This industry changes so much that it's tough to see what's coming, but Microsoft's researchers—all of whom are women—say they know Credit: Thinkstock Microsoft researchers have shared their annual predictions of what they believe will be the big advancements in technology within the next 10 years. The predictions were made by 17 different researchers at the company, covering 10 different areas. Predictions are always a dicey thing. Stewart Alsop will never live down his prediction that “the last mainframe will be unplugged on March 15, 1996.” Twenty years later, IBM still sells its z Series mainframe. Oops. Still, the Microsoft wizards have some interesting predictions. And for this year’s list, Microsoft’s prognosticators are all women. Microsoft is celebrating Computer Science Education Week around the globe, with special emphasis on women and girls, given the fact women account for only 20 percent of computer science graduates in 34 of the countries which are members of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) yet are half the population. Some of the predictions from the women: One of the great algorithmic advances of the next decade will be the development of algorithms that are fair, accountable and much more robust to manipulation. The search box will disappear. It will be replaced by search functionality that is more ubiquitous, embedded and contextually sensitive. By 2027, we will have ubiquitous virtual reality systems that will provide such rich multisensorial experiences that will be capable of producing hallucinations that blend or alter perceived reality. By 2027, automation will give rise to a new economy in which most people’s societal contribution comes from the data they generate as they go about their lives rather than the work they do. By 2027, we will have a quantum computer that can break at least low-strength traditional cryptographic systems. By 2027, the majority of software engineers will be facile in programming systems that reason about estimates and produce models with statistical methods. In 2017, systems will increasingly re-architect themselves to support interactions without a graphical user interface. We’ll see fewer users installing apps on their devices and more apps turning into behind-the-scenes services for chatbots and personal digital assistants. See all of the researchers’ predictions here. Also by Andy Patrizio: Microsoft, BlackRock form group to raise $100 billion for AI data centers Enfabrica looks to accelerate GPU communication Intel rumored to be working on major core update Related content news Supermicro unveils AI-optimized storage powered by Nvidia New storage system features multiple Nvidia GPUs for high-speed throughput. By Andy Patrizio Oct 24, 2024 3 mins Enterprise Storage Data Center news Nvidia to power India’s AI factories with tens of thousands of AI chips India’s cloud providers and server manufacturers plan to boost Nvidia GPU deployment nearly tenfold by the year’s end compared to 18 months ago. By Prasanth Aby Thomas Oct 24, 2024 5 mins GPUs Artificial Intelligence Data Center news Gartner: 13 AI insights for enterprise IT Costs, security, management and employee impact are among the core AI challenges that enterprises face. By Michael Cooney Oct 23, 2024 6 mins Generative AI Careers Data Center news Network jobs watch: Hiring, skills and certification trends What IT leaders need to know about expanding responsibilities, new titles and hot skills for network professionals and I&O teams. By Denise Dubie Oct 23, 2024 33 mins Careers Data Center Networking PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe