drones

Do you understand the narrative behind the ‘magic’ of tech/AI?

(Photo credit @juliusdrost)

On Sunday, I was listening to the latest episode of ‘This American Life’ - one of my *favorite* podcasts for its fantastic ability to tell unique stories. I like to visualize the narrative arc included in each episode (and in each ‘act’ within the episode). This episode’s title was ‘The Magic Show’ and I enjoyed hearing the backstory for how magic tricks are constructed -- and how crucial story-telling is for a mind-blowing magic trick. I remember experimenting with a magic kit as a kid -- and I loved showing off my (clumsy) ability to make a scarf disappear from my hand. Good career coaches are a bit like magicians -- helping you pull together seemingly disparate aspects of your background until -- poof! -- a compelling pitch appears. But as any good magician will tell you -- you need to practice over and over and over...and sometimes you drop the ball instead of palming it.

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I highly recommend listening to The Magic Show podcast episode - a completely enjoyable way to spend an hour and might even spark some long-dormant magical yearnings. 


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Sometimes, tech innovations can seem like magic.  Fifty-odd years later, the Apollo 11 moon landing is considered both a magic moment and a feat of technological and scientific innovation. I am also continually impressed by the new feats achieved by AI. After ‘listening’ to thousands of recorded coughs, an AI can now diagnose covid19 from just the sound of a cough (and even for those who are asymptomatic!)  Not only are balloons bringing internet to rural areas of the world...but an AI has been developed to allow a Loon balloon to take in wind speed & direction inputs and raise or lower the balloon accordingly.  AI also recently solved a 50-year-old biology challenge known as the ‘protein folding problem’ -- helping biologists determine how and why certain proteins fold themselves into certain shapes. Behind all of these seemingly magical feats is ridiculous amounts of hard work. 


While I don’t want to lose the awe and wonder behind many tech innovations, I know more people in the general public need to understand the narrative behind the “magic.” If people don’t understand how drones work and the software that runs them is developed, then we could end up unknowingly subverting our own privacy interests with AI-powered police drones recording our moves. A lack of understanding about how automated systems are developed can cause us to be unaware that these same systems may be excluding the poor from basic services, jobs and housing. Or we can be fooled into thinking a blog is being written by a human when it was really by an college kid’s AI


Tech is increasingly pervasive in all aspects of our society -- and that means we have an individual responsibility to see what’s behind the curtain and the ‘tech magicians’ also need to show us how their tricks are developed (like my favorite YT illusionist Zach King!).


Want a Career in Tech but aren’t sure where to start? Take a look at MY COURSE, ‘TECH SEARCH COMPASS’ FOR STEP-BY-STEP SUPPORT

What tech tools are being used to help produce your food?

(Photo credit @markusspiske)

One of the great things about living in upstate NY is how easy it is to access nature & parks. When I live in cities, I was always within walking distance of a park or a body of water (Central Park, Sabino Canyon, Brooklyn Promenade, Fresh Pond, etc). Last weekend, I took my dog for a drive to a nearby lake. Along the way, I noticed that (in my electric car) I passed 2 Teslas, an Amish farming family in a horse & buggy, and countless farms. Growing up on a dairy farm seemed like a normal thing to do as a kid in this area, until I got to Princeton and classmates behaved like I had arrived from another planet. I wanted to focus on agriculture tech (or agtech) this week to highlight what tech evolutions are happening to help you and millions of others eat.


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Agriculture as an industry has been around since humans have existed, and agtech refers to the use of tech in agriculture, horticulture and aquaculture with the aim of improving yield, efficiency and profitability. And while some early inventions like the wheel and stone milling helped individual farmers do more, it was the Industrial Revolution that brought tractors and other large machines to make huge changes in how farming was done. Now, the tech industry is bringing its collective brainpower to solve these critical challenges.

Drones are an obvious way to help bring more efficiency in crop production and fertilization, and monitoring of crops and herds. (Drones also take great aerial photos/videos of my cousins’ farm’s corn maze!). It’s incredibly hard for farmers to keep up with constantly changing weather patterns or to assimilate & analyze all the data so there are tech companies designing software tools to help with herd management and health tracking, crop rotation planning, and checking for weeds. There are even robots working on farms to do weeding as covid19 makes it more difficult to have concentrated amounts of people together in one place.  IOT sensors could work in combination with drones to help set up a monitoring network for crops or herds but only if the rural connectivity challenge is also addressed (see last week’s newsletter for more). 

In urban areas there has been a sharp rise in the vertical farming market to ensure that fresh produce isn’t shipped long distances and spoiled along the way; it’s grown right within city limits. More agfunds have begun to appear, investing in companies like Gro Intelligence who use AI to analyze unstructured data sets from the UN and the World Food Programme and help companies predict large-scale agricultural trends/impacts.



Want a Career in Tech but aren’t sure where to start? Take a look at MY COURSE, ‘TECH SEARCH COMPASS’ FOR STEP-BY-STEP SUPPORT