| CARVIEW |
Select Language
HTTP/2 200
server: GitHub.com
content-type: text/html; charset=utf-8
last-modified: Sun, 02 Feb 2020 19:33:46 GMT
access-control-allow-origin: *
etag: W/"5e37241a-f30"
expires: Sun, 28 Dec 2025 14:56:14 GMT
cache-control: max-age=600
content-encoding: gzip
x-proxy-cache: MISS
x-github-request-id: 6000:272D88:7C2B38:8B1E74:695142B6
accept-ranges: bytes
age: 0
date: Sun, 28 Dec 2025 14:46:14 GMT
via: 1.1 varnish
x-served-by: cache-bom-vanm7210031-BOM
x-cache: MISS
x-cache-hits: 0
x-timer: S1766933175.686707,VS0,VE200
vary: Accept-Encoding
x-fastly-request-id: 1f9efab7337a99c346ef3d82f74e0cf2ebc9c2e4
content-length: 1555
Future Friendly
In today's incredibly exciting yet overwhelming world of connected digital devices, these are the truths we hold to be self-evident:
- Disruption will only accelerate. The quantity and diversity of connected devices—many of which we haven't imagined yet—will explode, as will the quantity and diversity of the people around the world who use them.
- Our existing standards, workflows, and infrastructure won't hold up. Today's onslaught of devices is already pushing them to the breaking point. They can't withstand what's ahead.
- Proprietary solutions will dominate at first. Innovation necessarily precedes standardization. Technologists will scramble to these solutions before realizing (yet again) that a standardized platform is needed to maintain sanity.
- The standards process will be painfully slow. We will struggle with (and eventually agree upon) appropriate standards. During this period, the web will fall even further behind proprietary solutions.
A New Hope
But there's hope. While we can't know exactly what the future will bring, we can:
- Acknowledge and embrace unpredictability.
- Think and behave in a future-friendly way.
- Help others do the same.
The future is ours to make —friendly.
Undersignums
