Technologies To Be
Every so often I have an idea for new technologies that have yet to be created or conceived. I usually forget about them right away, only to see them being sold by some big company a year or two later. Not all of them are revolutionary ideas. Actually, most of them are probably things that lots of people have though about, but no one has taken the time to create. Anyway, here are a few of my ideas...
- An OpenSource NDMP library, complete with bindings to common scripting languages (Perl, Python, etc.), and client / server packages. The API should be simple to understand and program against, despite NDMP's underlying complexities. This would give other OSS software packages, such as Amanda, the ability to backup various different platforms using a standards based protocol. It would also eliminate the need to purchase outrageously priced client agents from the big-name backup software vendors. I personally think this would be an outstanding project for Google Summer of Code or even a graduate level course in software engineering.
- The personal VoIP phone. Much like a cell phone (or possibly even as a feature on a cell phone), this phone has the ability to attach itself to Wifi or LAN networks, register itself with some sort of a public VoIP provider service, and send and receive calls free of charge. For whatever reason, despite the fact that people send email, IMs, and various other forms of digital communication free of charge each and every day, these same people think they have to pay by-the-minute for voice calls. It makes no sense.
- A centralized global database for contact information. I know, I know, invasion of privacy, junk email, identity theft, spam, blah blah blah. Get over it people. If someone wants to track you down and/or send you something, they will find your contact information, so why not make this a useful feature. The idea is that someone keeps an online database of contact information for everyone, and companies such as banks, magazine publishers, and utility companies are required to actively monitor this single source for changes in your contact information. If your email address changes, they know it and automatically change it in their systems. If you move to another city, everything gets automatically re-routed. If you're going to be on vacation in France for two months and want all of your snail mail, email, and phone calls to be routed to a different location, you can simply log into a web site for this big database of contact information and enable this. I don't think people or businesses should be required to use the database, but it would benefit both to do so.


2 Comments:
I know exactly what you mean. For me it's not always technology but the random useful tool/tech/whatnot. Only a few years later to see it come to reality by someone else making a fortune. It happens to the best of us.
By
Wedge, at 2:39 PM
A LONG time ago, I wanted a cordless with speaker phone on the handset. At the time, no one made one. Finally, I found TWO companies they had them. Then I thought about a caller ID that would say the number instead of displaying it...a few years later, that came out too! We are all there with you.
I love the Idea of the VoIP phone! That makes so much sense when we have so many places right now that have WiFi. We just need to live in a city where WiFi is all over the city for free. It's a great idea but a long ways a way from being practical. You should start it!
The where am I database...yeah, sorry, I am one of those people who have had a stalker and dont' like everyone knowing where I am. I get what you are saying though. Be nice when someone moves you only have to put in your new address once instead of contacting banks, credit cards, post office, etc of your new address. Plus, how are people going to run from their bills? LOL
By
G13, at 11:03 AM
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