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Friday, January 21, 2022

Seven predictions for the world of technology in 2022

 A quote that is variously ascribed to Yogi Berra, Neils Bohr and even Mark Twain goes something like: “Never make predictions, especially about the future." Regular readers of Tech Whispers, however, have ignored these wise words and have been clamouring for my predictions on technology in 2022. Peering myopically at my personal crystal ball, here is what I see:


Artificial Intelligence (AI) everywhere: Pretty much like digital, or electricity (as Peter Ng said), AI will not be one more thing we do, but will be infused in most objects around us, from cars and phones to TV sets and soon everything else we use. This will usher in the Edge AI revolution, where AI is not in some central server somewhere, but embedded in objects ‘at the edge’. As AI becomes increasingly ubiquitous, questions about ethics in AI usage, responsible AI and explainability will become more strident. I expect one large incident, a Cambridge Analytica scandal of AI, to happen and bring AI ethics into the common imagination.

For better or for Metaverse: The Metaverse, non-fungible tokens (NFTs) and Web3 hype will continue this year, fuelled by crypto ‘bros’ and even other bored apes. There is substance behind the hype—the rise of the creator economy and the proposed decentralization of the web—but there is a lot of fluff too, and that will likely crash and burn. Alongside, crypto will continue to mature, with it becoming more mainstream and some of its real potential getting realized. Here’s a specific prediction: the first $100 million NFT will be sold this year (unless already done by the time this article appears).


Elon Musk rules: 2021 was the year of the entrepreneur behind Tesla and SpaceX, and so will 2022. Musk will continue to reshape energy, cars, space, transportation and other industries; he might even pick a new one to reshape this year. As he does so, he will not only reign as the world’s Tech Overlord, but also give technology a new way of thinking and a new set of rules. He will show how it can be used to remake vast physical and infrastructure businesses. Thus, he will continue to be the richest man on earth, increasing his lead over Amazon’s Jeff Bezos and Microsoft’s Bill Gates.

The pandemic ends: Here is where I am going to truly go out on a limb and say this will be the year that the covid virus would establish an equilibrium with the human race. The Omicron variant will convert the raging pandemic into an endemic, much like the flu, and we will learn to live with it with periodic vaccines. Author Laura Spinney said in her 2018 book Pale Rider that “pandemics end socially, not medically", and that is how this one will peter out too. However, this won’t be the last one, as the ravaging of our planet may prompt newer viruses to consider human hosts.


The rise of green AI/software: The cloud, AI, computers and electric cars are hugely polluting industries, despite the popular impression of their being clean and gentle. Manufacturing one PC needs 240kg of fossil fuels, training one model for natural-language processing emits the same amount of carbon dioxide as 125 New York -Beijing round trips, and the world’s data centres consume almost as much electricity as South Africa does. As this awareness grows, we will see the advent of green AI and software, with governments and corporations starting to mandate this, just as they now do for diversity and inclusion, and environment, social and governance goals. Expect an announcement on nuclear fusion, a technology that could possibly ‘solve’ the global energy crisis.

Crunch times: The two biggest crunches faced by the tech world in 2021 were semiconductors, as global producers struggled with covid-disrupted supply chains and an explosion in demand as the pandemic eased, and an acute shortage of tech workers, as people discovered new ways to work. While the semiconductor crunch will ease, the people crunch will not. Technology is booming, with Big Tech growing rapidly, startups mushrooming and traditional companies going digital. The supply of tech workers cannot keep up, and the astronomical salaries they command will not flag off.


The future of work is here: The pandemic-enforced work-from-home arrangements, continued rise of the gig economy and the emergence of the ‘passion economy’ has ensured that the future that we envisioned for work—work from anywhere, multiple employers, work-life integration and the redundancy of geography—has accelerated into the present. This has led to the Great Resignation and hybrid-work patterns, among other massive disturbances. Expect this to continue in 2022.

As I have written earlier, the covid outbreak has forced us to decentralize more or less everything, be it work, retailing (e-commerce), food (delivery), health (telemedicine) or education (study from home). This Great Decentralization has set a trend that I believe will be irreversible, and this is what is driving up the massive demand for technology and digital transformation, as traditional firms struggle to adapt.

It was another wise person who said, “Any believable prediction of the future will be wrong. Any correct prediction of the future will be unbelievable." Which one of the two these are, we will have to wait till year-end to find out. Let 2022 be a good one.

Jaspreet Bindra is the chief tech whisperer at Findability Sciences, and learning AI, Ethics and Society at Cambridge University.

Source: Mintepaper, 20/01/22


What is the Pacific ‘Ring of Fire’?

 

The Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai volcano, which erupted over the weekend, lies along the Pacific ‘Ring of fire’.


The Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai volcano erupted over the weekend, sending ash and smoke thousands of feet into the air. The volcano, situated on an uninhabited island, became active in 2009. It lies along the Pacific ‘Ring of fire’, and is just over 60 kilometres from the island nation of Tonga.

The Pacific ‘Ring of Fire’ or Pacific rim, or the Circum-Pacific Belt, is an area along the Pacific Ocean that is characterised by active volcanoes and frequent earthquakes. It is home to about 75 per cent of the world’s volcanoes – more than 450 volcanoes. Also, about 90 per cent of the world’s earthquakes occur here.

Its length is over 40,000 kilometres and traces from New Zealand clockwise in an almost circular arc covering Tonga, Kermadec Islands, Indonesia, moving up to the Philippines, Japan, and stretching eastward to the Aleutian Islands, then southward along the western coast of North America and South America.

The area is along several tectonic plates including the Pacific plate, Philippine Plate, Juan de Fuca plate, Cocos plate, Nazca plate, and North American plate. The movement of these plates or tectonic activity makes the area witness abundant earthquakes and tsunamis every year.

Along much of the Ring of Fire, tectonic plates move towards each other creating subduction zones. One plate gets pushed down or is subducted by the other plate. This is a very slow process – a movement of just one or two inches per year. As this subduction happens, rocks melt, become magma and move to Earth’s surface and cause volcanic activity.

In the case of Tonga, the Pacific Plate was pushed down below the Indo-Australian Plate and Tonga plate, causing the molten rock to rise above and form the chain of volcanoes.

Subduction zones are also where most of the violent earthquakes on the planet occur. The December 26, 2004 earthquake occurred along the subduction zone where the Indian Plate was subducted beneath the Burma plate.

Written by Aswathi Pacha

Source: Indian Express, 19/01/22

The formal economy – and not just the informal sector – is in distress

 

Ishan Bakshi writes: Between April 2020 and September 2021, 23 per cent of India’s formal labour force availed of an advance from EPFO to meet Covid-19 expenses


The dominant narrative in public discussion is that much of the persisting economic distress is concentrated in the informal or unorganised parts of the economy. That enterprises in the organised sector and the formal labour force have emerged relatively unscarred is a view that resonates widely. However, contrary to this notion, there are signs that the distress not only envelops the informal economy, but also that large parts of the formal economy continue to face considerable financial hardship.

Take the formal labour force. Since the onset of the pandemic, the Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO) has allowed members to avail of an advance to deal with expenses arising from Covid-19. Data from EPFO shows that between April 2020 to September 2021, 1.5 crore such claims were received. This implies that 23 per cent of India’s formal labour force (an upper limit, based on those contributing to EPFO) has availed of this facility. (Members were allowed to do so twice from June 2021).

Of these 1.5 crore claims, 87.2 lakh were received in 2020-21. This works out to an average of 7.26 lakh claims per month. In comparison, in just the first six months of 2021-22 (April-September), 63.4 lakh such claims were received, at an average of 10.5 lakh per month. This suggests that not only has the formal labour force continued to face economic hardship, but also that it has been of a similar if not higher magnitude in the ongoing financial year.

For the informal labour force with no such safety net, dealing with the economic fallout would have undoubtedly been far more difficult. While there are no firm estimates, it is possible to arrive at some understanding of the extent of the distress using data of individuals seeking work under MGNREGA.

In the pre-Covid year of 2019-20, 7.88 crore individuals obtained work under NREGA. In 2020-21, the first year of the pandemic, this rose to 11.19 crore. In just the first nine months of 2021-22, this figure has touched 9.33 crore. Considering that work demanded by households under the scheme tends to rise during the lean season of January-March, the final number for this year may end up being closer to last year’s number.

This persisting and heightened demand for work signals either the continuing absence of other forms of employment, or the need to rebuild buffers, or the need to supplement incomes because wages in other jobs remain depressed. It also implies that the distress in the informal labour market, at least in rural areas, is yet to recede, and is similar to levels observed last year. It is possible that in the weeks ahead, with constraints on budgets, states begin to curtail registration of households demanding work, in which case, work demanded under NREGA will cease to be a proxy for labour market distress.

At the enterprise level, the distress amongst the smaller formal firms has been severe. Data on the Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS) which was designed to extend credit facilities to firms provides some understanding.

According to the RBI, the total number of guarantees extended to MSMEs under this facility stands at around 1.10 crore, amounting to Rs 1.7 lakh crore. As this facility was extended upto 20 per cent of the loan outstanding, it implies that these entities had a loan exposure of roughly Rs 8.5 lakh crore (upper limit). To put this in perspective — as per RBI, the total credit flow to MSMEs by banks (assuming a congruence in definitions) stood at Rs 17.8 lakh crore across 4.2 crore accounts at the end of 2020-21. Roughly 85 per cent of disbursals under ECLGS are through banks.

This provides a sense of the extent of the financial distress among formal MSMEs, and how extensively this facility was used during this period. However, unlike the data on the labour force, these numbers are skewed towards the initial period of the pandemic. Over time, the distress at the firm level, at least among the formal ones, is showing signs of easing.

Of the 1.10 crore guarantees, 95.3 lakh were issued in 2020-21, while only 20.6 lakh were issued in 2021-22, despite the scope for more. Similarly, under the RBI’s restructuring schemes, while 9.29 per cent of eligible MSME accounts were restructured under the February 11, 2020 scheme, this fell to 7.19 per cent under the August 2020 scheme, and to 5.8 per cent under the May 2021 scheme. This indicates that at least some of the formal MSMEs are witnessing an improvement in their operating climate, and are able to meet their obligations.

The second quarter results of 2,000-odd companies point to a similar trend. Among the smaller firms (those with net sales of 0-25 crore which account for 40 per cent of the sample), 50 per cent had surpassed their pre-Covid sales at the end of the second quarter of 2021-22, up from 37 per cent in the first quarter. While the corresponding numbers for the bigger firms are 80 per cent and 53 per cent respectively, these numbers, nonetheless, do suggest that smaller firms are recovering to their pre-pandemic levels, even if at a glacial pace.

But if this is the pace and extent of the recovery among formal MSMEs, considering that the relief package was largely disbursed through formal monetary channels, to what extent the stress among the millions of unregistered or informal MSMEs would have abated is difficult to ascertain. As only entities with reserves would have been able to survive during this period, it is likely that firm death rates in the informal sector would have risen dramatically. But the question is, have birth rates also picked up? Among the informal MSMEs that did survive, those with stronger linkages to the formal economy would probably recover faster than the informal ones.

Naturally, the pace at which unorganised enterprises, and the smaller formal firms recover, will have a bearing on how quickly the labour market distress eases, and how India exits from this pandemic. Considering this the upcoming Union budget must continue to provide support to the economy, nurture the recovery.

Written by Ishan Bakshi

Source: The Indian Express, 21/01/22

Thursday, January 20, 2022

Quote of the Day January 20, 2022

 

“I don't need a friend who changes when I change and who nods when I nod; my shadow does that much better.”
Plutarch
“मुझे ऐसे मित्र की आवश्यकता नहीं जो मेरे साथ-साथ बदले और मेरी हां में हां भरे; ऐसा तो मेरी परछाई कहीं बेहतर कर लेती है।”
प्लूटार्क

Global Cybersecurity Outlook 2022

 

Key Findings

  • In 2021, the ransom ware attacks have increased by 151%. Each organization faced 270 cyber-attacks on an average.
  • A successful organization that breached cyber-attacks spent 3.6 million USD.
  • 59% of the cyber leaders believe that there is not difference between cyber resilience and cyber security. It is not so. Cyber security is providing protection to the computers, data storages and internet. Cyber resilience is anticipating and adapting to cyber-attacks. There is no anticipation component in cyber security. It is an overall protection. Cyber resilience knows its enemy. And cyber security doesn’t.

Influence

According to the report, the following two factors have the highest influence on cyber security

  • Automation and machine learning: 48%
  • Remote and hybrid work environment: 28%

Reasons

The increase in cyber-crimes was mainly because of increase in global digital economy.

Data created in one minute

  • Youtube upload: 500 hours
  • Emails sent: 197 million
  • Tinder swipes: 2 million
  • Amount spent online: 1.6 million USD
  • Twitch views: 2 million
  • Netflix subscribers: 28,000
  • Instagram stories shared: 695,000
  • Linkedin connections made: 9,132
  • Whatsapp messages sent: 69 million
  • TikTok Downloads: 5,000

Concerns

  • 42% infrastructure is broken down by cyber-attacks. 24% cyber-attacks are identity thefts. 20% cyber-attacks are ransom ware attacks. 10% of personal assets are lost.
  • 55% of the organizations in the world were affected by cyber-attacks in 2021.

Cyber security solutions

The following factors should be considered while creating cyber security solutions:

  • Percentage of digital transformation made by an organization. A considerable amount greater than the transformation should be spent on cyber security.
  • Third-party software attacks
  • Malicious attacks
  • Regulatory requirements
  • Board direction
  • Media attention
  • Shift towards remote working

Lagging areas

The organizations are lagging in the following areas:

  • Prioritizing cyber security in business decisions
  • Acquiring leadership support for cyber security
  • Recruiting and retaining cyber security tale

Current Affairs- January 20, 2022

 

INDIA

– PM Modi to host first India-Central Asia Summit virtually on January 27
– Three Navy personnel killed in explosion onboard INS Ranvir in Mumbai
– Rajasthan: BSF to conduct ‘Operation Sard Hawa’ along Pak border from Jan 23 to 28
– Eleven cities selected as the winners of the Streets for People Challenge by the Union Ministry of Housing & Urban Affairs
– Housing and Urban Affairs Ministry announces winners of Nurturing Neighbourhoods Challenge
– Cabinet approves extension of tenure of National Commission for Safai Karamcharis for three years
– Internet panel on languages ropes in Vijay Shekhar Sharma as ambassador

ECONOMY & CORPORATE

– Cabinet approves Scheme for grant of ex-gratia payment of difference between compound interest and simple interest for six months to borrowers in specified loan accounts
– Cabinet approves infusion of Rs.1,500 crore in Indian Renewable Energy Development Agency Limited (IREDA)
– SEBI launches mobile App — Saa?thi– to create awareness among investors about basic concepts of securities market.
– HAL signs contract with Mauritius for export of advanced light helicopter (ALH)
– Experts deliberate on widening scope of India-Israel Industrial R&D and Technological Innovation Fund
– Dileep Sanghani elected as Chairman of IFFCO (Indian Farmers Fertiliser Cooperative)
– DGCA extends ban on international flights till February 28

WORLD

– Indonesia passes law to relocate capital to remote Borneo
– French senators vote to ban headscarves in sports competitions
– Pfizer chief Albert Bourla wins $1 mn Genesis Prize for vaccine development
– Roberta Metsola of Malta becomes EU Parliament’s new president
– Saturnino de la Fuente of Spain, said to be world’s oldest man, dies at 112

SPORTS

– Pakistan’s Babar Azam named as the captain of ICC Men’s T20I team of the year

International Undergraduate Merit Scholarship 2022

 The University of Sheffield, UK is  delighted to offer 75 International Undergraduate Merit Scholarships in 2022.

The scholarships are competitive awards worth 50% of the tuition fee for an undergraduate degree programme starting in autumn 2022. The scholarship is available for new international students who meet the eligibility criteria.

You must hold an offer to study at the University of Sheffield before you apply for this scholarship.

 

Key dates

The deadline for scholarship applications is 13:00 (UK time) on Monday 25 April 2022.

Scholarship results will be announced by 16:00 (UK time) on Monday 16 May 2022.

Eligibility criteria

Your programme must be scheduled to commence at the University of Sheffield in autumn 2022.

You must receive an offer for a course studied in full at the University of Sheffield. All undergraduate degree courses are eligible with the exceptions of Medicine (A100/A101) and Dentistry (A200).

For tuition fee purposes you must be self-funded and eligible to pay the overseas tuition fee.

You must not be a sponsored student.

You must enter a degree programme at the University of Sheffield in programme year 1 or year 2.

For further terms and conditions please visit – https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/international/fees-and-funding/scholarships/undergraduate/international-undergraduate


Source: indiaeducationdiary, 18/01/22