2030: No More Phones

It is often said than the modern smart phone is 10 gadgets in 1. That decades ago we needed to lug around a video camera, gaming console and so on to replicate what we get from a single device today.

Ten years from now we might not have phones any more. Except for… typing. They could be called a tyoer.

Camera: The trend is towards cameras being everywhere. Having to hold a phone to take a photo or video is very limiting. Imagine if you were at a bar, that has cameras everywhere. You and your buddies huddle together, and don’t even need to say “group photo”. The AI of the bar recognises the situation, knows who you all are, and sends you 5 photos for you to choose from before sharing.

Combine that with your personal drone, a flying device that is always hovering above you, filming and monitoring, looking for friends, dangers and opportunities.

And first person views, which cannot be filmed using other people’s cameras or your drone, will be filmed by your AR glasses.

Phone: Your AR glasses will have that covered.

Social Media: Your AR glasses will have that covered.

Maps: Your AR glasses will have that covered. Or your car.

Texting: This is the problem. Just as people are talking on phones less, and texting more, I cannot see us dictating to our AR glasses in public. We will want to type. Maybe our AR glasses can project a virtual keyboard onto whatever close surface we look at? Or will we carry little keyboards with us – because we will still have bags. Maybe built into the outside of your bag? Or on top of a book cover?

 

Bedroom Cams for Rape Evidence

blurry

Rape is a serious issue, around the world. Rapes are under-reported because of beliefs that justice won’t be served, and having to relive the ordeal in public testimony. And that stems from the difficulty of proving a crime when it is one person’s word against the other’s.

Video footage would solve that issue. And any other forms of domestic violence.

I presume most rapes occur in private residences. We could force people to have “rape cams” in every room of their home. A black box type device that uploads data to the cloud and cannot be turned off. Data is stored for 1 week only, and is impossible to access without a court order.

Furthermore, and this is the key, the footage is not of a good resolution. It is not of a good enough resolution to make out faces or private parts clearly. It will be of no interest to voyeurs or perverts or sex sites. The sound will be of good quality, and a high res camera at all property entrances will show who arrived, and left, and when.

A basic video monitor can be provided to give reassurance to occupants that the video is indeed blurry.

I would like to think that blurry video, and good sound, are enough to reasonably determine if anything that occurs is consensual or not, and violent or not.

 

Where’s the Real Smart TV?

I don’t own a smart TV. I have a regular TV with an Xbox One and Chromecast to send content to it. That is the smart option, because “smart” TVs tend to be clunky, slow, and will date too much before your next television purchase.

I know what I want – a really smart TV.

Google Nest Hub, and Amazon Echo Show do everything I want from a smart device except for one minor detail. The screens are too small, maxing out at 10 inches. I want the same functionality, but built in to a big screen TV.

It surely isn’t hard? The same devices already have everything you have, you just need the display to be larger, and the software to adjust to the screen size.

I guess the problem is that Google and Amazon do not make televisions. There is nothing stopping them – there are many TV brands that don’t manufacture the hardware, but simply market it.

I would like to think that both have a TV up their sleeves, and are simply waiting for a glut in hardware / lull in TV purchases. I recommend:

  • 4K, with nothing fancy except for whatever makes blacks blacker
  • wall mountable
  • really good speakers built in
  • cameras that can focus on who is talking – with an off switch
  • screensaver of your choice, that turns off when nobody is home
  • screensavers like security camera, news and weather, photos (yours or others) and social media streams, in general or a specific person/group
  • has your wake up info in the morning – public transport, weather, appointments etc
  • voice-operated shopping app – starting with clothing. Incorporate camera for fitting and previews.
  • access to all content, from everywhere, with ease

TVs are cheap these days, if you ignore fancy features. Incorporating most of the above is not technically difficult. If you can sell a TV for $200 more that is really smart and has a killer feature, it will outsell every other TV.

My Time Has Value

There is a disturbing trend where seemingly trivial needs cost workers big time. Examples:

Annual smoke alarm inspection. Typically these are during business hours only, which means I am required to take time off work for a 4 hour window, for someone to do a 2 minute job. Surely I could perform this myself, in my own time?

Open House. If the landlord decides to sell the place where you live, you can be present during the open for inspection (often during work hours), or just let random strangers wander through your home without you there.

Lost Key. Or even, in my case, keys are updated because of a crime. You can get the new key during office hours, which means take time off work.

Car Servicing. Yes, they tend to offer Saturday appointments. Just book months in advance.

Online Customer Service. I just spent 2 hours resolving a wrong charge, via online chat. The service was appalling (GoDaddy). My time is valuable.

In my world these are trivial things, yet I need to take substantial chunks of time off work to achieve them. This is inefficient and wrong.

I suggest that any time a person is required to participate in something, so that they can maintain normalcy (nothing has gone wrong), it is available to suit their hours, and not the hours of the provider. 

And customer service should have minimum standards. 

The China – North Korea Codependency

Prediction: China and North Korea will join together like an ultra-mini-EU.

Citizens of each will in theory be able to move to the other country.

High end factory work will be situated in North Korea.

South Korea wants some of that business, so pushes for reconciliation with North Korea.

End result: more China.

Farewell Economic Growth. Farewell Population Growth.

Economic Growth is bad in many ways – this excellent, concise 2015 article sums it up:

  • Growth is efficiency, which means less jobs
  • Growth makes the rich richer – trickle down has never happened
  • Growth means more harm to the environment

And Economic Growth good in only one way – modern economies do not work without growth. If you take away growth:

  • Share prices plunge
  • A highly leveraged society falls apart
  • Investment based on diminishing returns is impossible
  • Less growth means greater unemployment
  • Less growth means less taxes to support the unemployed

It is virtually a death spiral based on how things currently work. So if we stop growth, we have to change the system.

Well, the death spiral might not be so bad. Nobody will starve, we will just be forced to adjust to a new way of being. But it will be a terrible shock to the system, and many people won’t cope. So we need to predict those adjustments, and work out a plan to change things.

PROSPERITY ISN’T BETTER FOR MOST

Australia has had continued economic growth for decades. At the latest federal election  (2019), the LNP got back in because people preferred economic stability over social reform. Detractors would say that the LNP achieved the growth on the back of high immigration rates (more people equals economic growth in western countries), an on-going resource boom (which they have no control over) and a growing national debt.

It is easy for a political party to persuade voters that the economy is in good shape by using figures like GDP and increased tax receipts that help balance the budget.

But are things improving in tangible ways for regular citizens? No, things are actually getting worse. What we are seeing throughout the richer nations are:

  • Increased unemployment & under-employment
  • The rich are getting richer
  • Longer working hours
  • Higher rates of obesity, addiction and suicide
  • Reluctance to fix environmental issues, especially climate change

But if the numbers are good, there is a national feel food factor, perhaps divorced from personal experience.

THE END OF POPULATION GROWTH

Global population is predicted to peak around 2040-2050. For the first time since capitalism began. Economic growth will become more difficult to achieve with less people, and even harder with a greater percentage of people in retirement.

The decrease in population will obvious occur in the richest countries first, as the predicted decline is based on wealth. Richer people have less need for multiple kids, and those kids cost more to raise in advanced economies.

If the capitalist system that we know and love is to be under threat, it will be seen first in Europe, USA, Canada and Australasia.

This is not being addressed or discussed at present. It certainly isn’t something that governments that have 3-5 year terms are interested in. It is looking likely that the end of economic growth will occur before anything is done about it.

A country that is proactive about this could avoid major societal upheavals.

A NEW MODEL

Capitalism cannot survive in its current form without “growth”. Jobs and businesses won’t change, but how they are funded and how results are measured will need to change.

Sharemarket – people buy shares for only two reasons: dividends from profits, and capital gains. If, in general, neither of these is normal, investors will have no interest in owning shares.

Scaling Down – when a business is doing well and needs to expand by investing in more staff and capital items, that is an easy and enviable situation to be in. Managing less staff, less capital items and less revenue/profit doesn’t work at all.

It seems impossible to change…

THE HISTORY OF GROWTH

  1. Everyone hunted/cooked/made shelter. It took the energy we had to just survive
  2. Agriculture / permanent settlements. Not everybody was needed for survival. We had the freedom to make little figurines, or clothing. So some people tended to crops, some cooked, some made things. No ownership, everybody shared the fruits of their labour
  3. Ownership. Some people spent time on things that were mostly valuable to them. Their own homes, primarily. They built it, for themselves, they owned it.
  4. Value. Trading with other towns, they soon realised that they had things others did not, and vice versa. Relative values were determined.
  5. Debt. People wanted something they couldn’t afford, so they owed for it.
  6. Kingdoms. Instead of being a local leader for the good of others, a few people gained power for their own benefit.
  7. Corporations. The same as kingdoms, still elitist, but for the good of many rich people.
  8. Share markets and modern nation states. Because currency and shares have variable values, the notion of growth was introduced as one way of valuing them

But here’s the thing. The vast majority of us, throughout history and now, are stuck at 2. We essentially all help each other out to get the things we want. We do have 3 (ownership), but it isn’t the same as the when it first came into being, And it is saddled with 4 and 5, which are unfair and detrimental respectively.

Though we are stuck at 2, things have changed since 10,000 years ago (some say 5,000). Because we have witnessed 6,7 and 8, we now have greed, desire and envy. We want the riches and the success. We think that striving for them is all we need to do, but unfortunately that is almost always never enough. Fame and fortune comes from luck, circumstance and inheritance (and a bit of being attractive).

In early civilisation we all helped each other out. Some provided food, some cooked, some made things. And that is still what half of us do today. We have cooks, builders, farmers, as well as new, beneficial jobs like doctors and teachers.

The other half of us have jobs that have mostly risen due to greed – police, military, accountants, lawyers, banks, marketing, sales people…

And we are working more than ever. While we could all work less and collectively get by, we want more, so we strive to achieve even though it is almost always futile.

IN REVERSE

If growth unravels 7 and 8, and 95% of us are still basically at 2, then it looks like things will unravel in reverse order for the rich. But it a long, twisted, unpredictable way.

If we remove greed from the equation (impossible?), and factor in technology that pretty much provides all the basics we need for survival for free, then we could return to a better version of 2.

Historically 2 was quite clearly defined – you worked all your life and merely survived. We have nicer survival these days, but the poor are getting relatively poorer. We are getting less of the collective achievements than the rich. Much less. For example, we still work a lot.

We have an opportunity to return to 2, but a far better version. And at the roots of 2 has been socialism. We just need a version of socialism that works for everyone – good luck with that!

THE START OF A SOLUTION

Giving everyone a modern version of 2 is easy, most idealised versions of socialism provide it. The Scandinavian models clearly work best, and authoritarian communism works worst.

The modern version means that we all keep doing what we do, with a bit more of the pie, and work a bit less.

The cost of that is what happens to the wealthy, and to corporations.

Social Growth

Negative growth might be too hard. So perhaps we can shift growth from economic to social. That will mean putting a value on social growth, that replaces economic growth.

Example:

  • A company makes disposable shopping bags that sell for 5 cents each
  • Society demands a more environmentally-friendly solution
  • They make multi-use bags that sell for 50 cents each
  • Because this is a solution, they end up using less resources, needing less staff, and the new bags last much longer than 10 old bags = less income

So they are left with less income, and too many staff. They use the staff to create a social outcome, and they receive income from society.

If those staff remain, their social benefits become profit for the employer. Or alternatively, they could work directly for society instead.

Job losses averted.

Quality Products

Less waste means better quality products. Shirts that last 10 years instead of 10 months. Toasters with replaceable elements.

Because such products are more efficient, we can offer an incentive for their manufacture. A rebate from the government. But that is hard to do with declining tax revenue. So the incentive cannot be monetary.

A Social Currency

The future economic model is a combination of fiscal and social currencies. Fiscal will decline as social rises until a natural mix is arrived at. They will be labelled differently, but will hold a relative tradable value, like cryptocurrencies of today.

A social currency can be combined with Universal Basic Income. Each person can receive $1,000 fiscal dollars per month, and $1,000 social dollars.

An idea that never really took off is that if we pay tax, we should be able to decide how it is spent. We do that indirectly by voting for governments. But what if we could directly say here is my tax, please spend it more on health and less on war? An article on this is here

Social dollars will need to be spent. There could be some kind of mechanism for deferral, but ultimately it has no other use but public good. Deferred dollars might lose value with time.

Social dollars can only be spent on certain things. For sure, things that are primarily good for society.

There will arise some situations where social and fiscal dollars need to be traded. That will establish a relative value, that will be useful for comparing how the different systems are performing.

Consumers Choose

I get $1,000 in social dollars every month. I pretty much have to spend it. It has a relative value to fiscal dollars, but ultimately can only be redeemed by benefiting society. Once used to benefit all, it can be converted into fiscal dollars.

i can give it directly to charity, easy.

Or, if I have the opinion that a company, say Amazon, is abusing their powers or the environment, I can choose to fund some/all my of purchase from them with social dollars. They can get real dollars back only if they spend it for the good of all.

The ratios of who gets what can be adjusted to make the model work best for all. It can start slow and grow as we learn how things work out.

We already do this, essentially, when giving to charities. We are simply broadening the scope and forcing it upon people. For their own good.

Control

Because this is brand new, results will be unexpected. For all we know, everybody might flood a particular business with social dollars and cause them to fail (although people should realise they actually like that business existing, because they like the product or service).

The beauty of it being social currency is the government can make adjustments, like interest rates:

  • The amount of social dollars each person receives
  • The redemption value of social dollars
  • The limits of how many social dollars any business can receive if they don’t want them

We can literally make it up as we go along.

SUMMARY

Instead of user pays, we have user gives
Economic growth slowly transitions in the direction of social growth
Employment is maintained, but with less hours, as we shift from fiscal work to social work
Wealth distribution improves

 

The Expensive Home Assistant

Everyone has the Google Home / Alexa device these days, and use them to find out what the weather will be.

One day they will cross the threshold of amusing but mostly useless, to an indispensable tool.

The first company to make that leap should be bold and charge a fortune for it. I’m thinking $2,000.

The key feature will be an engaging, useful personality.

Hey Rob, that bill is 5 days overdue. I can just pay it now, if you like? Of you can put if off, no problemo, but it won’t go away. Do you want to discuss what is really going on? Or just pay it? Also, that movie you wanted to see has its last cinema showing on Wednesday. And it is has been 4 days since you contacted your girlfriend, I can adjust the threshold if you like, and maybe add Davina to the list of important people?

 

 

Difficulty Factor of Cooking

Idea: recipes have a difficulty score that is based on science and we all know our level

We love scoring and rating things.

All I have seen from recipes is preparation time and easy/harder.

I propose a 10-point scale set using rules set by cooking experts.

How hard is it to cook this well enough to (relatively) please 80% of eaters? People who typically like everything has their vote discounted, and vice versa…

Factors include timing, cutting skills, number of operations/ingredients, assembly, multi-tasking…

Anything microwaved is 1

Toast is 1.5, if the setting has been worked out

A roast dinner would be 2

A salad 3

A sandwich 4

A soup 5

A pasta dish 6

A pizza 7

A steak is 8

Then use AI to read a recipe and work out how long it takes. 10 point scores for difficulty, hours and minutes for time.

If I know my skill level of 1-10, and the time I have in hand, I can choose a recipe.

The difficulty score methodology is secret. First mover advantage and the “secret” keep it as the standard trusted score.

A souffle is 9

Anything not already done is a 10

People Who Repeat Themselves

I personally find it infuriating. But far more importantly, the inefficiency is a drag on communications and the economy.

Let’s start with the obvious:

Politicians being interviewed. They very regularly say something, then continue to say the exact same thing again, using the same words and catchphrases, just rearranged a little.

Aaaaaarrrggghhhh!

I have been on many business calls and meetings, and it is rampant, both from customers and providers.

I think it is mainly men. I suspect that it may be connected to mansplaining…

If we can train people not to repeat themselves, imagine the rise in global productivity! Time on the phone greatly reduced. Shorter meetings, and more time to actually get things done

 

Oil Prices Will Drop

Idea: invest in airlines

Why?

There is only one way that clean and renewable energy prices will go, and that is lower, with improvements in technology

There is only one way that the percentage of cars being electric will go, and that is higher. Not just because of lower running costs, but also government incentives, acceleration, and less moving parts = less maintenance costs.

In the USA, 71% of oil is used for transportation.

If oil prices increase, people will switch to electric vehicles more quickly. So that is not an option.

If oil prices decrease, oil-rich countries will make less money, but it will last much longer. All leaders postpone bad news if they can.

Prediction:

Oil prices will slowly decline.
Many industries will benefit from lower electricity costs
Airlines don’t have alternatives for fuel. Even if electric aircraft become a thing, planes have a lifespan of 30+ years.
Fuel costs are a major factor for airlines.

Lower oil prices will translate into profits for airlines. Invest.