The Prague Post - Clones, noseprints, flying taxis: Sci-fi meets reality at expo

EUR -
AED 4.334765
AFN 75.541512
ALL 95.675629
AMD 441.318218
ANG 2.112656
AOA 1082.3638
ARS 1589.289073
AUD 1.653808
AWG 2.126072
AZN 2.007051
BAM 1.956341
BBD 2.376637
BDT 145.108871
BGN 1.968913
BHD 0.445514
BIF 3557.653007
BMD 1.180331
BND 1.500602
BOB 8.154184
BRL 5.875215
BSD 1.180016
BTN 109.824419
BWP 15.811235
BYN 3.352798
BYR 23134.491158
BZD 2.373236
CAD 1.623268
CDF 2726.564845
CHF 0.920694
CLF 0.026677
CLP 1049.940269
CNY 8.062132
CNH 8.035559
COP 4241.189608
CRC 543.245522
CUC 1.180331
CUP 31.278776
CVE 110.29548
CZK 24.331332
DJF 210.126288
DKK 7.472742
DOP 70.329435
DZD 156.186161
EGP 61.9655
ERN 17.704968
ETB 184.246055
FJD 2.593076
FKP 0.877088
GBP 0.869296
GEL 3.17495
GGP 0.877088
GHS 13.038493
GIP 0.877088
GMD 86.164699
GNF 10353.861263
GTQ 9.021417
GYD 246.876132
HKD 9.245363
HNL 31.341661
HRK 7.537831
HTG 154.581409
HUF 363.494204
IDR 20209.63049
ILS 3.552201
IMP 0.877088
INR 109.868708
IQD 1545.827185
IRR 1553551.901506
ISK 143.79965
JEP 0.877088
JMD 186.331492
JOD 0.836855
JPY 187.416488
KES 152.618457
KGS 103.219934
KHR 4734.268193
KMF 494.558945
KPW 1062.267399
KRW 1735.198931
KWD 0.364522
KYD 0.983363
KZT 560.640182
LAK 25926.945187
LBP 105668.205897
LKR 372.349743
LRD 217.52827
LSL 19.322776
LTL 3.485211
LVL 0.713971
LYD 7.475066
MAD 10.915016
MDL 20.207413
MGA 4879.307046
MKD 61.638795
MMK 2478.549874
MNT 4220.3519
MOP 9.52105
MRU 46.893959
MUR 54.637624
MVR 18.236436
MWK 2046.148112
MXN 20.345345
MYR 4.663528
MZN 75.48202
NAD 19.32294
NGN 1593.589012
NIO 43.421632
NOK 11.137451
NPR 175.719071
NZD 1.996217
OMR 0.453814
PAB 1.180016
PEN 3.979766
PGK 5.191435
PHP 70.553706
PKR 329.131855
PLN 4.238729
PYG 7550.086447
QAR 4.301889
RON 5.091834
RSD 117.365031
RUB 88.968198
RWF 1728.062905
SAR 4.42866
SBD 9.499993
SCR 16.483553
SDG 709.37888
SEK 10.831604
SGD 1.499735
SHP 0.881236
SLE 29.039661
SLL 24750.950185
SOS 674.38065
SRD 44.182175
STD 24430.472378
STN 24.506565
SVC 10.324853
SYP 130.581455
SZL 19.317175
THB 37.744039
TJS 11.174635
TMT 4.137061
TND 3.426347
TOP 2.841954
TRY 52.785236
TTD 8.018148
TWD 37.233901
TZS 3076.205133
UAH 51.345389
UGX 4378.209907
USD 1.180331
UYU 47.483122
UZS 14330.960324
VES 562.48961
VND 31092.874149
VUV 140.853766
WST 3.256933
XAF 656.132762
XAG 0.014982
XAU 0.000246
XCD 3.189904
XCG 2.12667
XDR 0.816867
XOF 656.138322
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.656504
ZAR 19.287779
ZMK 10624.39467
ZMW 22.567045
ZWL 380.066159
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    0.1700

    22.66

    +0.75%

  • RYCEF

    0.4200

    17.66

    +2.38%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    15.56

    -0.58%

  • NGG

    -0.3100

    88.64

    -0.35%

  • BTI

    -1.3000

    57.39

    -2.27%

  • BP

    -0.4600

    45.98

    -1%

  • GSK

    0.2400

    59.18

    +0.41%

  • RIO

    -0.4200

    98.78

    -0.43%

  • RELX

    0.5650

    34.815

    +1.62%

  • BCE

    0.2250

    23.725

    +0.95%

  • CMSD

    0.2180

    22.878

    +0.95%

  • AZN

    0.1400

    202.38

    +0.07%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.93

    +0.08%

  • BCC

    0.8650

    82.415

    +1.05%

Clones, noseprints, flying taxis: Sci-fi meets reality at expo
Clones, noseprints, flying taxis: Sci-fi meets reality at expo / Photo: Thomas COEX - AFP

Clones, noseprints, flying taxis: Sci-fi meets reality at expo

The Mobile World Congress (MWC) is primarily a pow-wow for the big-wigs of the telecom industry, but far from the main thoroughfares of the vast conference there are always hidden tech gems.

Text size:

Here are some of the most offbeat products spotted by AFP.

- Eternal clone -

As advertising slogans go, "you can live forever" is up there with the best.

That is how Memori Yamato explains the "personalised AI clone" from her Japanese company Alt Inc.

"Your descendants can continue to speak and interact with you, even after your death," Yamato told AFP.

The idea is to upload as many videos, images and audio samples as you can while alive.

The system will use it to generate an AI mirror, cloning you forever in the digital world.

"It will look like you, it speaks in your voice, and it even thinks like you," she said.

The idea has been nine years in the making, she said, and feedback from early users suggests the technology has nailed appearances and voices.

- Noseprint ID -

A dog's nose carries similar identifying traits as a human fingerprint.

South Korean start-up Petnow took this info and ran with it -- like a dog after a stick -- to create a biometric database of pets based on noseprints rather than microchips.

"Since the 1940s, we've known that dogs' noses worked a little like fingerprints," the firm's Peter Jung told AFP.

He explained that around 100,000 animals are abandoned each year in South Korea, often because owners cannot afford vet bills.

"Less than 10 percent have chips because people don't like the process," he said.

Petnow just requires a photo and AI does the rest, ensuring the photos are good enough for identity purposes.

Jung says 50,000 pet owners have signed up since last year and he hopes the government will change the rules to allow his system to replace chips.

And cat lovers need not worry. Their noses may be too petite to be identifiable, but each feline face is unique and can be used in the system.

- Flying taxi -

A staple from the pages of science-fiction and the dream of the super-rich, flying taxis could be with us as soon as 2025, according to SK Telecom.

At the MWC, some attendees got an early taste, thanks to VR headsets and a real-life prototype complete with juddering seats.

Halfway between a helicopter and a drone, the craft has six electric motors that allow vertical take-offs and landings.

It can carry up to four passengers and move at speeds of up to 320 kilometres (198 miles) per hour.

South Korea's biggest telecoms provider developed it with Californian start-up Joby Aviation and hopes it will solve congestion in South Korea's cities without costing the earth.

"In Korea, in urban areas, we have severe traffic congestion, but constructing a mass transportation system like a highway or subway needs many social costs," said the firm's Ken Wohn.

"Using this UAM (Urban Air Mobility) service can shorten our customers' travel time without making so much infrastructure."

- Never alone -

In the future, we may live our later years in the company of "socially intelligent" robots capable of "building an emotional relationship" with us.

That is the vision of Spanish technology outfit Eurecat, which has developed a robot called NHOA -- or "never home alone".

It is designed to reduce the loneliness of older people living at home.

The orange and white robot stands 160 cm tall and can be controlled with a touchscreen and by voice.

Eurecat's David Mari said the aim was not to replace human relationships but to "humanise" the applications and connected objects used by older people.

N.Kratochvil--TPP