a few of our
highlights…
We start with wearable technology, a market that is expected
to grow to over $4 billion in 2017 thanks to smartwatches from the likes of
Apple, LG, Samsung, Motorola and Huawei et al. leading the way. Then we have
fitness-tracking brands, think Fitbit, Misfit Ray, and Lumo Run, and Smart
Glasses, although that particular form of wearable tech is still very much a
work in progress. And while there are many on the market – prices are wide
ranging, from $130 to upwards of $2,000.
Smart glasses are, of course, a form of AR — Augmented
Reality — and it leads nicely into our second highlight: Virtual Reality.
Virtual Reality has many uses and has been used in fields as
far apart as space to medical training to military and flight simulators.
It also has a large scope and potential for gaming, too, of
course. Granted, take-up of the current devices by consumers has been somewhat
limited, but it is amazing to think how far the games industry and technology
has come from, for example, basic mechanical slot machines of the 19th century
to home computers by the 1980s, and now VR (and AR). It is enough to get
technologists extremely excited.
Our third pick is the advent of self-driving or autonomous
cars, something that’s no longer the preserve or domain of traditional car
manufacturers, with tech companies like Apple and Google challenging the likes
of Volvo, BMW, and Ford, etc., etc.
We already have tech that can help us today with cars — be
it assisted braking or lane keep assist/park assist — and some believe that
fully autonomous cars could be here in less than 10 years.
Another is the use of reusable rockets in space travel with
Space X leading the way and successfully landing an orbital rocket at the end
of 2015. Space X has made many since then — despite challenges along the way —
and earlier this year, they launched and landed a used rocket for the very
first time.
Is Mars in sight? Maybe…
Our final pick is the CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research) operated Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the most expensive scientific instrument ever built, costing over $4 billion. Its mission, in a nutshell, is to test different laws of physics and just recently it found a new baryon particle — Xi cc.Also Read: How Technology is Influencing Online Business
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