Making a moonshot is almost more an exercise in creativity than it is in technology.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Moonshot thinking starts with picking a big problem: something huge, long existing, or on a global scale.
Moonshots live in that place between audacious projects and pure science fiction.
Why shoot for the moon? It matters because when you try to do something radically hard, you approach the problem differently than when you try to make something incrementally better.
I do believe that making a factory for innovation, a moon-shot factory, is possible.
Google X is here to do moonshot-type projects. Not just shooting to the moon, but bringing the moon back to Earth.
The moonshot for Google Glass is to harmonize the physical and digital worlds. It is specifically to find a way to help people be naturally, elegantly situated, physical and digitally, at the same time.
With light field technology, there is a huge opportunity for creativity in photography that hasn't been available in the past.
Technology, like art, is a soaring exercise of the human imagination.
Art challenges technology, but technology inspires the art.
What I love about new technology is that it really pushes the art. It really pushes it in a way that you can't imagine until you come up with the idea. It's idea-based. You can do anything.
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