Ten O'Clock Tech Today Music, Tomorrow Our Lives Arik Hesseldahl, 10.29.04, 10:00 AM ET http://www.forbes.com/technology/personaltech/2004/10/29/ cx_ah_1029tentech.html NEW YORK - How much of your life could you cram into an iPod? That's the question I'm pondering in the wake of Apple Computer's release of the iPod Photo, the one with the color screen that can store and display digital pictures in addition to a huge collection of music. Gateway announced a similar device this week as well. In case you missed it, Apple Chief Executive Steve Jobs, ever the headline-generating salesman, personally took the wraps off the long-rumored iPod Photo this week. It looks a lot like previous iPods, but in addition to storing and playing lots of music, it can turn users' digital photography collections into slide shows set to music. Even better, on the player's docking cradle are two video-out ports, one for composite video, the other for S-Video, so the the iPod can be connected to a TV or other external display. That got me thinking, not only about the relatively obvious path that Apple could follow toward an iPod that can play video. The killer consumer app in this case would be playing video not on that tiny iPod display, but on an external monitor. Yet there are bigger ideas to consider. Could the iPod and similar devices be the start of something bigger in the area of personal data storage? Consider for a moment how far the storage capacity of the iPod has come, thanks to the relentless improvement in hard-drive capacity at Toshiba, the firm that supplies Apple with the drives that go inside iPods. When the iPod was first released, it crammed five gigabytes into a package the size of a deck of playing cards. Now the same device is lighter, thinner and stores as much as 60 GB. I'm willing to bet that an 80-GB player will hit the market before this time next year, and 100 gigabytes won't be far behind. One hundred gigabytes, that's enough to start storing a good bit of video. The first TiVo digital video recorders had 20-GB hard drives. But if you think beyond making music and TV shows portable, a handheld 100-GB device from which data can quickly and easily be accessed presents some pretty powerful uses. By some estimates, the average American consumer generates some 100 gigabytes worth of data in the form of financial, health, academic and other records over the course of a lifetime. How useful would it be for your new doctor if, on the first visit, you were able to furnish your complete personal and family medical history from an iPod-like device? Often half the battle against bureaucracy is having the sufficient information in hand to prove you are who you say you are. Having easy access to a digital birth certificate might save a lot of time in applying for a passport. Having an always-available copy of an academic transcript or a professional portfolio could come in handy at job interviews. Some types of information, such as medical data, could be kept on the device all the time, while other data could be rotated on and off as needed, just like favorite songs from a music collection that is otherwise stored on the PC. This idea of portable data has spawned some interesting devices. The Oqo handheld PC and Antelope Technologies' Modular Computing Core (see: "A PC In Your Pocket" [1]) are already on the market, while Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen's Vulcan Ventures FlipStart handheld PC (see: "Paul Allen's Mobile Computing Fantasy" [2]) is starting to take shape--I saw a demo unit earlier this month. Combine a computer that goes everywhere you do with a device that records everything you see, say and hear, and you need no longer rely on fallible human memory. Accenture has for years been working on a concept it calls the Personal Awareness Assistant. The idea is to turn your life into a reality-TV show. A tiny wearable camera and microphone could be used to record conversations. Add global positioning system chips, and it can remember exactly where and when those conversations took place. That, of course, raises the question of how much information storage is too much. After awhile, you'd have to wonder how much of the information you could record could be used in a timely fashion. If you're recording every conversation for future reference, you run up against the clock pretty quickly. You'd never have the time to replay it all, so the contents of the recordings would have to be searchable in some way. A study by researchers at the University of California at Berkeley last year pegged the amount of information created in the world in 2002--including digitally, on paper, on film or video, or any other format--at 5 exabytes, or 5 billion gigabytes. That amounts to about 800 megabytes for every person in the world, based on a population estimate of about 6.3 billion. And the amount of data produced grows at a rate of about 30% annually. When most people look at the iPod and devices like it, they see a shift in how music is being packaged and sold. But I'm starting to think we're seeing the onset of a more profound change in the kind of information we track and how we use it. Music is just the beginning. [1] A PC In Your Pocket, Arik Hesseldahl, 2004.01.09, 10:00 AM ET, http://www.forbes.com/2004/01/09/cx_ah_0109tentech.html [2] Paul Allen's Mobile Computing Fantasy. Arik Hesseldahl, 2004.02.17, 8:52 AM ET