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The goofy and weird products of CES 2023

I picked the best products of CES 2023, and now it’s time to figure out the goofy and weird products.

The line between best/cool/innovative and goofy/weird/stupid can be a fine one. After all, we truly don’t need that much more gadgetry than a computer, a smartphone, the internet and basic household appliances. But tech companies have convinced us that spending on cool tech is a great use of disposable income. They’re also in the process of telling us the metaverse is the next big thing.

Beyond setting the big trends, CES also shows us the big flops. There was a “gallery of flops” historical exhibit in the Eureka Park part of the show, but it kind of flopped because they didn’t have access to keys for the lockers where they kept their exhibit items. It was a gallery of nothing when I walked by.

Many people made fun of the Withings urinalysis scanner for your toilet, but I found that far more practical as a useful preventative measure –a good way to catch signs of diseases — and not just a vanity thing about the “quantified self.” That’s why I’m not inclined to make fun of innovations in health.

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But some of these products made me laugh out loud, as useful as they might seem to some enthusiasts. Just remember that everybody has a different line when it comes to division between the cool and the weird. Sometimes a product gets weird when you attach a price to it, like the $250 dog feeder I wrote about years ago that sought to replace a $5 dog dish. Or the $5,000 Kohler shower system that I saw this year. As part of a home remodel or a luxury home purchase, the $5,000 shower system isn’t all that crazy.

Other everyday products made you wonder if they were really necessary just because you connected them to the internet, giving rise to a new internet-of-things gadget. Now we’re seeing AI/machine learning getting infused into everyday products, and the wave of nothing is starting again.

Without further ado, here’s the weird products of CES 2023. Like them or not, they’re all fun.

The Ella smart baby stroller from Glüxkind Technologies

Ella can rock your baby by itself.
Ella can rock your baby by itself.

I looked at other publications and found from Canada made a lot of weird CES lists. It showed off the Ella AI-powered baby stroller with a motor. More properly, it uses some algorithms to assist parents with their strollers. It has a self-driving capability, but not while the baby is actually in the stroller. That only kicks in if you have to hold the baby in your arms and push the stroller at the same time. It also uses sound to coo your baby to sleep with white noise and a rocking motion. When you’re going uphill, the motor kicks in to assist you.

This is an example of taking an everyday thing and making its smarter. It’s putting intelligence at the edge of the network, and it doesn’t really need to send your data back to the cloud. I suppose I shouldn’t call this weird because it could be very useful for its target parents, and it was conceived by new parents. But it’s certainly something I didn’t expect see at the show. Another surprise? The $3,300 price tag.

BMW’s Dee changes colors and emotions

Last year, I thought BMW’s color-changing car was impressive. And that was only when it used E Ink to change its surface color from black to white and back. Now it’s back with a vision for a new concept car dubbed BMW i Vision Dee. Now the car demo showed 32 different colors.

BMW’s Dee changes its color on the fly.

It also had an augmented reality system via the windshield as well as an AI assistant named Dee. While the company is going for that Knight Rider Kitt fantasy car, it is veering into the weird with the “Digital Emotional Experience” of creating a car that is your friend that laughs and jokes.

Hollywood icon Arnold Schwarzenegger helped bring the car to life in a YouTube promo video. I believe we’re getting a bit more into the neighborhood of the film Her, and that definitely feels weird. But maybe there will come a day when a car that changes colors will be normal. BMW says Dee is coming in 2025.

LG MoodUp brings the party to the kitchen

The LG MoodUp refrigerator will change its colors depending on what you want.

LG Electronics showed off its MoodUP technology for changing the LED door panels of its refrigerators. It lets consumers create a customized lighting scheme for the refrigerator with a wide range of vibrant colors to suit their mood or the environment.

You can also play music via its built-in Bluetooth speaker to set the tone in the kitchen whether they’re entertaining a crowd or enjoying a weekday meal. You can control it with the LG ThinQ app, choosing from dozens of colors and multiple sizes. It has 190,000 color combos.

You can also choose moods such as Season, Place, Healing and Pop. Season, for example, uses the tones and hues of nature to represent different times of the year, while Healing elicits a feeling of wellbeing through the use of soft, soothing colors, creating a calming mindfulness space. Because all of the best parties happen in the kitchen. It’s coming this spring. Not to be outdone, Samsung has a fridge with a 32-inch screen.

Aromaplayer adds scent to your videos

Aromajoin announced its AromaPlayer, which lets creators customize their videos by adding their own scents to them. After picking up a video from your own library or by using a YouTube link, you can add scents on the timeline to set up the perfect smell, timing, and duration for a scent to go with your video.

Kyoto-based tech startup Aromajoin said the scented video platform was powered by its proprietary Aroma Shooter technology, which can switch between various scents without any delay. AromaPlayer is a web application that can be easily access from a Google Chrome browser. There are a few hundred kinds of scents available, from coffee to orange.

LG Styler ShoeCare deodorizes your sneaker collection

LG Styler ShoeCase deordorizes your stinky shoes.

Sneakerheads will pay a lot for their shoes and probably go to extremes to show them off. That’s why LG Electronics created LG Styler ShoeCase and its accompany LG Styler ShoeCare. You can stack your sneaker collection into the different cases in the display. And you can also clean and deodorize the shoes usin the TrueStream nozzles that refresh the shoe smell and soak up excess moisture. It takes 37 minutes to deodorize up to four pairs of your shoes.

Kohler’s aromatherapy Sprig showerheads

Kohler’s Sprig aromatherapy shower system.

Kohler launched its Sprig shower systems that infuse your shower experience with aromatherapy. It’s like a spa in the bathroom with natural shower infusion pods, versatile body and linen mists, and premium bath bombs that provide a peaceful escape through aromatherapy.

Sprig infusion systems can retrofit to an existing shower to diffuse aromatherapy into water, making it simple for people to get your dose of aromatherapy with your shower. It’s costs $140 for the shower system and $24 for the pods that you can use eight times each.

Blok cutting board with a built-in screen

Blok cutting board with a screen.

The Blok cutting board comes with a 13-inch by 20-inch display that you can use to watch recipe videos while you’re looking. With a $39 a month subscription, you can learn how to cook healthy and delicious meals via live and on-demand cooking classes led by expert chefs.

You can also detach the screen for cleaning. The price? $700. That’s more than your usual cutting board. I just use my iPhone for this purpose. But Blok calls this the Peloton of the kitchen. While you’re at it, you might check out Samsung’s Bespoke AI Wall Oven, which can livestream what you’re cooking and warn you if something is burning.

The Nowatch isn’t a watch on your wrist

The Nowatch came from Hylke Muntinga.

Five years ago, Hylke Muntinga lost six friends in a year, as they all died via accidents or disease. At a funeral, he realized that he didn’t want to be in the rat race anymore. And 2.5 years ago, he found out he was going blind through a rare disease. So he decided to create the Nowatch, which is actually not a watch. It’s a watch-like wrist band with a gemstone at its center. It has fitness sensors from Philips. But its main function is to remind you that you don’t need to know the time, and that you should live in the moment, Muntinga told me in an interview at CES 2023. It starts at $387. It has sustainable packaging.

“It helps you lead a more balance life,” he said.

The Skyted voice-silencing mask

Skyted is a mask that muffles your voice.

SkyTed makes you look like Bain from the Batman movies. But its purpose isn’t to make you menacing or to distort your voice. Its purpose is to silence you.

You can use it as a mask that filters out viruses. But it can also enable you to do phone calls on planes or public places, talking as loud as you want with total privacy. It uses the same tech to muffle aircraft engines in its design so that you can shout into the mask and no one except the person you are calling on the phone will hear you. I could use one while playing games late at night, when I don’t want to wake up the rest of the house with my shouting.

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Dean Takahashi

Building a greener future begins with buildings

Smart city concept. Communication network. 5G.

Image Credit: metamorworks // Getty Images

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Turning sustainability ambition into action begins with buildings. The built environment is the single largest emitter of carbon, ahead of even transportation and agriculture. In fact, nearly 40% of the world’s carbon emissions come from commercial real estate, with the industry’s total footprint expected to double by 2060.

Yet despite real estate’s outsized environmental impact, the built environment receives only 5% of climate tech investments. It remains an untapped opportunity for companies looking to meet sustainability targets.

Most companies have yet to forge a strategy that connects their building operations and their long-term climate goals. Technology will be the answer for businesses to reach net-zero moving forward, from developing a strategic plan to adopt efficiency improvements, to replacing legacy systems with smarter, greener ones.

Creating a sustainability action plan

Green buildings have been a part of the global consciousness for decades — from the formation of the United States Green Building Council (USGBC) in 1993 to rate the sustainability of buildings, to the WorldGBC Net Zero Carbon Buildings Commitment in 2018 calling on the building and construction sector to decarbonize the built environment.

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However, with outdated energy and equipment operations continuing to hinder progress, not enough companies have a clear roadmap to green their buildings and get their real estate to net-zero carbon emissions.

The first step companies need to take is implementing a data-driven, outcomes-based approach to inform their goals and longer-term strategy.

Companies will likely have to evaluate their monthly utility bill expenses, energy usage, equipment efficiency, water consumption, recycled waste versus landfill waste, and carbon emissions to create a baseline. They can then use that baseline to compare their performance to industry benchmarks and identify milestones they want to reach on the path to net-zero. However, this should just be the start of measuring environmental impact. Organizations should be tracking sustainability performance consistently to know how they’re progressing toward their goals and where to adjust along the way.

From there, organizations must create a strategic sustainability plan, basing goals and metrics on where data is telling them to take action.

Strategies should focus on actionably reducing consumption and emissions in the existing real estate portfolio and ensuring new developments are efficient, making use of renewable energy wherever possible. In a present reality where climate disasters happen frequently and our continued reliance on fossil fuels is severely impacting people’s health around the world, this type of groundwork will pave the way to a more sustainable future.

Technology should drive progress

Once we determine a strategic roadmap, it’s time to get into the tactics and technologies.

Green buildings are also smart buildings, inherently tech-enabled to make real-time adjustments that reduce emissions, use resources more efficiently and optimize environmental and economic performance. The potential for technology to further reduce energy consumption in existing and new commercial buildings is enormous. On average, 30% of the energy used in commercial buildings is wasted, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Fortunately, today’s data collection and analytics tools are more than able to deliver the insights companies need to make proactive decisions, including:

  • Internet of Things sensors that provide real-time data on a building’s energy usage, occupancy, equipment and systems can help companies know what exactly needs to be addressed.
  • Artificial intelligence can leverage these insights to identify how to make spaces more comfortable while saving energy, improving indoor air quality and bringing fresh air inside, and providing proactive maintenance recommendations to prevent future issues.

Additionally, a large amount of a building’s energy is spent on heating, cooling and lighting — and technology should play a role in making these processes greener and more efficient. Recent research found that sustainability and environment controls are the top technology that companies plan to adopt in their workplaces over the next three years. For example, technology built for lighting and HVAC efficiency takes measurements to make real-time micro-adjustments and continuously optimize equipment. This new-age operation of buildings, driven by technology, is a critical factor in real estate’s ability to reach net-zero.

Greening buildings today is all about smart technology that will power sustainability-built environments. There are many other technologies and building adjustments for companies to consider when creating or retrofitting green buildings, from water controls to solar shading devices. Each organization will need to determine what makes the most sense for its unique strategies and goals.   

A green future is profitable

It’s important to note that although there may be higher upfront costs associated with greening a building, they tend to be offset by lower long-term lifecycle costs.

People today also want to live and work in green buildings. Not only do such buildings align with the societal shift towards net-zero, they’re also better for tenant health and employee productivity. And there’s an opportunity for greater gains from stepping up sustainability efforts, with green buildings being less costly to operate, lasting longer and increasing in value over time.

In fact, research reveals that net-zero carbon (NZC) intervention measures directly impact a building’s bottom line and that failing to decarbonize leads to significant financial risk. For many buildings, meeting 2050 decarbonization targets put forward in the Paris Climate Agreement is grounded in retrofitting current spaces, which can also garner higher rents, reduce financial risk and generate higher occupancy rates and tenant satisfaction.

Ensuring buildings are sustainable should be a top priority in every organization’s strategy as they start taking tangible steps towards reducing emissions and reaching net-zero. The time is here to build a more sustainable future — and it starts with the buildings themselves.

Ramya Ravichandar is VP of sustainability products at JLLT.

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Ramya Ravichandar, JLL Technologies

One year later: Apple’s rules on data privacy force a rethink on customer engagement

Double exposure of human face and circuit board.

Image Credit: Getty Images

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Last year’s update to Apple’s privacy policy is one of those events where the worried predictions ended up being exactly what transpired: The significant reduction in marketers’ ability to personalize and target ads based on consumers’ digital behavior and the downstream impact on the social media giants’ ad revenue.

Even worse, the dollars still being spent by Chief Marketing Officers (CMOs) have become less effective. Sure enough, by some measures, ROI plunged nearly 40%. This new environment has marketers scrambling. But it hasn’t changed their behavior dramatically yet.

Marketers are still acting as if we live in an advertising world enriched by an almost unlimited amount of available data. Many have yet to pivot in the way I think would help them most: By realizing that, in this post-privacy age where marketers are given less information about individuals or their digital consumption across other applications, it makes it vital to engage with customers immediately after they express interest.

Human-centered interaction

Consider this example: I recently did a search online for kids’ bikes and discovered a wasteland of old-world advertiser thinking: Everything I saw, from the high-priced top four Google pay-per-click (PPC) links to all those fortunate enough to be listed afterward, was basic. A simple link back to a site.

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Maybe those who clicked through to the site would see an ad for a flash sale or some other enticement. More noticeable was what I didn’t see: Any attempts at engagement.

I’m referring to the sort of human-enabled interaction that many marketers still believe (incorrectly, I think) will not scale effectively. These include click-to-message or click-to-call prompts, which engage highly interested, possibly motivated consumers in fewer clicks (with a lot less frustration) as opposed to them finding them on their own.

In an ideal world, consumers are engaged with a resource — human or otherwise — that help them understand their options and propel an eventual purchase.

Driving conversion in a world where you have less information about a potential buyer requires a different approach. This means putting in place channels for conversion at every opportunity, rather than simply asking those same consumers to do their own homework, engage passively with a website, and expect the same results as when you could count on some degree of interest from those you targeted (later) with a link or discount.

Exchanging value

It is not enough to assume that each person you reach is the ideal demographic candidate for your product, especially those that require a high amount of consideration. Some exchange of value still needs to take place, where marketers are providing something a customer needs — which in most cases is just more information — in exchange for their attention and, hopefully, their loyalty.

If these requirements weren’t necessary, mattress stores or any physical retail would no longer exist. That they still do is proof that consumers are after something beyond just a transaction and proof that it is now a digital marketers’ challenge to re-create the three-dimensional relationship that still exists in-person in a one-dimensional world.

Apple’s privacy policy change revealed in many ways just how lazy some marketers had gotten. They had become accustomed to an environment where they could learn as much as they wanted about each and every customer by watching signals closely for future buying behaviors.

Yet the absence of that world doesn’t mean marketers are doomed. It simply means that they need to find new and creative ways to accomplish their goals, including relearning some old lessons they may have forgotten.

Nick Cerise is chief marketing officer of TTEC, a technology-enabled services company providing customer experience, engagement and growth solutions to clients worldwide.

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What digital workers are and why the market is rapidly growing

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Digital workers help scale business processes that require accurate data and around-the-clock precision. They perform simple copy-and-paste work, such as entering data into a system or extracting information from PDFs, emails and spreadsheets. 

According to Grand View Research, the global RPA workforce will expand at a rate of 38% between now and 2030. In my role at OpenBots, I’ve spent the last year talking with developers, partners, and automation leaders to understand the scale and present reality of digital workers.    

Using multiple workers or a digital workforce enables organizations to handle complex workflows for customer-facing and internal projects, with scaling being a shared theme across industries. 

A digital worker is a robotic process automation (RPA) bot that mimics human behavior and interactions on a computer, which involves many applications, websites, and documents.

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Traditional programmers and citizen developers build them using RPA tools available on intelligent automation platforms to perform manual, high-volume, and rules-based tasks.

Task automation using RPA is typically the first step in automating business processes. The next step is to add a layer of intelligent document processing that combines AI and machine learning (ML) to process documents.  

How to build digital workers

You can build a digital worker from scratch after taking certified courses or watching tutorials on an RPA academy — many free ones exist. It’s helpful to know some fundamental development concepts, like input, outputs, and parameters, but you can get up-to-speed quickly if you’re new to RPA development.   

Building a digital worker is straightforward if you have a development background or are tech-savvy. There are affordable low-code platforms with hundreds of built-in commands to get you going. You can also extend functionality by adding custom C# code or Python to your commands.    

If you’re in a leadership position, you’ll want to consider outsourcing the development to an experienced automation partner with expertise in your industry. This will ensure you’re focused on clear business objectives while the partner has the technical know-how to build digital workers that align with your goals.  

Why digital workers are important

Teams in the banking industry, along with many others, rely on digital workers to augment their human workforce. A notable example is KeyBank, which has a robust digital workforce to scale its processes. Without digital workers, they would have hundreds of hours of work left undone each week.   

Tedious processes that follow strict rules, like copying data into a system and verifying its accuracy, are standard in back-office tasks. Tasks like these are essential for a business to function, but that doesn’t mean that a highly trained employee has to perform them.  

Humans can only work so many hours before getting tired and don’t always complete tasks similarly. Digital workers, on the other hand, perform rule-based processes without deviation. This consistency translates into increased revenue, lower compliance costs, and efficiency. 

Working with a development partner

Organizations new to automation will have to either build their digital workforce themselves or have it made for them. Choosing a development partner offers direct advantages. They’ll be able to guide you on the best place to start and can develop a proof of concept in a matter of weeks for your first automation.  

Digital workers can perform almost any task a human worker can do on a computer. Because it’s so broad on how you can incorporate, those going the DIY route often get stuck in the analysis paralysis stage, unsure where to begin.   

A partner will help narrow the focus on processes that will produce an immediate ROI. The automations have to make sense and also produce results to justify their value. Working with a partner ensures they are building a quality digital worker that serves your needs.

Building automations yourself

If you’re in operations, it may make sense for you to build an automation yourself. You are in the trenches and know processes that could benefit from automation. This path is ideal for people who enjoy learning new terminology and understand the potential as they will become the champion of automation in their organization.   

Courses will make you a competent citizen developer and give you the foundation to create simple to medium complexity digital workers. You can learn the RPA basics in a few weeks. From there, you’ll gain experience by expanding bots, building others, deploying them, and maintaining them. 

Understand who will update and maintain your digital workforce. Having a straightforward change management process is also underrated. Passwords change, and programs will need to be updated, which will knock a bot offline. Have a plan on who on your team will take ownership of your digital workforce. 

Prove it through testing

The digital workforce is still a relatively new concept. Even veteran automation leaders with decades of experience are still getting used to it. Even so, the opportunity of becoming more efficient and competitive is a theme that applies to businesses of all sizes and types. 

The truth is that no one can tell you the exact ROI of adding a digital worker to your team. Through execution, you’ll understand its impact on your business and staff. Like the example of KeyBank, digital workers have become crucial to their operations, but they had to prove it first.  

There is also no reason to wait. There are low-risk options to start building digital workers, and it’s not the theory that will win the day — but testing rapidly, failing fast, and being open to change. 

Jason Dzamba is director of media at OpenBots

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How businesses can get quantum ready for long-term success

Person with laptop working with data

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Proof of concept quantum computers are here. Many businesses are getting ‘quantum ready’ — that is, exploring how this technology could give them a competitive advantage.

Working for a quantum computing company, of course I’m going to say getting quantum ready is a savvy move. But just as we’ve seen with the likes of AI and cloud computing, forward-thinking businesses are often the ones to reap the early rewards of such technical innovations.

But quantum computing is different. It’s not just another technical innovation, it’s a completely new way of carrying out computations in the future.

Quantum computers work in a fundamentally different way to today’s computers. While traditional machines use ‘bits’ that are either a 0 or 1, a quantum computer’s quantum bits (qubits) can exist in a superposition and, effectively, be a 0 and 1 at the same time.

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This quantum quirk unlocks a vast amount of computational power, allowing us to tackle a new range of problems that would take billions of years to solve on today’s supercomputers.

As quantum computers mature, a vast number of applications will be unlocked across multiple industries in everything from drug discovery to financial services and climate change. And most of these use cases we cannot begin to imagine yet.

That’s also why it is important for businesses to start interacting with quantum computing now. Because by getting ‘quantum ready’, the world can understand the real impact of these machines on society. And you can start to understand and prepare for the potentially significant impact that this disruptive technology will have on your business.

What is quantum readiness?

Quantum-ready is effectively understanding the opportunities and threats of quantum computing and learning how to use this technology to your advantage.

Being quantum ready does not mean you need to understand everything about quantum computers or have your own machine.

Quantum readiness will look different to different organizations, depending on your processes, requirements and industry.

A high-level quantum ready framework may include the following steps:

  • Learn and reach out: Get a high-level view of where quantum is, and where it is going. Start to establish both your internal champions and engage with quantum companies to find thought partners that are right for you.
  • Map your computational impact landscape: For many, the journey involves gaining an understanding of your current computational challenges. What does your problem landscape look like? Plot your computational challenges against “impact on the organization” and “computational difficulty”. Are there any high value, yet computationally intractable challenges facing your company? These problems might be suitable for quantum computers. Collaborate with quantum experts to map this to quantum computing capabilities. Consider reaching out to quantum computing companies to learn more about what’s possible, but also to help with this mapping exercise.
  • Build skills: Build an internal capability in quantum that is appropriate for the business’s opportunity in this area. Or rent time on today’s small-scale machines to start solving toy problems and getting to grips with how these machines work.
  • Be patient: Commit to the longevity of the development of quantum computers and reap the rewards as quantum computers become more powerful.

Once this initial exploration phase is complete, then the truly interesting conversations around quantum computing can start.

A lot of work needs to be done between industry end-users and quantum companies to prepare for the world of quantum computers. Crucially, this should be done in tandem with the actual development of these machines.

Get ready for the future

There’s one issue that’s particularly important to understand to futureproof your quantum strategy: scalability. Over the last few years, quantum computing companies have hit the headlines, growing their machines one qubit at a time.

Every step forward is important. But to unlock the commercial potential of quantum computing, we need to make a machine with millions of qubits. Today’s biggest machine has 127 qubits.

So, when you start to reach out to quantum computing companies, there’s one question to always ask: “can you really get me to one million qubits?” Because a long-term, “million-qubit” mindset is needed to make sure you protect any investments in this technology.

It’s important for businesses to understand this and work with a company that’s aligned with this ambition. Because when quantum computers are ready, you need to be ready too.

Ilan Elson is VP of operations at Universal Quantum.

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Ilan Elson, Universal Quantum

Executive interview: Rajesh Naidu, Expedia

We speak to Expedia’s head of IT architecture about what a modern, scalable architecture for the cloud should look like

Cliff Saran

By

Published: 05 Jan 2023 11:30

The career of Rajesh Naidu, chief architect and head of data management and data governance at Expedia Group, mirrors the way the pendulum of IT architecture has swung from packaged applications to data centricity. Looking at the trends in enterprise architecture, he says: “Enterprise architecture has definitely had its share of being in vogue and out of favour.” But, as Naidu points out, when architecture becomes an ivory tower, it can become obsolete.

“When ERP [enterprise resource planning] and packaged applications were dominant, it was all about integration and standardisation,” he says. “But with the advent of the cloud, DevOps and other new paradigms, IT architecture is all about getting the foundation and the design right.”

For Naidu, events like the pandemic test an IT leader’s ability to design and build systems that are resilient and available all the time. He believes IT architecture has changed to become more focused around identifying what is core to the organisation. The age-old ‘build versus buy’ debate is a major part of the conversation across the organisation as business leaders assess the core competency of the business. He says this debate in IT is about “where do you want to build core differentiating applications versus where you can buy applications”, and believes those off-the-shelf packages are there to supplement the core in-house system by adding context. Naidu spoke in a recent Computer Weekly Downtime Upload podcast about Expedia’s IT architecture.

He joined Expedia towards the end of the pandemic, having previously worked at Starbucks for almost a decade. Beyond the virtual interview process, Naidu says: “Making the switch from an old company to a new company during the pandemic was daunting at times, because you are leaving a known culture and a known surrounding with individuals you worked with.”

The travel sector suffered significantly during the pandemic, and as Naidu notes, the industry needed to reinvent itself, ready for when the surge in post-pandemic travel would resume. “I looked at it as a challenge to be at the forefront of travel, which is an industry which certainly looked like it was going to be the first to rebound after the pandemic,” he says.

The IT architecture at Expedia has needed to evolve as the business has grown. “Expedia is no longer the online travel agency that we built 25 years ago,” says Naidu. “We are powering travel through our brands. We have over 168 million loyalty members and over 50,000 business-to-business partners.” It now needs to manage bookings across more than three million properties and more than 500 airlines, car rentals and cruise lines. “This is a pretty big scale in terms of the partners,” he adds.

In addition, Naidu says the platform needs to process 600 billion artificial intelligence (AI) predictions a year. “We have over 70 petabytes of data, and in some cases we are using AI and ML [machine learning] to evaluate 360,000 permutations on a single web page.”

From an IT architecture perspective, Naidu says the challenge for Expedia is to provide an architecture that uses building blocks that scale easily and meet the need to remove complexity from its current platform, which has grown organically through company acquisitions. “We are migrating towards a common platform strategy that consolidates applications while driving efficiency, improving developer experience and reducing the platform costs,” he says.

This involves making use of public cloud services to provide scale, resiliency and the ability to scale up and down as needed. From an enterprise application perspective, he says Expedia is in the process of moving 9,000 applications. “We are focusing on a combination of people process and technology,” he says. “We have the right training for our people, to make this transition to the cloud.”

Naidu says Expedia has also set up an Architecture Guild, which brings together all the IT architects in the business to help them understand the current technology footprint, what the future system should look like, and share problems and common architecture and design patterns.

Unlike a centre of excellence, Naidu says the Architecture Guild is focused on bringing the practitioners of the architecture together, building best practices, along with doing the actual work of designing the system.

“It’s not just about putting policies and white papers out there and having teams go off and try to figure it out for themselves,” he says. “This is actually about working closely with the teams designing systems. We certainly want to avoid being an ivory tower. We want to be pragmatic. There’s going to be moments when we provide a centre of excellence for expertise, but in many other cases, we are actually doing the hands-on design work with the teams.”

The common goal in Expedia’s IT architecture, says Naidu, is to build what he describes as one of the “largest Kubernetes migrations in history”.

Where it makes sense, Expedia will be containerising its workloads and moving them to a Kubernetes cluster. It will also be using AWS EC2 instances. Some application functionality will be provided as services hosted in the public cloud, while others may be available through software as a service, which requires integration with Expedia’s enterprise architecture. By making use of public cloud paradigms and refactoring applications where necessary, Naidu says Expedia will be able to develop new software functionality much faster than before.

Listen to the Computer Weekly Downtime Upload podcast with Rajesh Naidu >>

Read more on CW500 and IT leadership skills

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Stephania Buresh

Securing low Earth orbit represents the new space race

Are we entering a new space race? In a manner of speaking, it could be argued we’re already in that race, as the barriers to launching satellites into low Earth orbit (LEO) become lower, and cyber criminals subsequently identify a new source of critical information to disrupt, intercept, utilise or even take over.

In this respect, the “race” that has already begun is one that requires both governmental and private players to unite and ensure optimum resilience across the systems being placed in our planet’s periphery. Meanwhile, competitors in this – long distance but relatively quick – race are looking to build on examples of early exploitation, to enhance their competencies, and prepare for a future where space is simply a database with a bird’s eye view.

But what was the starting pistol that triggered this particular contest?

“Ultimately, it is a combination of engineering factors that contribute to dramatically reduced costs of launch,” says Adrian Nish, head of cyber at BAE Systems Digital Intelligence. “You can get things into space much more cheaply than in decades gone by, largely thanks to advances in technology, and manufacturers being able to integrate off-the-shelf solutions as part of the resultant satellites.

“‘Space as a service’ is almost analogous to the cloud in that respect, in that customers are being offered platform space to ‘rent’, and to run applications. This commercialisation is driving the sector to become more viable, but wherever there is data being generated or stored, you also have a growing cyber security risk.”

A piggyback into low Earth orbit

BAE Systems itself has had products and services in and around space for a number of decades already, providing radios for clients including the European Space Agency, as well as for deep space missions.

Nish explains that it has also sought to capitalise on the future scope of space as a new information arena, with a particular focus on low Earth orbit.

“As part of this effort, though, we’ve made sure we’re part of the security conversation, because space as an attack surface is fundamentally different to what it was previously,” he says.

“If you think about a geostationary satellite, they are very much bespoke systems designed for long-life endurance in harsh environments.

“Conversely, for low Earth orbit and nanosatellites, you can build them using more commercially available technologies. The good news is that it makes them easier to develop and manage. But it also makes it easier for attackers who also know what they’re doing with these systems too.”

In this sense, there isn’t a whole lot of difference in terms of the attack surface between on-the-ground platforms and the landscape envisaged slightly further up.

That attack surface, rather, comprises not just the physical satellite, but also a ground station which effectively controls the satellite. Joining the party also are a host of receivers that then pick up information from the satellites, and aid communications.

The upshot being, an attacker doesn’t have to hit the satellite to hit the satellite.

Nish continues: “The ground stations in particular are interesting targets as they are pretty much the same as enterprise networks. There are people sat on desktops or laptops feeding into the network. It just so happens that, at some point, that enterprise network will allow a connection up to an operating system in low Earth orbit, which might also be as familiar as a Linux system.”

If a threat actor can gain access to said laptop or desktop, then the potential to piggyback on whatever is being fed up to that operating system becomes a very real possibility.

“Once you’ve got that right, and are being delivered to an equally recognisable system, you then have potential access to peripherals in the form of cameras, motion sensors, commands, the spacecraft, essentially. Malicious things can easily follow.”

A variety of impacts

For anyone in any doubt of whether this likelihood of attack – and race – is already underway, criminal activity may be sparse so far, but certainly not insignificant.

In the spring of 2022, global communications company Viasat experienced an outage across Europe, at almost the exact time that Russian troops entered Ukraine. As well as being a commercial broadband provider, Viasat is also used by the Ukrainian military. On closer inspection, the main damage seemed to be collateral across the continent, as a result of a misconfiguration sent down to modems.

However, upon even closer testing of the memory chips from these modems, it was revealed that they had been essentially wiped out, akin to wiping the operating system from a PC. The EU, UK and US have all since concurred that the attack originated from Russia’s GRU, which gained access to the internal management system through a misconfiguration, developed malware to deploy across the network to wipe the modems, and pushed that malware through on the day of the invasion. It wasn’t the satellite itself that was being targeted – it was merely a portal to impact connections and operations on the ground.

“This really demonstrates the lure of satellite attacks – it’s the variety of impacts, and disruption on offer,” Nish notes. “Yes, the majority of attackers are likely to be motivated by money, with space just another frontier to enact ransomware attacks on manufacturers, law firms, finance companies, etc.

“State actors, meanwhile, absolutely need to be factored in as well. They’ll be after what they always have been – political, military or commercial insight; to misdirect; to attain data; to disrupt or destruct; to gain intelligence; and to simply see what another country is seeing as silently and covertly as possible.”

Securing the entire bubble

This is why a united, collaborative defence must be established between public entities and private players.

BAE Systems is already part of the Space Security Information Exchange (SSIE) – a by-invitation group backed by the Centre for the Protection of National Infrastructure (CPNI) and the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) – of which Neil Sherwin-Peddie is currently chair. He is also head of space security at BAE Systems Digital Intelligence, and is hugely motivated to mobilise stakeholders in this race’s early stages.

He says: “UK agencies are already coming together to gain better visibility across multiple platforms and from multiple perspectives. As well as BAE Systems, the UK Space Agency and the European Space Agency, other big private players such as Airbus are also involved in the conversation, while the role of smaller businesses and even startups can’t be overlooked. Security is the main part of this conversation between us all, addressing policy, process and procedure to make sure we’re working in one common direction.

“At the moment, there isn’t a user manual or guidebook to follow to secure platforms, so it really is a case of addressing the entire infrastructure as a complete function.”

Ground stations are key to this effort, as the receptor of information being transmitted down from satellites, but also as the controls to guide periphery tech in space such as radios, sensors and communications tools.

“As a starting point, this lays the foundations for mass management of the large, overall infrastructure, and security of the total enterprise,” Sherwin-Peddie adds. “We can’t just look at ground stations though, or user terminals, or the spacecraft; it’s about securing the entire supply chain, knowing that if one element becomes weak or vulnerable, then the whole network has assurances in place to mitigate that.”

First isn’t always best

Sherwin-Peddie notes the level of urgency in this development conversation across numerous public and private parties. And, to that end, agrees that we are in something of a race; if only against time at this stage.

It’s an assertion that Nish agrees with, circling back to the comparisons with cloud’s rise to prominence.

“For years, we presumed and predicted that cloud would be the next big thing for attackers to target. How could it not be, considering what it was designed for? But then nothing really happened for a long time. Then…SolarWinds.

“Suddenly, those initial predictions became true, all because adoption had reached a scale that became too attractive to ignore. Attackers had spent the time up to that point learning how best to exploit the cloud, what the gains would be, what data they’d be accessing if successful, all so they could strike when the iron was hotter.”

In this analogy, space is an iron that is warming up at considerable pace.

Nish affirms: “As [low orbit] becomes more utilised, more relied on, more essential, the attacks will come. Simply, the race for us is getting ahead of that inevitability and establishing resilience ahead of time.”

It shouldn’t be forgotten that space still represents a technical step change from what both developers and attackers will have experienced before, despite the growing familiarities and lowering barriers to launch.

From both a hardware and software perspective, the level of cutting-edge solutions set to be deployed in this realm presents a huge opportunity to slow down would-be exploiters and achieve an initial level of resilience that ensures a sizable lead in this race.

Sherwin-Peddie concluded: “I have in the back of my mind constantly that while this is a race, first to market might not be the best to market. This is why a collaborative approach is so vital, in developing systems and platforms that are sustainable and durable in this context.

“If we get these initial conversations and developments right, with plans in place to mitigate challenges or attacks, then really, it’s such an exciting ‘space’. One that will soon house hugely impressive feats of engineering, and technological breakthroughs for the future.”

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Bong Mischke

Top trends in tech, and retail’s early adopters

Consultancy group McKinsey & Co announced 14 top trends in tech in 2022, stating: “Technology continues to be a primary catalyst for change in the world.”

It noted that business executives can “plan ahead better by tracking the development of new technologies, anticipating how companies might use them, and understanding the factors that affect innovation and adoption”.

Computer Weekly looks at the 14 trends identified by McKinsey, highlighting the opportunities for retailers and the industry’s early adopters of the tech behind the trends.

1. Advanced connectivity

Technologies in this space include optical fibre which helps connect people to high-speed internet, Wi-Fi 6 connectivity, and advanced cellular tech standards such as 5G and 6G that are replacing 4G. According to McKinsey, advanced connectivity’s impact on retail could be the enablement of better digital and cross-channel experiences resulting in increasingly personalised and targeted shopping experiences for consumers.

Improved connectivity would also potentially allow retailers to better manage and improve existing day-to-day operations such as inventory and warehousing, as well as coordinating supply chains and adding augmented reality to boost product information.

IT analyst group Forrester suggesst in its The CIO’s guide to 5G in the retail sector report that retailers may be better off pursuing Wi-Fi 6 over 5G.

Dan Bieler, author of the report and principal analyst, says: “[Retailers] have achieved some great solutions with existing technologies, and they will not risk upsetting everything in the short term where they don’t see a clear [ROI] for making additional network infrastructure investments in 5G.”

Bieler says Wi-Fi may be preferred by tech leaders in retail simply because they don’t need the transformative powers of 5G, unless they are rolling out deployments of connectivity-heavy solutions such as virtual reality.

2. Applied artificial intelligence (AI)

The McKinsey research which accompanied the trends report found that the top two user cases in retail for applied AI were marketing and services. Across all industries, these departments – as well as product and service development function – represent the business areas making use of applied AI more than others.

The technology supporting this trend is machine learning (ML), and its various subfields such as computer vision and natural language processing.

An example of the latter in action in retail could be in chatbot usage to answer customer service or staff queries. John Lewis Partnership (JLP), for example, has worked with Zendesk since 2015 to run its Partner Choice internal website, which allows staff to access their company perks. Implementing the new tech means routine queries can be directed to its Help Centre with the assistance of automation, giving staff a chance to focus on higher-value activities. A rota system by which only one agent is managing support and answering queries at any one time is now in place.

Raphael Hewett, partner and publicity manager at JLP, says: “At the start, we had about five agents working full time dealing with queries, but the productivity boost from using Zendesk tools means that this part of the team’s role is quite a light touch now.”

3. Cloud and edge computing

Edge refers to data computation happening at close proximity to the physical location creating the data. It has emerged as an option for businesses as they realise the migration of servers from on-premise to cloud sometimes fails to offer the required processing speeds for some components of their modern strategies.

In retail, edge computing can help provide frictionless checkout experiences or real-time personalised promotions – which as McKinsey says, rely on “low latency edge computing and analytics applied to a range of in-store data streams”.

Amazon’s Just Walk Out technology is a prime example of edge in action. The tech is used in Amazon Fresh stores where customers check in via app before automatically being charged as they walk out without visiting a checkout.

Michael Zampani, principal software engineer with the physical stores tech team at Amazon, says: “While Amazon Web Services [AWS] helps us to elastically scale our resources to process data, stores can be a long distance from a data centre, and there can often be a large amount of data to process.

“Our initial prototypes and installations in our own store formats started with all of our processing done in the cloud. As we scaled to different locations and larger store formats, we quickly needed to iterate on an architecture to allow us to run our algorithms where it makes the most sense – either in the cloud with elastic compute or in the store where the data is.

“To manage these bandwidth issues, we built an edge computing architecture to process sensor data and compute receipts locally without going back and forth to the cloud. Placing compute close to our data helps us to improve reliability by sending less data over the internet.”

4. Future of bioengineering

Describing this tech trend, McKinsey says: “Converging biological and information technologies improve health and human performance, transform food value chains, and create innovative products and services.”

For retailers and consumer goods companies, bioengineering can support the development of manufacturing of more sustainable, cost-effective products – or, as McKinsey says, it might entail “the creation of sustainable, cost-effective, and higher-quality materials and production processes for consumer goods, such as clothing, accessories, shoes, beauty products, and packaging”.

Many new ideas in this space are coming under the jurisdiction of the London Fashion Fund (LFF), a group with City of London funding aiming to find and generate a portfolio of entrepreneurial fashion ventures. One of the directors of the LFF is Jane Shepherdson, brand director of Topshop in its heyday and former CEO of Whistles.

“What we do is we fund small startup businesses who we think will be the future of a responsible fashion industry,” she says.

Among the ideas supported includes a company growing cotton hydroponically, Hydrocotton, which uses less water than traditional methods. That business, Shepherdson says, already has a deal with H&M.

Another company backed by LFF is developing items that photosynthesise. The items reportedly have cotton absorbing more CO2 than a 100-year-old oak tree but, as Shepherdson muses, “you have to leave the jacket in front of the window otherwise it will die”.

Although recognising the outlandish nature of some of these ideas, she adds: “Clearly, some of these things will work and make the world a better place, and help us move forward.”

5. Future of clean energy

Most of the UK’s largest retailers are exploring how to remove fossil fuels from their fleets – both long haulage and delivery vehicles – and transfer to cleaner energy and power supplies.

According to McKinsey, this is the trend where there was most investment ($257bn) in 2021, across sectors.

Much of the shift depends on a more rapid supply of alternatives to fossil fuels, and retailers have continually called on the government to lay down more plans for this changing infrastructure. For example, is hydrogen power the way forward, or perhaps its biofuel? Retailers are demanding guidance in this area.

Andrew Opie, director of food and sustainability at the British Retail Consortium (BRC), says: “I don’t know a retailer or a delivery company that isn’t looking at its sustainable transport at the moment.

“But there are some big areas of government policy that need to be delivered – the most obvious is electric vehicles, in particular for HGVs. What’s the next generation of HGVs going to be when we start to phase out diesel? That’s where government really needs to get its act together in terms of signalling the infrastructure for retailers.”

In the meantime, there are several examples of retailers experimenting with innovative technology in this space, such as Tesco’s electric van fleet roll-out in Scotland, and Sainsbury’s work with Flexible Power Systems to find greener tech to power its transport refrigeration units.

Currys is trialling use of solar to help power its vehicles. To help reduce the fuel consumption of nearly 200 vehicles across its network, the electricals retailer is working with Trailar to place “cutting-edge, ultra-thin solar panels” on van roofs. It has connected the panels to the vehicle battery and when solar power is generated it is used to power various on-board activities, as well as the vans’ tail lift.

6. Future of mobility

McKinsey says: “More than a century after mass production of automobiles began, mobility has arrived at a second great inflection point – a shift towards autonomous, connected, electric, and smart technologies.”

So how does this impact retail? Much of the work in this space crosses over into trend five and the future of clean energy, but there is also the potential for companies, as Boots has shown on The Solent and Isle of Wight, to use airborne drones to make deliveries.

As covered by Computer Weekly, Co-op is the UK retailer with the most prominent usage of autonomous machines for online delivery. Working with Starship Technologies in Milton Keynes, Northampton, and Leeds, the retailer fulfils local delivery of goods via GPS-tracking robots that route their way from stores to customers’ homes.

It was revealed at The Evening Standard’s Plug It In event in December that Ocado and Asda are both trialling driverless delivery vehicles in London alongside tech firm, Wayve, which hints at further retailer innovation in mobility in 2023.

7. Future of space technologies

Advancements in space-related tech could have a positive impact on the ground too. For example, the European Space Agency looks set to approve a three-year research project to see if solar farms in space can produce electricity to power properties on Earth. That could have positive consequences for consumers and businesses alike, including retailers.

McKinsey also says the future of space technologies might involve retailers being able to track moving shipping containers and providing positioning and navigation information. From a consumer product perspective, it adds that businesses might be able to experiment under specific space environment conditions to inform design and manufacturing of sneakers and footballs.

8. Future of sustainable consumption

The environmental awakening in society over recent years is making individuals and organisations think more than ever about their carbon footprint and the impact their actions have on the planet.

The trend of sustainable consumption centres on the use of goods and services that are produced with minimal environmental impact, and according to McKinsey includes the use of low-carbon and sustainable materials. It covers production of goods, packaging and the whole ecosystem that surrounds consumer behaviour.

Increasingly, there are enabling technologies emerging to transform industrial and individual consumption to address environmental risks such as climate change. Retail arguably has most to gain here, of course, as an industry that is built on the manufacture, selling and consumption of goods.

Lots of work in retail is under way to reduce the industry’s impact on the planet. An example of a retailer working on addressing the topic of sustainable consumption with new technology is Ocado, which is working with Echo Packaging to run a “closed-loop” system for its plastic bags.

Ocado delivery vans collect customers’ used and unwanted plastic bags at the doorstep, and this packaging is send to Echo where it is broken down into pellets, moulded into sheets, and then used to make “new” plastic bags which Ocado sends out to its shoppers.

9. Immersive reality technologies

Immersive-reality technologies enable people to “see the world differently” through mixed or augmented reality or “see a different world” through virtual reality, according to McKinsey, which says venture capitalists funded this sector to the value of $4bn in 2021. It says that represents the second largest annual figure after 2018, indicating that this is an area of tech regaining traction after the pandemic. This tech has multiple uses in retail – both customer-facing and behind the scenes in warehouses and the supply chain.

Cosmetics companies are among the brands to have established versions of this tech that are regularly used by their customers. In December 2022, direct-to-home cosmetics business Avon said it was launching a virtual try-on online shopping experience alongside tech firm Perfect Corp.

The e-commerce feature will allow Avon customers to virtually “try on” around 400 makeup products, in the lips, eyes and face categories, through their mobile camera or desktop webcam. The retailer is putting representatives from the beauty company in place to advise customers while they use the technology.

Alex Long, head of omnichannel global marketing at Avon, says the tech will enhance interactions with customers, adding: “Until now, it has only been prestige brands offering this type of brand experience.”

10. Industrialising machine learning

Several of these top tech trends are interlinked, but McKinsey differentiates industrialising machine learning from applied artificial intelligence (AI) by saying the former refers to the systems that put AI and its subfields into production for real-life business use. Applied AI, it says, “refers to the real-world business use cases after the technical infrastructure is implemented”.

In short, trend 10 is all about unlocking the true potential of AI and ML, and holds potential benefits such as supporting scalability and interoperability within an organisation, as well as leveraging bigger, richer reused data sets. Embracing this trend can lead to reducing costs through faster development and deployment, and standardised processes.

Will Higham, futurist at Next Big Thing, says: “Retailers are going to need to find a way to make things as efficient as possible in 2023. Creating more efficient communications between bits of technology or machine to human will be a focus. The latter will be about augmented intelligence – things that enable people in the supply chain to do things more quickly.”

Boots’ use of collaborative robots in the warehouse to help staff picking and packing during busy times such as Black Friday is an example of the latter in action in retail.

11. Next-generation software development

This trend broadly relates to progress in the field of software development. It’s an area continually evolving and improving, with next-generation tools or methods related to software application development.

Tools in this space include AI-enabled development, as well as low-code or no-code platforms. Part of the trend is the advert of a microservices approach to development enabling faster development as microservices and APIs serve as building blocks companies use to effortlessly add functionality to software.

Decathlon, through its work with Aiven, and Toolstation via partnering with Percona, are examples of retailers embracing next-generation software development practices. Computer Weekly covered the work in a previous article.

12. Quantum technologies

As the McKinsey analysis suggests, quantum-based technologies have the potential to provide “an exponential increase in computational performance for certain problems and transform networks by making them more secure”.

Be it quantum computing, quantum communication or quantum sensing, these futuristic technologies aspire to change our computational, networking and sensory infrastructure in the years ahead. It is early days in its influence on general enterprise IT, but companies such as Alibaba, Amazon, Google and IBM have already launched commercial quantum computing cloud services which are available to their customers, including the retailers that rely on these tech providers’ platforms.

Next Big Thing’s Higham says quantum computing is going to help businesses such as retailers make decisions “incredibly fast”.

Optimising delivery routes and the supply chain in general will be areas of focus with this tech capability, he says, adding: “It will probably help AI and improve chatbots too, as they’ll be more nuanced and they’ll be quicker to pick up on what people want and anticipate people’s needs.”

13. Trust and architectures and digital identity

Digital-trust technologies allow organisations such as retailers “to build, scale and maintain the trust of stakeholders in the use of their data and digital-enabled products and services”, according to McKinsey.

For retail and consumer goods companies, specifically, the emerging zero-trust architecture technology could have most impact in this space.

In effect, this is a type of IT security system design where all entities, inside and outside the organisation’s computer network, are not trusted by default. Instead, they need to prove trustworthiness – and this covers areas such as access management, device protection, network security and data encryption.

All of this will become increasingly important to brands such as Heinz as they build their own databases and go direct to consumer, and retailers such as Boots and Morrisons as they look to monetise their historic and new swathes of data by forging retail media partnerships with brands.

14. Web3

If, loosely speaking, the original Web was about reading on the internet, Web 2.0 was more interactive – exemplified by the growth of social media – then Web3 is putting the ownership of the internet back into the hands of the user so they can truly participate and create.

As a result, as-yet-undreamed of new digital products, channels and experiences will emerge in this world. They will provide the capability of fusing the physical and the virtual – a prime example of this in retail would be customer engagement and e-commerce in the metaverse.

As McKinsey notes, Web3 will involve “disintermediation with a shift toward individual ownership and control over data monetisation, functionality, and value”. And retailers are using Web3 technologies to create new offerings, devise new modes of customer engagement such as loyalty programme that offer access to unique experiences, and to track and orchestrate logistics across global supply chains.

Ralph Lauren, for example, is for the first time “designing for the metaverse first” via a new venture with Epic Games, the maker of the online game Fortnite. The partnership debuts a digital apparel and accessories collection which will launch in the Fortnite Item Shop, with a replica of the digital boot available in the physical world.

In the October launch announcement, Ralph Lauren said it was “testament to the company’s belief in the power of the metaverse”. David Lauren, chief branding and innovation officer, said: “Ralph Lauren has always designed dreams and created new worlds.”

He explained the collaboration with Fortnite represents “a completely fresh take on the Ralph Lauren brand – designing for the metaverse first – that is thoroughly focused on the future”.

Former Halfords and Morrisons CIO, Anna Barsby, who is now founder and managing partner at consultancy Tessiant, says more retailers and brands will be thinking about metaverse in 2023, but argues that explorations in this space “must have a point”.

“Brand awareness for the future generation I get, but beyond that I haven’t really seen a compelling story in that space yet,” she says. “People will continue to dabble – everyone is dabbling and a lot of digital directors are trying to get their heads around how can they get value beyond brand awareness. I think they’re waiting for someone else to do something cool, and they’ll all copy.”

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Rebecka Ramage

IT architecture: A Computer Weekly Downtime Upload podcast

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Rajesh Naidu, chief architect and head of data management at Expedia, discusses how the role of IT architect is evolving

While there is a definite trend to digitise, companies tend to be at very different stages of their digital transformation. Few organisations have the luxury of starting with a greenfield site; many are bound by an IT legacy spanning many years.

Until recently, Rajesh Naidu headed up IT architecture at Starbucks. He is now chief architect and head of data management and data governance at Expedia Group. Looking back at his past experiences and his time at Expedia, Naidu believes the main thrust of a digitisation strategy should be to target data and the differentiated capabilities that can be delivered with this data. Speaking about how this works at Expedia, he says: “For us, it’s all about using artificial intelligence [AI] and machine learning to power personalisation and personalised experiences for our travellers and business partners.”

Like many organisations that require highly scalable compute capacity for data processing, Expedia makes use of public cloud services. It uses AWS EC2 instances, and is embarking on a containerisation effort as part of an application consolidation exercise. Moving to the public cloud provides the scale-up in datacentre capacity organisations need to provide personalised experiences. “You still have to design your systems, but at the end of the day, you have certain scale challenges that you can address more easily with the cloud,” he says.

Naidu believes AI is moving beyond a buzzword to something with tangible business benefits. At Expedia, he says AI can be used for applications like price tracking and offer predictions for flight bookings. This is a powerful feature for travellers using Expedia, who are cost conscious and want to make sure they are purchasing the tickets at the right time. 

Price tracking shows past trends and future price predictions for flight searches. This, according to Expedia, enables travellers to see how their flight prices might change. For Expedia partners, it encourages travellers to consider and purchase flights they may otherwise not book.

AI is also being used in its smart shopping tool. This is designed to make it easier for travellers to compare and choose between offers by surfacing a wider range of options earlier and all in one place. For hotels, this includes room attributes, categories and upgrade opportunities. For flights, this includes different timings, stopovers, seat selection and baggage check.

Naidu says Expedia is also developing a conversational AI platform, which will be of interest to its 50,000 business-to-business partners. This AI system will be one of the first services available on Expedia Group’s Open World platform, the company’s new ecommerce suite, which offers building blocks such as payments, fraud, conversations and service that, Expedia says, can help businesses improve their travel services.

Read the full interview here >>

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Arden Center

Poll: Has Musk Influenced Your Decision on Buying a Tesla?

[flagged]

awb 8 hours ago | hide | past | favorite

I didn’t want one, but now I do


7 points

I never wanted one


39 points

I wanted one, but now I don’t


29 points

I still want one


7 points

Never going to buy a new car anyway, that’s nuts, but his antics are definitely off-putting.

Another interesting question might be if it’s affected anyone’s job application behavior.

I don’t understand this, if this is referencing Plaid the payment company are they known to be particularly “hardcore” with employees? My only other assumption is the fabric pattern which can be considered “loud” by some

Their service centers treat you like you are gum on their shoe. I’ll never buy another one. If it was once, I’d allow it could be a fluke. But it is constant, and in multiple states. Even simple parts are like searching for teeth on hens. It has to be a deliberate plan from Elon Musk.

I’m actually seeing the Tesla engineers do some positive things since Elon has been distracted by Twitter. Holiday update was solid and didn’t upset the apple cart, the return of a real steering wheel option for S/X, etc.

Ugly cars, kind of sporty yet also frumpy looking and the new front bumpers have always seemed unattractive to me. Clearly the automated driving features aren’t there yet, I like driving anyway so paying a heap for a car with features I’m not gonna use is a waste. More generally, seriously not a fan of Elon’s flippant nature. Having features turn off when you sell the car to someone else is not acceptable. I suspect that something will happen that will change the balance of how much you own the car even more in Tesla’s favor soon, and I’m not keen to be in line to test it.

Musk has caused me some serious internal conflict. I never liked him and have long thought of him as a conman. His antics on Twitter have only elevated my distaste for the man. And yet, as someone injured by the vaccine, I can only be grateful for the more open discourse that has been enabled since the acquisition.

Does National Socialist collaboration influence your opinion on wanting to buy a Mercedes-Benz, BMW, Porsche, Volkswagen, or Audi?

…or Ford (with two large factories in Berlin and Cologne during the Third Reich) and GM (back then owner of Opel)? Oh, and IBM/DEHOMAG or Disney products?

The difference is that Musk is running Tesla right now and not a human lifetime ago…

If elon was as distant in the rear view mirror as WW2 Germany, I’m sure people would feel differently.

Good news for Elon that all his crimes will be forgiven one day.

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Raleigh Howe