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  • Tech - News
  • Updated: October 30, 2022

20 Tech Innovations That Improve Quality Of Life

20 Tech Innovations That Improve Quality Of Life

Technology has had a significant impact on both the planet and each of our personal lives. The introduction of modern technology has made life easier and safer by upgrading the standard of living. Almost everyone in the world is into tech.

It is also difficult to overlook the benefits of technology, such as the fact that Lifehack and the Internet as a whole are impossible without it.

It is advisable to pause for a moment and admire a few examples of technology that are designed solely to enhance safety and simplicity.

Identity theft and depression would both be much more prevalent if these inventions hadn't been made.

Here are 20 tech innovations that have improved quality of life:

1. 3D Printing

Like most inventions, 3D printing was inspired by earlier theories and notions.

The layering technique employed by modern 3D printers was first utilised in the late 19th century to create topographical maps, and 3D printing as we know it today started in 1980.

A revolution in 3D printing has been fueled by open-source software and less expensive production techniques.

When 3D printing first became popular, it cost thousands of dollars to print something. You may now purchase a desktop 3D printer to use at home.

However, the emergence of more affordable manufacturing techniques and open-source software has sparked a recent 3D printing revolution.

Today, the technique is being utilised to create everything from bridges to less painful ballet slippers to cheaper car parts, and it is even being investigated for artificial organs.

2. Apps

Apps have revolutionalised how we consume media and interact, from news and streaming services to texting and social media apps.

They have also altered the way we go about living our daily lives, helping us find on-demand rides, short and long-term rentals, learn a language, make a budget, rate craft beers, listen to music, and have food delivered to our door.

Before downloading an app, be cautious to read reviews and understand the pricing structure to ensure that it will fulfil your needs.

Examine the conditions of use and the permissions you are granting, at the very least, briefly.

3. Artificial Intelligence

Artificial intelligence (AI), or the simulation of human intelligence in machines, was once only found in science fiction.

However, it has recently entered the actual world and emerged as one of the most crucial technologies of our time.

AI is also the brains behind facial recognition and is assisting in the resolution of pressing issues in retail, transportation, and healthcare (spotting breast cancer missed by human eyes, for example).

It is utilised online for a variety of purposes, including spam screening and speech recognition.

However, there is also concern that the development of autonomous weaponry, such as sentry robots, missile defence systems, and drones, would usher in a dismal future.

Industry leaders have advocated for technological regulation to guard against the dangers posed by devices like deep fakes, which are video forgeries that give the impression that individuals have said or done things they haven't.

4. Autonomous Vehicles

Autonomous vehicle advocates have been hyping its promise for more than a decade: without human drivers, cars will be safer and more comfortable, especially on lengthy trips.

They have been a goal of technology businesses for a very long time.

Since its creation in 2009, Nissan Leaf breaks the record for the longest autonomous vehicle trip in the UK by travelling 230 miles without incident. This is the longest and most difficult road trip to date.

The technology being developed for autonomous vehicles, such as adaptive cruise control, automated forward-collision braking, automatic parking, autopilot, and lane-keep assist, is already helping us.

However, fully self-driving cars may not be available in dealerships for another ten years.

5. Biometrics

No more truancy or dishonesty! The implementation of biometric technology has aided in streamlining instruction and boosting discipline.

Some of the biometric technologies used by schools to streamline their operations include voice recognition, eye tracking, fingerprinting, and facial recognition.

They are employed in workplaces to enforce discipline on employees who have a tendency of arriving late for work.

Additionally, biometric technology has been included in smartphones by developers for security reasons.

6. Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies

Bitcoin is the digital cryptocurrency which was made popular by anonymity, grabbed headlines for its spectacular rise in value a few years ago and then its equally stunning drop.

It crossed the $1,000 mark for the first time on January 1, 2017, reached a high of $19,000 in December of that same year, and then had a 50% value decline in the first half of 2018.

Technology, money, math, economics, and social dynamics are all incorporated into the decentralised currency.

Additionally, it is anonymous because bitcoin uses encryption keys to link buyers and sellers rather than names, tax IDs, or Social Security numbers.

The "miners" are computers running specialised software that record transactions in a huge digital ledger.

The term "blockchain" refers to all of these blocks.

However, with thousands of miners competing at once, the computational process of mining for bitcoins can be taxing.

7. Blockchain Technology

Blockchain, the encryption technology that powers bitcoin, is maybe bigger than the cryptocurrency itself.

A profusion of entrepreneurs wants to use blockchains, which function as secure digital ledgers, for voting, lotteries, ID cards and identity verification, rendering graphics, welfare payments, job searching, and insurance payments.

It might be a very huge deal.

According to analyst company Gartner, blockchain will benefit enterprises in the amount of $176 billion by 2025 and a staggering $3.1 trillion by 2030.

8. Bluetooth

Bluetooth is a radio link that links devices over short distances, and it is another wireless communication technology that has been shown to be important.

With Bluetooth, which was made accessible to customers in 1999, you may connect a mobile phone to a hands-free headset and have a conversation while keeping your hands free for other tasks, like operating a vehicle.

Since then, Bluetooth has developed to connect items like hearing aids, earbuds, and portable wireless speakers to audio sources like phones, PCs, stereo receivers, and even cars.

PCs and fitness trackers both use Bluetooth to wirelessly connect to keyboards and mouse and send data to mobile devices.

The number of Bluetooth-capable devices worldwide almost tripled between 2012 and 2018.

In the modern smart home, Bluetooth is used for functions like unlocking door locks and streaming audio to lightbulbs with built-in speakers.

9. Cloud Computing

The term "cloud computing" is used to refer to anything that involves delivering hosted services over the Internet ("the cloud"), including servers, storage, databases, networking, software, analytics, and intelligence.

This type of service delivery enables faster innovation, adaptable resources, and scale economies.

Because data may be duplicated at numerous redundant sites on the cloud provider's network, cloud computing enables data backup, disaster recovery, and business continuity simpler and less expensive.

10. Drones

Drone use has greatly increased In recent years.

Unmanned aircraft, originally developed as a hobbyist device, are now used to scan construction sites, spray insecticide on crops to protect farms, shoot movie sequences, and carry products to difficult-to-reach locations.

There are many different types of drones available today, from obtrusive quadcopters to payload-carrying mini-planes.

Customs and Border Protection utilises Predator drones, which cost $16 million and can fly up to nine miles in the air and have radar powerful enough to identify footprints in the sand, on the US-Mexico border.

Drones are anticipated to take over the skies in the not-too-distant future, serving as individualised air taxis and carrying out vital tasks like delivering medicine, assisting in search and rescue operations, and putting out fires.

11. Facial recognition

A burgeoning area of technology that is becoming more and more prevalent in our lives is facial recognition.

It is a type of biometric authentication that confirms your identity using facial features.

The technology allows us to unlock devices and organise images in digital albums but its primary applications may wind up being marketing and monitoring.

Suspected criminals are identified using cameras connected to facial recognition databases with millions of mugshots and driver's licence photographs.

As you enter a business, they might also be used to detect your face and provide you with tailored buying recommendations.

Both of these actions give rise to privacy issues, such as law enforcement overreach, systems with covert racial bias, and hackers getting access to your sensitive information.

Additionally, certain systems aren't always that precise.

The market isn't, however, exhibiting any indications of stalling.

The facial recognition market is anticipated to increase by 74% in the US, from $3.2 billion in 2019 to $7 billion in 2024.

12. Internet of things

The Internet of Things (IoT) is a fantastic concept since it is both yet very theoretical and already a working network that is used on a regular basis.

The physical world is changing, and the Internet of Things is changing the world as we know it by encouraging and facilitating opportunities that are so unique that they are almost beyond our ability to imagine.

As a result, the items that are connected to the Internet are sending notifications to our phones and evolving into specialised, unique, and intelligent devices that can respond to our unique needs and requests.

However, this journey has only just begun.

Despite the fact that the expression was first used in 1999, it wasn't until this past decade that consumers started to accept the idea.

Today, there are tens of billions of internet-connected devices that allow users to perform smart home tasks like turning on the lights, watching who is at the door, and getting a message when the milk is running low.

It has commercial applications as well, such as in the administration of public services and the healthcare sector.

Spending on the internet of things technology is expected to exceed $248 billion this year, more than quadruple the amount invested three years ago.

In five years, it will top $1.5 trillion, according to market analysts.

13. Music streaming

Streaming is still the way of the future for music consumption.

Music streaming is more convenient than any tangible media and can be inexpensive or even free.

According to a report, streaming now accounts for 85% of all music consumption in the US, a rise of 7.6% from 2018.

On-demand audio stream consumption in 2019 increased by 32% to a record 705 billion streams.

Streaming contributed close to 80% of the $11.1 billion in overall music business sales in 2019, a 13% increase.

Nevertheless, song sales decreased by 26% and album sales plummeted by 23% in 2019.

This follows drops of 18.2% and 28.8%, respectively, the year before.

14. Quantum Computing

Billions of dollars are being invested in the study and development of quantum computing by businesses and nations.

They are wagering that it will succeed in enabling new capabilities in chemistry, shipping, materials design, finance, artificial intelligence, and other fields.

The technology is starting to live up to some of the promises scientists have been hyping for decades.

In the past year, a task that would have taken the fastest supercomputer in the world 10,000 years to complete was finished in 200 seconds by a quantum processor created by Google called Sycamore.

The performance of Honeywell's quantum computers is expected to increase by a factor of 10 every year for the next five years, meaning they will be 100,000 times faster in 2025.

Honeywell, who once supplied enormous mainframes, made this prediction.

15. Social Networking

Twenty years ago, the online world looked considerably different.

Friendster, a social networking platform that debuted in 2002 and allowed users to create online profiles and connect with people they knew in real life, may be remembered by older users of social networks.

The launch of Facebook, a social networking site for college students, by Mark Zuckerberg two years later, however, completely altered everything.

When it became publicly accessible in 2006, it swiftly overtook Friendster and MySpace.

Today Facebook promotes connections and keeps people in touch, yet advertising is its primary source of revenue.

It generated $32 billion in ad sales last year. It also paved the way for other social networks that, among other things, let users talk, post images, and look for jobs.

Nearly a third of the world's population, 2.37 billion people, use it today.

16. Video Streaming

Twenty-five years ago, a new media storage format was taking the entertainment world by storm.

DVDs had a superior picture and sound quality to VHS tape, and they took up less room on your shelves.

Movie rental stores abandoned VHS for DVDs, and online rental services like Netflix popped up, offering the convenience of mailing rented discs directly to you.

Then Netflix introduced its streaming service, allowing people to watch movies and TV shows across the internet.

Consumers fell in love with the convenience of on-demand programming and began the phenomenon of "cutting the cord."

As more streaming services like Amazon Prime Video, Hulu and YouTube emerged, consumers started cancelling cable and satellite subscriptions and rental services such as Blockbuster went belly up.

By next year, more than one-fifth of US households are expected to have cut the cord on cable and satellite services, according to eMarketer.

17. Virtual Reality

Virtual reality, which immerses users in a computer-generated world, has been adopted by businesses of all sizes.

Virtual reality has expanded into a real-world sector worth an estimated $18 billion, which was formerly limited to science fiction films like Walt Disney's Tron.

Virtual reality is a new technology that has uses in a variety of fields, including education, health care, architecture, and entertainment, despite expectations that it would increase the video game industry's economy.

18. Videoconferencing

Since the coronavirus pandemic forced us to stay indoors and avoid interaction with others, videoconferencing has become increasingly common.

This technology wouldn't have made our list a few months ago, but it is now proving to be essential.

Although video telephony has existed in some form since the 1970s, its popularity didn't really take off until the web was introduced.

In addition to cameras, free internet services like Skype and iChat made videoconferencing widely available online in the 2000s.

The application was welcomed by the business community as a method to save staff travel for meetings and as a marketing tool.

Video chatting and conferencing apps became more widely used as a tool to get work done and contact friends and family, especially among those who had never used technology before, as businesses and schools introduced policies on working and studying from home.

19. Voice Assistants Technology

A speech assistant like Amazon's Alexa, Google's Assistant, or Apple's Siri is often the brain of the smart home for consumers.

Their connected speakers will play music via multiple streaming services, read you the news, and tell you the weather, among hundreds of other "skills," in addition to being a must for managing items in your house.

Around the world, there were more than 3.25 billion voice assistants in use in 2019, and by 2023, that figure is anticipated to more than quadruple to 8 billion.

The fact that these gadgets are essentially internet-connected microphones that send your chats to servers at Amazon, Google, or Apple presents a privacy concern as well.

All three businesses have acknowledged utilising human contractors to listen in on a few voice assistant calls in an effort to boost the accuracy of their software.

20. Wi-Fi

In many parts of the world, including some of the most isolated areas, wireless technology has become an indispensable aspect of daily life.

Many people feel they cannot live without it. A future without the internet is perhaps difficult to imagine.

Imagine a world without Netflix, social media, emails, and a plethora of other everyday activities made possible by the internet.

The globe has been significantly impacted by wireless communication in numerous ways.

Wi-Fi was created and made available for consumer use in 1997enabling users to detach from the network wire and move about the house or office while still being connected if we had a router and a dongle for our laptop.

Wi-Fi has improved in speed over time and has been incorporated into computers, mobile devices, and even automobiles.

Today, Wi-Fi is so crucial to both our personal and professional lives that it is practically unheard of to be in a house or public space without it.

Conclusion

Since each invention entered the picture, it has all worked toward the same overarching objective: minimising human efforts.

And what is best about these technologies is that they concentrate on a variety of fields that various people value in their lives.

You can certainly do without some of these technologies.

However, it's quite doubtful that you would be able to perform efficiently without access to increasingly all-encompassing tools like Wi-Fi and artificial intelligence.

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