In this week's Abundance Insider: Self-driving car kits, Microsoft’s anti-cancer mission, and large-scale tidal power farms.
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What it is: Claire Lomas recently completed the U.K.'s biggest half-marathon at the age of 36 -- despite being paralyzed and 16 weeks pregnant -- thanks to a robotic suit she wore during the race. The powered exoskeleton by ReWalk Robotics was designed with motion sensors located in the feet, hips and upper body, enabling the user to control their movements: for example, the ability for paralyzed patients to lift their own leg.
Why it's important: The ReWalk is only one example of the implications robotics will have in the treatment and rehabilitation of paralysis patients. As Peter has previously said, "Dozens of wearable and implantable biometric sensors will make us all the 'CEOs of our own health' within the next decade." | Join the Discussion
Spotted by Aryadeep S. Acharya
What it is: Scientists out of the University of Bath say early experiments suggest it may one day be possible to make babies without using eggs. They have succeeded in creating healthy baby mice by tricking sperm into believing they were fertilizing normal eggs. The findings, published in Nature Communications, could, in the distant future, mean that the baby-making process no longer requires women.
Why it's important: Removing the need for an egg in the reproductive process could have a huge impact on society. One possibility, in the distant future, is that it might be possible for scientists to combine sperm with ordinary cells in the body to form an embryo. In other words, two men could have a child, with one donating an ordinary cell and the other donating sperm. Or one man could have his own child using his own cells and sperm, with that child being more like a non-identical twin than a clone. While these future scenarios may seem like science fiction, these experiments anchor them in possibility. | Join the Discussion
Spotted by Peter Diamandis
What it is: While social media networks were livestreaming the recent U.S. presidential debate, NBC took it one step further and streamed the debate in Virtual Reality, thanks to a partnership with Altspace. People could attend by using the AltspaceVR app on the Oculus Rift, HTC Vive or Samsung Gear; the stream was also offered in 2D via Mac and PC.
Why it's important: Peter's recent blog on VR mentioned the implications of Virtual Reality on conferences, education and travel. NBC's VR election cycle coverage indicates we're one step closer to dematerializing the immersive experience of major live cultural events and large group gatherings. | Join the Discussion
Spotted by Peter Diamandis
What it is: Microsoft has vowed to "solve the problem of cancer" within a decade by using groundbreaking computer science to crack the code of diseased cells so they can be reprogrammed back to a healthy state. Microsoft has assembled a "small army" of the world's best biologists, programmers and engineers to tackle this problem, opening its first wet laboratory this summer focusing on cancer as a computational problem.
Why it's important: We're increasingly seeing technology giants like Microsoft and Google tackle problems traditionally addressed in medical research labs and universities. "I think it's a very natural thing for Microsoft to be looking at cancer because we have tremendous expertise in computer science, and what is going on in cancer is a computational problem," Chris Bishop, laboratory director at Microsoft Research, told the Telegraph. How will the world change if these tech giants are successful and, in a decade or less, cancer no longer exists? | Join the Discussion
Spotted by Gaëtan Soltesz
What it is: Comma.ai, the self-driving car startup helmed by iPhone hacker George Hotz, has unveiled new details about its first commercial product, the newly named Comma One. TechCrunch reports that the $999 aftermarket kit will allow buyers to give their cars semi-autonomous abilities on par with Tesla's Autopilot.
Why it's important: Peter's blog on the rise of self-driving cars mentions the implications of autonomous vehicles on our society. When this technology comes online at scale, it has the potential to save millions of lives -- each year, we lose 1.2 million people to traffic accidents in the U.S. alone -- and inject some 2.7 billion hours of productive time into the economy. | Join the Discussion
Spotted by Peter Diamandis
What it is: Sandisk has just released images of its SDXC prototype card, which boosts 1 terabyte of memory. That makes it the current biggest SD card on the planet, with 16,384 times more storage than the 64GB SD card Sandisk parent company Western Digital released just 16 years ago. While The Verge rightly points out that this 1TB SD card will likely be expensive, relatively slow to write/read information, and still susceptible to data corruption or loss, we know that it's only a matter of time before its price-performance ratio improves.
Why it's important: This SD card has more storage capacity than many modern laptops. As sensor technologies continue to get better and cheaper, we'll increasingly need data storage solutions that can keep up with 4K, 8K, 360-degree and virtual reality footage on smartphones and other mobile devices. | Join the Discussion
Spotted by Cody Rapp
What it is: Four Thieves Vinegar, a medical hacking collective, has created an open-source, DIY version of the EpiPen emergency allergy medicine and auto-injector that costs just $30 in off-the-shelf materials. They designed the device in response to parent company Mylan's controversial EpiPen pricing strategy. "The pharmaceutical company Mylan, which is the only manufacturer of the device, was recently shown to have raised the prices of a single device from $57 to $318 -- that's a 461 percent increase -- since acquiring rights to it in 2007," reports MIT Technology Review.
Why it's important: Open-source communities have always sparked innovation and helped us solve big problems (DIY Drones, Wikipedia, Linux and the rise of hackerspaces are just a few examples). As even more people around the world gain access to powerful medical technologies, these collectives will proliferate. How might an open-source community demonetize a core product or service in your business or area of interest? | Join the Discussion
Spotted by Dan Swift
What it is: The latest electric bus from Proterra, the Catalyst E2, has just logged some impressive statistics at the Michelin Laurens Proving Grounds in South Carolina: 600 miles traveled on a single charge, and a reported nominal range between 194 and 350 miles on a single charge when simulating realistic driving conditions. This means that, for the first time, an all-electric bus is capable of serving "the full daily mileage needs of nearly every U.S. transit route," as a Proterra press release describes, making it "the first direct replacement for fossil-fueled transit vehicles."
Why it's important: In the Proterra press release, CEO Ryan Poppel describes the implications of the Catalyst E2's achievements succinctly: "The question is no longer who will be an early adopter of this technology, but rather who will be the last to commit to a future of clean, efficient, and sustainable mobility. With the Catalyst E2 offering a no-compromise replacement for all fossil fuel buses, battery-electric vehicles have now broken down the final barrier to widespread market adoption." | Join the Discussion
Spotted by Aryadeep S. Acharya
What it is: Scotland has unveiled its first of four turbines for Phase I of the MeyGen tidal stream project – the world's first large-scale tidal energy farm – designed to generate electricity from Scotland's northern tides. The 1.5-megawatt turbines, developed by Atlantis Resources, each weigh 220 tons and stand 49 feet tall. Project organizers ultimately plan to install 269 turbines with a total capacity of 398 MW, which would be enough energy to power 175,000 homes.
Why it's important: Peter has previously written about the new developments, occurring seemingly every day, that indicate a near future with abundant energy. This project's success would be a global milestone for the entire tidal power industry, and a significant step closer to that future. | Join the Discussion
Spotted by Aryadeep S. Acharya
This email is a briefing of the week's most compelling, abundance-enabling tech developments, curated by Marissa Brassfield in preparation for Abundance 360. Read more about A360 below.
At Abundance 360, Peter's 250-person executive mastermind, we teach the metatrends, implications and unfair advantages for entrepreneurs enabled by breakthroughs like those featured above. The program is highly selective and we're almost full, but we're still looking for a few final CEOs and entrepreneurs who want to change the world. Apply now for Abundance360 Summit if you'd like to develop an Abundance Mindset.
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