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Technology Untangled

Is technology changing the way we speak?

Technology Untangled

Hewlett Packard Enterprise

Cloud Computing, Everything As A Service, Future Technology, Information Technology, New Innovations In Technology, It Consultant, Cloud Native, Containerisation, Iot, Disruptive Technologies Of The Future, Machine Learning, Neural Networks, Cool Tech, Latest Technology News, Virtual Machines, Gadget News, Hybrid Cloud, Internet Of Things, Technology Consulting, Hpe, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, New Technology 2020, Containers, Hci, Information And Communication Technology, Hyperconverged Infrastructure, Converged Infrastructure, It, Tech, Sustainable Tech, Digital Technology, Hp Hyper Converged Infrastructure, Enteprise It, Digital Transformation, Cloud Storage, Deep Learning, Tech News, It Management, News, Vmware, Artificial Intelligence, New Technology, Modern Technology, Sustainability, Technology, Hyperconvergence, Latest Technology, Disruptive Technology, It News, Saas, Business Continuity, Network Security, Technology Software, Hyper Converged Infrastructure Vendors, Xaas, Software As A Service, Circular Economy, Advanced Technology, Technology Scouting, Technical Engineering, Most Innovative Tech Companies, Educational Technology, Autonomous Vehicles, Cloud Architecture, Ict, New Technology 2021, Tech Solutions, Science And Technology, Technology Design, Infrastructure As A Service, System Technology, Cloud, Dhci

5.069 Ratings

🗓️ 16 January 2024

⏱️ 40 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode, we'll explore how technology is changing the way we communicate. But much more than that, we're going to be looking at how it's actually changing our relationship with language itself.

Ever since the first pictograms which date way back over 5000 years, we've been searching for technologies to communicate with each other in more widespread, more efficient ways. The printing press, the telegram, the telephone, and the internet have all evolved into what we're now using today: live streaming; chatbots; VR and AR technologies and, of course, social media. The thing is, the pace of change has grown remarkably in recent decades. We're more connected than ever.

And nothing is changing that faster than AI, in particular generative AI. It’s a core area of interest for HPE Chief Technologist, Matt Armstrong-Barnes. He can see the incredible potential for globe-spanning communication that AI brings, from instant translation to live captioning, but he’s also wary of taking the human out of the loop and losing the important context, nuance and difference that makes language so special and effective.

That’s also a challenge for Courtney Napoles. She’s Linguistic Engineering Director at Grammarly, an AI-enabled software platform which aids human writing. Despite being a tech firm with a strong machine learning underpinning, they rely on humans in the loop to ensure that communication remains effective for us, rather than trying to pull us towards homogenised, machine-learning inspired writing styles.

The rise in assistive technology is having unintended benefits, too – in particular, it’s opening up the door to greater representation in the workplace, and bridging communication barriers when it comes to accessibility needs. Rob Koch is a data engineer and principal at Slalom Build, and heads the group Deaf In The Cloud Dot Com. He’s seen a remarkable breaking down of barriers in the last few years as technology has enabled him to communicate more effectively with colleagues and customers. There’s a way to go, but he’s optimistic about the future.

And speaking of the future, where are we headed next? Leslie Shannon is Nokia’s head of trend scouting. She’s keeping a keen eye on the way we communicate and the language we use, and is seeing a stark generational shift away from text and towards video and augmented reality solutions, embracing the additional context that body language and gesture can add to traditional, ‘flat’ conversations – and changing the way we speak to our tech and the language we use in the process.

Statistics and sources cited in this episode:
Global communications market value: https://www.statista.com/outlook/tmo/communication-services/worldwide
US communcations market value: https://www.statista.com/outlook/tmo/communication-services/united-states
Size of the Digital Acessibility market: https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/digital-accessibility-software-market

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

More and more we find ourselves moving away from actual text because computing power

0:10.6

lets us get at better ways to represent the information that we're asking for and that we're looking for.

0:17.6

And it's not that language is going away, not at all. It's that the text representation of the language is greatly diminishing in use.

0:25.9

Ever since the first pictograms, which date over 5,000 years,

0:29.6

we've been searching for technologies to communicate with each other in more widespread,

0:34.1

more efficient ways.

0:35.6

The printing press, the telegram, the telephone, and the internet

0:39.2

have all evolved into what we're now using today, live streaming, chatbots, VR and AR technologies,

0:46.1

and of course, social media. The thing is, the pace of change has grown remarkably in recent

0:51.9

decades. We're more connected than ever.

0:55.1

So what's next?

0:56.5

Where will we be even in just the next few years?

0:59.8

In this episode, we'll explore how technology is changing the way we communicate.

1:04.1

But much more than that,

1:05.4

we're going to be looking at how it's actually changing our relationship with language itself.

1:12.0

Because tech isn't just changing the way we communicate.

1:16.6

Academic linguists generally agree it's changing both the words we use and the way we use them.

1:23.8

We've linked to some of those papers in the show notes.

1:38.3

Okay. We've linked to some of those papers in the show notes. You're listening to Technology Untangled, a show which looks at the rapid evolution of technology and unravels the way it's

1:46.0

changing our world.

1:47.0

We all hosts, Michael Bird and Aubrey Lovell.

1:50.0

The role of technology in communications has been growing ever since the 19th century, when

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