When was the last time you were alone, without your smartphone?

Without your phone did you feel incapacitated? I’m sure, like most of us, you would answer YES to that question. Without our smartphones, we lose our connection to the world around us.

It’s our immediate gateway to our job, bank, social register, healthcare, photos – and for some, our fitness and wellbeing tracker. You could say that the smartphone is our remote control to life.

This iconic device is at the centre of the technology revolution which, of course, has been made possible by the 4G networked world. This has already radically transformed how we interact with information, people, markets, and services.

A new connected eco-system of things

Around the corner, a new world is rising. Here are five technology trends taking the world into rapid advancements where artificial intelligence is creating a new reality. In this reality we increasingly interact with computer systems, robots, and intelligent agents in our daily lives, both at home and work.

But how will this impact today’s smartphone era? Can the smart phone become more intuitive, can it work with our bodies? Detached from our human bodies, it’s still seemingly separate from us.

Yet, everywhere we go we take our smartphones. In them we leave a digital imprint of our life, a digital twin which reflects what we do, how we move and what we aspire to be.

While today’s intelligent network of things also known as IoT (Internet of Things) is limited, 5G connectivity will bring a new wave of billions of connected objects which will also be smart. Communicating with each other. This connected revolution offers consumers a whole new range of possibilities to renew our world.

Humans will work more seamlessly with robots

Today’s consumers expect systems to become much smarter. In a recent study, 56% of smartphone users expect telecom service providers to anticipate their needs before they themselves realize what they are.

Tomorrow’s smart zero touch networks will form a networked society where 5G connectivity, cloud edge computing and advanced analytics act as the backbone.

As the expected efficiency gains are to be so huge, it is likely that the thinking behind cyber physical systems will be incorporated in almost any sphere to work and learn alongside humans. And advanced internet users go even further, 40 percent even say they would like a robot that works and earns income for them, freeing up their leisure time.

Although the thought of robots doing our work for us, is perhaps tempting, that humans and robots will be working together is perhaps much more likely. To make this a reality cutting edge technology is required.

Billions of devices need to be orchestrated to realize full potential, which then requires hugely complex systems. For instance, it could enable smart transport systems based on autonomous vehicles, optimize energy consumption in a smart city or enable smart manufacturing where machines and humans work side by side.

However, one of the biggest challenges is a very basic one: we need to make these hugely complex systems easy to access and use.

Humans want lovable machines

When so many things around us are becoming smart, we will want to interact with them without having to reach for our smartphone and click through another app with yet another user interface. The easiest way for us to do this is to make the things more like us.

Currently, half of advanced internet users said they want to talk to their household objects much like they do to people today. And today, more than half of current users of intelligent voice assistants believe we will use body language, intonation, touch and gestures to interact with tech just like we do with people.

To make machines more human is to make them useable – but also loveable. No matter how fantastic new technology is, it needs to be loved in order to be used as frequently and intensely as our smartphone. However, there is a fine line to balance.

It seems that consumers do not want systems to become too human-like. In fact, half of advanced internet users say that not being able to tell the difference between a human and a machine would spook them out. It seems that lovable machines still need to be recognizable as machines.

In order for this to happen our devices will have to become aware of who we are, what we do, and how best to support us. And this will enable human creativity and problem solving on levels which we have never seen before.

AI and the Internet of Skills

Imagine that you were diagnosed with a terminal illness. Then imagine you could choose between two kinds of doctors. The first has access to all historic documented treatment and cases of your diagnosis; the other one relies on personal experience, the hospital and the extended medical network around them.

Which would you choose? The first one, right? Well, then you have chosen to go to a doctor which is also a creative machine – working with artificial intelligence. They will have the internet of skills, a continuously up-to-date library of best practice.

When we think about the technologies of the future we often tend to think in polarities – either or, this or that. Often the question discussed is: Robot or human? I think it is high time we start asking what happens if we say robots and humans.

We need to design systems guided by human principles, but not necessarily always with human involvement. The system needs to know when to ask for guidance and why. And we need to able to trace how systems take decisions and be clear on their authority level.

Consumers will share their data – if there’s value

How to best design these systems is still something that is being researched. The new human-based way of interacting with machines – voice, body language and so on – provides new exciting opportunities to create value.

But one thing these systems depend upon is our willingness to share our data. At Ericsson’s Consumer & Industry Lab, we have been studying the consumer’s relationship with data. And when it comes to data, we see the same requirements from consumers to be willing to share their data time and again.

Firstly, consumers want to give their permission for a company to use their data. Secondly, they want to gain clear value from sharing data, and thirdly, they want companies to be transparent as to how they intend to use their data. If these three preconditions are met, consumers will share their data.

In fact, half of consumers already want their telecom service providers to use the information they already have about them to provide a more personalized service.

In one sense, we can say that we have already entered the age when humans and intelligent machines are interacting and working together in almost every aspect of human life. But right now, we have only taken baby steps into the future.

Most of the zero-touch future is yet to be developed – and how we create that future is still in our hands – with the help of smart and lovable machines!

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