Facebook Gets Far Out With Futurism at F8 – New York Magazine

Posted: April 21, 2017 at 1:53 am

Bubbles bubbles as far as the eye can see.

The vibe of the first day of F8, with an introduction by Mark Zuckerberg, was like a bunch of super-friendly RAs who ordered everyone pizza and just wanted to have some fun, talk about community, and deliver one core message: Now I am become Death, the destroyer of Snapchat.

The vibe of the second day of F8 was more like grad students who decided to get really stoned and think about the future for a while, with the main topic being, Wouldnt it be cool if like we were the computers?

The keynote, by CTO Mike Schroepfer, focused on three main themes: connectivity, AI, and virtual reality and augmented reality (with a little bit of freaky, direct brain-computer-interface stuff thrown in at the end).

Yael Maguire, part of Facebooks Connectivity Lab, said their strategy is using the atmosphere and the stratosphere to get people connected to the internet specifically by using millimeter-wave (MMW) radio technology to blanket an urban area in high-speed internet, or by using cellular networks to provide data connections in parts of the world that fiber-optic cable simply hasnt reached yet.

But the star of the show was Aquila, Facebooks solar-powered drone that the company hopes will one day beam down internet connectivity to parts of the world where none currently exists. A full-scale model of Aquila flew (and crashed) last year, and testing seems to be moving forward. While Facebook has yet to attempt to use MMW tech on it, it has attached an MMW transmitter to a Cessna, and was able to deliver 16-Gbps internet over a 13-kilometer radius enough to easily blanket all of Manhattan, most of Brooklyn, and parts of Queens and the Bronx with a signal. While all of Manhattan sharing that little bandwidth would make Netflix bingeing impossible, it would be more than enough for parts of the world without any connectivity to send text and pictures. Our goal is simple, said Schroepfer. We want to connect the 4.1 billion people who arent already connected to the internet.

Next up was Joaquin Quionero Candela talking about AI, or as its increasingly called deep learning or machine learning. The focus, given Facebooks newfound love of the camera, was mainly on using AI to examine and understand images, including understanding human posture and determining how close or far away objects are, even when using a single-lens camera. The most important part of this, however, seems to be that all of this AI processing isnt happening on a server farm somewhere its happening in real time on your phone, and its what made all those gee-whiz augmented-reality-camera moments from day one of F8 possible. (No word on what an active AI does to your battery life.)

Following that, Michael Abrash of Oculus took the stage and gave a long presentation on the future of augmented-reality glasses. AR glasses, of course, have had a certain odor of failure on them ever since Google Glass, and Abrash was quick to say that everything he was talking about was far in the future 20 or 30 years from now. His talk was more of a look at how Facebook is thinking about whats necessary for AR glasses to be successful the lens and optics, the AI needed, how to handle interaction than a concrete presentation. Abrashs main argument for AR glasses can be boiled down to: This is a technology that makes sense and people will want; technology is always advancing (usually faster than we think); and therefore, someday someone will invent AR glasses that are both usable, comfortable, and socially acceptable. But the biggest takeaway was that by dedicating this much time to essentially a wouldnt it be cool if presentation shows how Facebook is serious about AR.

Finally, Regina Dugan, previously the head of Googles Advanced Technology and Projects and before that head of research at DARPA, talked about direct brain-computer interfaces. Dugans speech touched on two main initiatives. One, that using passive brain monitoring (i.e., nothing gets drilled into your skull), her team believes they can produce something that will allow a user to type 100 words per minute using only their brain. Whats more, she expects that theyll be able to deliver a prototype of this in the next couple of years. The second was even more impressive, mainly because part of it has already been done: giving people the ability to decode language through touch. Of course, people have been doing this for nearly 200 years through Braille, but this was a bit different. An experiment showed a woman wearing a series of 16 actuators on her left arm, tuned to different frequencies. The woman (who was not deaf or blind) learned nine simple words purely by the tactile sensations coming from those sensors. She was then able to translate those words for example, grasp blue sphere as they related to a series of objects put in front of her. Essentially, the technology could create a universal tactile language something that would allow a person to, as Dugan put it, think in Mandarin, but feel in Spanish.

Its easy to roll your eyes at a lot of this stuff laser drones and AR glasses and typing 100 words per minute with just your brain. But none of the presenters are lightweights in their fields, and Facebook has quietly been amassing a murderers row of talent in long-distance communication and AI and AR. With Google seemingly abandoning many of its own moonshot projects, and Apple quietly working on something related to AR but staying mum, Facebooks futurism suddenly makes it seem very different from the rest of the Silicon Valley crowd. Whether any of this actually helps a company that still draws most of its income from delivering direct-sales ads to your eyeballs remains an open question.

The Snapchat 101: The Best, Coolest, Smartest, Weirdest Accounts on the Hottest Social Network on Your Phone

Google Is Considering Building Ad-Blocking Directly Into Chrome, Which Is a Terrible Idea

You can return your expensive juice press if you want.

Your Google Home speaker will now support multiple users and can recognize you just by the sound of your voice.

The pictures from the night are something else.

A steal at $85 bucks a night.

All big companies do it.

The online advertising giant seeks to directly control its competitors.

Stringing together song titles into semi-coherent sentences is this weeks best meme.

Day two of F8 felt a lot more like a sci-fi novel than a tech conference.

A Twitter thread contains fabled secrets that all New Yorkers crave to know.

Silicon Valley innovation has done it again.

Nintendo could be bringing the greatest console it ever made back to life for the holiday season.

The News Feeds enormous audience wont solve its waning relevance.

If Snapchat wants to be the Apple of augmented reality, Facebook is more than happy to be its Microsoft.

We give it three months before Facebook rips off the idea.

Move fast and break things doesnt work when those things are research procedures, laws of science, and human bodies.

A day in the life of YouTubes reigning teen queen.

Cabana lets you watch videos with your friends in real time.

You may be able to give a five-star review, and tip a dollar or two, at the end of an Uber ride in the near future.

Cant keep a good content farm down.

See the rest here:
Facebook Gets Far Out With Futurism at F8 - New York Magazine

Related Posts