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What big innovation do you expect within 10 years?  My crystal ball is no better than others.  Rather than predict innovations, I predict what characteristics they will have and how they might be invented.

1.  Mobility:  Future products will incorporate some degree of mobility and integration into the mobile lifestyle.  Smart phones fuel this.  But mobility is not all about communications.  Future products will take advantage of the data created by people as they move through their day.  The innovation templates, Task Unification and Attribute Dependency, are excellent tools for identifying these opportunities.

An MIT team is researching the feasibility of using cell phones as a unique tool to identify any emerging disease outbreaks. The team, led by Anmol Madan, said that a disease changes the mobility pattern of a cell phone user and by developing a software that tracked movements, phone calls and text messages of 70 students who were also daily surveyed for their health, the software was able to identify those suffering from an ailment.  Students who came down with a fever or full-blown flu tended to move around less and make fewer calls late at night and early in the morning. When Madan trained software to hunt for this signature in the cellphone data, a daily check correctly identified flu victims 90 per cent of the time.  Public health officials could also use the technique to spot emerging outbreaks of illness ahead of conventional detection systems, which today rely on reports from doctors and virus-testing labs. Similar experiments in larger groups and in different communities will have to be done first though.

To read the full, original article click on this link: Innovation in Practice: Characteristics of Future Innovations