INTEL DEVELOPER FORUM, San Francisco, Aug. 21, 2008 – Intel
Corporation’s chief technology officer took a
fascinating look at how technology will bring man and machine much closer
together by 2050.
Justin Rattner, during his keynote today at the Intel
Developer Forum in San Francisco, predicted big changes are ahead in social
interactions, robotics and improvements in computer’s ability to sense the real
world. He said Intel’s research labs are already looking at human-machine
interfaces and examining future implications to computing with some promising
changes coming much sooner than expected.
“The industry has taken much greater strides than anyone ever
imagined 40 years ago,” Rattner said. “There is speculation that we may be
approaching an inflection point where the rate of technology advancements is
accelerating at an exponential rate, and machines could even overtake humans in
their ability to reason, in the not so distant future.”
Cutting the Last Cord, Wireless
Power - Imagine being able to walk into an airport or room with your laptop and instead of consuming
battery, it is recharged. Based on principles proposed by MIT physicists, Intel
researchers have been working on a Wireless Resonant Energy Link (WREL). Rattner
demonstrated powering a 60-watt light bulb without the use of a plug or wire of
any kind, which is more than is needed for a typical laptop.
The magic of WREL is that it promises to deliver wireless
power safely and efficiently. The technology relies on strongly coupled
resonators, a principle similar to the way a trained singer can shatter a glass
using her voice. At the receiving resonator’s natural frequency, energy is
absorbed efficiently, just as a glass absorbs acoustic energy at its natural
frequency. With this technology enabled in a laptop, for example, batteries
could be recharged when the laptop gets within several feet of the transmit
resonator. Many engineering challenges remain, but the company’s researchers
hope to find a way to cut the last cord in mobile devices and someday enable
wireless power in Intel-based platforms.
Programmable Matter: Computers that
Change Shape - Intel researchers are also investigating how millions of
tiny micro-robots, called catoms, could build shape-shifting materials. If used
to replace the case, display and keyboard of a computing device, this technology
could make it possible for a device to change physical form in order to suit the
specific way you are using it. A mobile computer, for example, could be tiny
when in a pocket, change to the shape of an earpiece when used as a mobile phone, and be large and flat
with a keyboard for browsing the Internet or watching a movie.
Rattner described this as a difficult exploratory research
agenda, but steady progress is being made. He demonstrated for the first time
the results of a novel technique for fabricating tiny silicon hemispheres using
photolithography, a process used today to make silicon chips. This capability is
one of the basic structural building blocks needed to realize functional catoms,
and will make it easier to bring the necessary computational and mechanical
components together in one tiny package less than a millimeter across. The
technique is compatible with existing high-volume manufacturing and enables the
possibility to produce such catoms in quantity at some point in the future.
Dr. Michael Garner, program manager of Emerging Materials
Roadmap, joined Rattner onstage to discuss the importance of research of novel
silicon technology, keeping Moore’s Law alive and well through the next decade
and beyond. Among other things, Intel is researching how to go beyond planar
transistors to 3D transistors and is looking at using compound semiconductors to
replace silicon in the transistor channel. Looking further out, Intel is
exploring into a variety of non-charge-based technologies that could one day
replace CMOS altogether.
Robots: From the Factory Floor to
Your Kitchen - Robots today are primarily used in the factory
environment, designed to perform a single task repeatedly and bolted down. To
make robotics personal, robots need to move and manipulate objects in cluttered
and dynamic human environments, according to Rattner. They need to be cognizant
of their surroundings by sensing and recognizing movement in a dynamic physical
world, and learn to adapt to new scenarios. Rattner demonstrated two working
personal robot prototypes developed at Intel’s research labs. One of the
demonstrations showed electric field pre-touch that has been built into a robot
hand. The technique is a novel sensing modality used by fish but not humans, so
they can “feel” objects before they even touch them. The other demonstration was
a complete autonomous mobile manipulation robot that can recognize faces and
interpret and execute commands as generic as “please clean this mess” using
state-of-the-art motion planning, manipulation, perception and artificial
intelligence.
In addition to robots becoming more human-like, Rattner said
he believes more innovation will emerge to make human and machine interaction
more robust. Randy Breen, chief product officer of Emotiv Systems, joined
Rattner onstage to demonstrate the company’s EPOC* headset. The Emotiv EPOC
identifies brainwave patterns, processes them in real time and tells a game what
conscious or non-conscious thoughts the user has had, like facial expressions,
conscious actions or emotions. A user with the headset could think about smiling
or lifting an object, and an avatar in a game would execute it. EPOC can
currently identify more than 30 different “detections” through the 16 sensors on
the headset.