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'Future hurtling towards us': Intel CES Asia keynote looks forward to the internet of things

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Kirk Skaugen, general manager of Intel's client computing group, speaks at the inaugural CES Asia conference in Shanghai. Photo: SCMP Pictures

Exponentially faster computer processing and wireless charging will drive the internet of things revolution, attendees at a major technology conference in Shanghai heard today.

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Giving the introductory keynote at the inaugural Consumer Electronics Show Asia, Kirk Skaugen, general manager of Intel's client computing group, said that the world was moving to a state where "everything that consumes electricity computes and communicates".

"The future is really hurtling towards us," he said, explaining that within a decade "there will be about 50 billion connected devices in the world: improving our lives, our health, saving time, and making us safer, as well as many unimagined benefits".

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With the 50th anniversary of Moore's Law – the observation that computing power increases exponentially – this year, Skaugen said that Intel's button-sized Curie computer possesses more processing power than a 1990s supercomputer the size of a ballroom.

He identified one core area which will lead to widespread adoption of the internet of things: wireless charging.

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