Spimes everywhere
By Tom Storey
Beyond the frontiers of the next generation
of search stands yet another world: the world
itself. Imagine furniture, cars, cutlery and
power tools communicating with each other in an
organized network that far exceeds anything we
know today.
That’s what award-winning science fiction writer
Bruce Sterling sees. He outlines his ideas in his book
Shaping Things, an Internet-of-things pitch about
the crumbling distinctions between what we currently
know as the virtual and the actual.
Sterling sees a future network of objects,
which he calls Spimes, embedded with rudimentary
communications—RFID chips—and tied
to interconnected databases. The objects are
precisely tracked in SPace and tIME, creating
an entire world that is searchable. “You can think
of Spimes as being auto-Googling objects,”
he says.
Here’s how it would work, according to Sterling.
A manufactured item starts with a digital blueprint,
its specifications and tolerances available online
even before it exists. Automated production and
shipping records provide a detailed history of the
materials and procedures that went into making
it. Once it’s off the production line, a global positioning
system tracks it in space and time. Social software lets people critique it, offer advice and
suggest improvements. Ad-hoc networks like Bluetooth
and Wi-Fi keep the item and the people who
use it in constant communication. And if it was
designed for disassembly and recycling, the object
is tracked well beyond the end of its useful life.
In this brave new world of ubiquitous network
connectivity, clothes embedded with chips communicate
with sensor-equipped washing machines
about colors and their suitable washing temperatures,
and grocery bags remind their owners that
they have forgotten something.
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