by Earl Geertgens, president and CEO of FreeAxez LLC (Originally appeared in the May/June 2022 issue of FMJ ).
Machines are often depicted cinematically in a post-apocalyptic world where humans and machines are at war. They are so advanced they no longer require humans to operate. Meant as a warning of over-reliance on technology, these depictions fall short, failing to acknowledge the ingenuity and thought leadership that brought the machines to life in the first place.
Smart technologies are intended to enhance lives, not replace them. This puts people in a watershed moment — one in which both the built environment and how people interact with it through technology are in a delicate balance. The Internet of Things (IoT), now gaining traction as a household term, is exactly as the name implies — a wireless connection between inanimate objects that are able to interact with and even respond to each other.