Google, free host of this Blogger blog, has always had wild things going on behind its friendly search engine face. Follow
Google's history carefully, and you learn how a search engine, gathering the behavioral data generated by its users, can be the key to a whole information-driven reality. You also learn how technological developments layer one upon another, with each new functionality enabling the next. And therefore, as
Bill Gates has said: "People tend to overestimate
what can happen in the next year but underestimate what can happen
in the next five." That is why, when
Google buys a company or develops a new capability, we should ask: where is
Google going?
The company's informal motto is: "
Don't be evil."
Wiki:
Paul Buchheit ... the creator of
Gmail,
said he "wanted something that, once you put it in there, would be hard
to take out", adding that the slogan was "also a bit of a jab at a lot
of the other companies, especially our competitors, who at the time, in
our opinion, were kind of exploiting the users to some extent."
Gen Xer
Astro Teller,
Google’s Director of New Products, declares that we must override our linear expectations when we try to understand technology's
potential:
"If something rides the rails of exponentially improving computer and data capability, and if its benefits are sufficiently powerful, it is likely to happen – whether we can imagine it today or not."
In other words, something
Google may do that seems innocuous or incongruous compared to its latest mainstream developments (like its
contact lens glucose monitor) can turn out to be essential to tomorrow's integrated technologies. Lately,
Google's trail of breadcrumbs leads into a dark forest. From
driverless cars, to
offshore barges - to Google's immortality app, Calico; from
poaching academia's brightest minds to
Google Glass; from setting up an e-money system on the back of
Google Glass, to
crowd-sourcing medicine - to buying killer robots? (Hat tip:
SCGNews.)
Promo for development of Google's banking capabilities, using Gmail's user base with Google Wallet and Google Glass: "OK, Glass, empty my bank account." Will Google develop its own cryptocurrency? Image Source: Quartz.
Remember
Boston Dynamics? Under a
DARPA contract, they have made some of the world's most terrifying weaponized robots (at least, among the ones known to the public), modeled after successful predator species:
BigDog,
WildCat, Cheetah,
SandFlea (which can jump over 9 metres in the air) and Atlas (a real Millennial Terminator robot). In December 2013,
Google bought Boston Dynamics. According to the
CBC, this was the search engine's
eighth robotics company purchase in the past six months, and
Google's strategy here relates to the exploration of sensor technology:
CBC business commentator Kevin O'Leary, chair of O'Leary Funds, said Monday that the strategy makes sense, given the majority of "smart and new money going to startups today" is targeting sensor technology. "These robots are basically a bundle of sensors," he added. "What
Google is doing here is simply buying a company that's extremely
advanced at writing software to interface with sensors."