Digital native mothers and fathers are starting their own families. How is that changing home technology? Education technology? What does the future geek home look like and how does it function?
Software development happens in your head; not in an editor, IDE, or design tool. We’re well educated on how to work with software and hardware, but what about wetware—our own brains?
Read more.
The design and production of physical/digital spaces is at the heart of what we call the Programmable Environment. Instead of environments complete and fixed in time, subject to renovation or demolition when their purpose is no longer relevant, the result is a spatial system designed to evolve over time, in interaction with the users who inhabit it.
Read more.
More and more we use biological metaphors for our technology. Cars break and are fixed, but computers get infected. Technology evolves, competes, exploits our emotions. We are the ecological niche for technology. And its uses of us may be no more benevolent than our uses of our own ecological niches.
Read more.
Life hacking. Brain training. One and the same. The brain's frontal lobes enable our goal-oriented behavior, supporting our so-called "executive functions", which can be enhanced with targeted practice. Such as life hacking. This session will provide an overview of the cognitive neuroscience underpinning life hacking, and review the state-of-the-art of non-invasive tools for brain training.
Read more.
The greatest sports athletes' records live and die by their hi-tech gear. They use new swimsuits like the razor to shave seconds off their laps and sensors like the Nike+ to record their training. Michael Tchao of Nike Labs will share with us the process behind these creations and the new materials and technology that make them happen.
Read more.
We are currently in a time when sharing and social networks are changing the way we consume editorialized media and the definition of 'content' is increasingly blurred. In the R&D Labs at The New York Times we are exploring some of the questions around how we will consume information in the next 2 to 20 years.
Read more.
Want to help fix democracy? Hackers, those crazy Utopian dreamers with DIY attitudes, have begun a sustained assault on government with projects like the Sunlight Foundation, OpenCongress, GovTrack, Watchdog.net, FedSpending, MySociety, and Public.Resource. The goal?
Read more.
Jeremy Faludi (Worldchanging, Stanford, Project Frog)
This talk describes why and how to do green design. It will change listeners' perspectives on why sustainability matters, and how easy (or difficult) it is to achieve. It lists the priorities of sustainable design, as well as the principles and practical methods by which to achieve them, reinforced by examples of how each strategy is used in real products.
Read more.
David Calkins (Robotics Society of America, et. al.)
What coming in robots? More than just the butler bot, we can expect to see many robots in all aspects of our life - home, work, hospitals, schools... Single task robots will permeate our lives, as will telepresence bots giving us the ability to truly bi-locate. Noone can predict the future, but we can get a sneak peak.
Read more.
What are the five biggest problems will the world face in 2019 – and how can we get a head-start on solving them together? Find out in this talk, which presents the results of SUPERSTRUCT, the world’s first massively multiplayer forecasting gam
Read more.
In 1900 about 40 percent of Americans (40 million) lived on farms, and a similar percentage worked on farms. People were makers by necessity, and as a result they acquired many useful DIY skills that they applied to their leisure activities as well.
Read more.
What do Japanese geeks, teenagers, and high school girls do for hours behind their computers and cell phone screens? I'm going to talk about several examples of web apps and gadgets that are fun, creative, and uniquely Japanese. Through these, we see how crucial, hard-to-grasp aspects of Japanese culture materialize as new obsessions when technology is thrown into the mix.
Read more.
Rose White (City University of New York - Graduate Center / NYC Resistor )
A "hacker space" and a "community center" sound like different places, but spaces organized in the last year, like NYC Resistor and HacDC, have merged the two. These are cross-disciplinary, self-organized, adult-education centers, mostly focused on technology, with heavy detours into related sciences and crafts, and they are alive with learning. You could build one in your city, too!
Read more.
Why wait until retirement to explore the world? Two gen-x geeks decided to give up their conventional homes almost 3 years ago to create a conscious merging of life, work, sustainable living and adventure. They share their adventures, practical advice and insights to living nomadically on the road while utilizing mobile technology to operate their lives and tech businesses.
Read more.
Gold Sponsors
Silver Sponsors
Sponsorship Opportunities
For information on exhibition and sponsorship opportunities at the conference, contact Yvonne Romaine at yromaine@oreilly.com
For media-related inquiries, contact Maureen Jennings at maureen@oreilly.com
ETech Newsletter
To stay abreast of conference news and to receive email notification when registration opens, please sign up for the ETech Conference newsletter (login required)