I really wasn’t expecting to write about the Metaverse
again so soon, after discussing
it in the context of Roblox last March, which itself followed a look at Epic
Games CEO Tim Sweeney’s vision for the Metaverse last August. But darn that Mark Zuckerberg!
Credit: niphon/iStock
Not many noticed when Mr. Zuckerberg told Facebook
employees in June that the company would become focused on building a metaverse,
but he got some attention when he expanded
on his vision for The Verge in late July. Then last Monday Andrew Bosworth, Facebook’s
head of AR/VR, confirmed
a product group had been formed to bring it about. And, finally, in an
earnings call last Wednesday, Mr. Zuckerberg and his executive team couldn’t
stop gushing about the importance of the metaverse to the company, and the
world.
So, yeah, the metaverse is in the news. And, once again, I worry healthcare is going
to be late to the party.
I won’t go into too much detail about what the metaverse
is; for those who want a deep dive, there’s Matthew Ball’s nine part
primer, or you could just read Ready
Player One. Mr. Zuckerberg described
it to The Verge as follows: “you can think about the metaverse as an
embodied internet, where instead of just viewing content — you are in it.” In the earnings call, he clarified: “The
defining quality of the metaverse is presence – which is this feeling that
you’re really there with another person or in another place.”
Depending on your age/preferences, the concept of “an
embodied internet” is either chilling or thrilling. Maybe both.
It’s potentially a big deal. Gene Marks, writing
in Forbes, says, “business
interactions will forever change.” The
Conversation’s Beth Daley goes further, stating
“creating a virtual world
for users to interact with their friends and family is not just a fancy vision,
it is a commercial necessity.”
It’s not VR, it’s not AR, it’s not 3D internet, although
all those may be part of it. It’s not
gaming, it’s not entertainment, it’s not social network, although all of those will
be part of it too. Mr. Zuckerberg
promises: “It’s going to be accessible across all of our different computing
platforms; VR and AR, but also PC, and also mobile devices and game consoles.” Not to overstate it, but he sees
the Metaverse as the “next generation of the internet.” Mr. Zuckerberg also described it as “the next
computing platform.”
Credit: TechCrunch
He is openly telling people that the goal is for Facebook
to transition to a metaverse company, “within the next five years or so.” Analysts on the earnings call pressed Facebook
to confirm an estimate of a $5b investment, but only got an admission that,
yes, the investment was “billions.”
Significantly, for Facebook, Mr. Zuckerberg believes:
“this is going to be not something that one company builds alone, but I think
it is going to be a whole ecosystem that needs to develop.” As
Mr. Zuckerberg said
in The Verge interview, “Hopefully in the future, asking if a
company is building a metaverse will sound as ridiculous as asking a company
how their internet is going.”
This will require interoperability; “People are going
to want to reach the people they care about no matter what service they're on
and be able to move between these.” In other
words, “it has to have the sense of interoperability and portability.” These
are not the kind of sentiments words we’re used to hearing from Facebook.
Nobody, not even Mr. Zuckerberg, thinks we’re going to
see a metaverse right away – perhaps five years, maybe ten, possibly more -- and
no one is really sure where the money will be.
It may become a “huge economy,” with “entirely new types of work” and
plenty of virtual goods, as Mr. Zuckerberg predicts,
but, admittedly, the concept is still not well defined. The Next Web warns:
“The hype train has arrived.”
That article, by Thomas Macaulay, goes on to add
There is some merit to the hype. Technological advances in fields like VR and AI are rapidly making virtual worlds more immersive and layered. Their escapist appeal has also grown during pandemic restrictions.
In the short term, however, buzzwords rarely live up to the hype. But once the underlying tech matures, effective strategies develop, and realistic objectives emerge? It has the potential to be truly transformational. Just don’t expect it to happen overnight.
Tech companies, you see, are deathly afraid of missing
“the next big thing.” They’ve been the
beneficiaries of previous next big things, and they know both how fragile their
perch is and how quickly a newcomer can ride that next wave past them. Just ask AOL, MySpace, Netscape, Kodak, Nokia,
or Wang, to name a few.
Microsoft famously
was late to realize the importance of the Internet, Google was
flummoxed by the introduction of the iPhone, Facebook didn’t
take mobile seriously enough initially, and Apple is still well
behind its peers in cloud computing.
Each survived, even prospered, but none wants to miss the metaverse too.
Not so much in healthcare, though. The incumbents just keep rolling along. For all the adoption of EHRs, they still are
not living up to the promise of better care and shared data. For all the ballyhooed gains of telehealth
during the pandemic, they’re already
starting to dissipate. For all the
investment in digital health, there’s no real sign that it saves money or
improves health. Healthcare takes new technologies and kludges
them into submission. Credit: The Hospitalist
Let’s face it: healthcare was late to computers (well,
at least to PCs). It was late to the internet. It was late to mobile. It still doesn’t understand the importance of
social media or gaming. It isn’t even
thinking about the metaverse.
I don’t know what health care might be in the metaverse. I doubt anyone does. But, for example:
- Your digital twin could see your doctor’s avatar (or an A.I. doctor!), for a virtual in-person visit;
- You could connect with others with similar conditions/interest in a much more personal and robust way than Zoom or Facebook allow;
- You could immersively educate yourself about health (and other) topics of interest.
More importantly, new uses will be found as people get
used to the technology, just as we found new uses for smartphones and the
internet as more people started using them.
This will happen in health care too.
Ignore it at your own risk.
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