Monday, November 28, 2011

A Little Bit about You and a Little Bit about me


A Little Bit about You and a Little Bit about me



If you clicked on this link you’ve probably read some of my other blogs on writing and publishing online.  I can’t tell you who clicked on my blog but I can tell what country they are from.  I am amazed that my thoughts not only reached across America but across the world, from Korea to Bulgaria, Russia, Spain, Japan, United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada, Netherlands, Malaysia, India and Australia and the East coast of South Africa (Godom) to South America.

The Human race has been trying to communicate with each other since the cave drawings, radio, TV and the Internet.

You are all interested in writing.  I can also tell you that its only one or two people from each country that read my blog.  You are my links around the world.  I would like to thank you, “Thank You” for reading my blogs.  If you have a question or want to discuss something please look up “Lord Skyler and The Earth Defenses Force” on FaceBook and send me a message.  We are here to help each other.  Please keep in mind though that I am a writer trying to sell his books, so if you can buy a copy or share my Web site with your network of friends, I would appreciate it.

A little bit about me.  I am a father, a husband and most of the time a Human just being Human.  I am on a quest for knowledge to obtain wisdom.  Everybody is my teacher.  Every door of knowledge I open I see ten more new doors on the other side.  The more I learn the more I realize how much I don’t know.  I wear a smile on my face because I teach by example.  A Happy Life is made up of Happy moments.  Enjoy each moment.

Thanks for your support.

Matt Schott




Thursday, November 10, 2011

What will the difference be between Smart Houses today and Smart houses Twenty years from now?


What will the difference be between Smart Houses today and   Smart houses Twenty years from now?



You know how the internet records every click you make.  I take that idea and apply it to smart houses.  Your smart house in the future will learn your routines and your likes and dislikes.  It will learn that you change slightly as you grow older.  It will learn to anticipate what you will need.

They’re a lot of advantages to having a smart house that preps your food and screen your phone calls.  It could order your food and give you the daily news that is important to you.  It can make small talk with you as it reads the sports news and looks up certain details that interest you.

After ten years or more its programming might develop glitches.  It could, not let you open the refrigerator door because you need to diet.  It could lock your door because you go out and drink too much on the weekends.  What would happen if your life was threatened?  Could your smart house kill someone protecting you from being attack?  I can hear Isaac Asimoz’s voice in my head now, “The three laws of robotics.” 

A robot will not harm a Human or through inaction allow a Human to come to harm.

A robot must obey orders given by a Human except where such orders would conflict with the first law.

A robot must protect it’s own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the first and second law.

The problem with the great Isaac Asimoz’s laws is that Humans will be doing the programming.

I’ve worked in the electrical field for more than 27 years.  The tech for smart houses is here.  We have developed so much technology in the last fifty years that we haven’t applied it or engineer it to its full potential.  I’ve written a scifi short story murder mystery called,

“A Program Thicker Than Water”.


I take today’s technology one or two steps forward.  Besides showing how smart cars and smart houses will be used I also throw in some tech that allows you to paint the inside of your house without using paint.  You could travel to a space station around Jupiter without leaving your bedroom.  Please download my 9,000 word short story and time travel to the future the next time you have lunch.  Please tell me what you think.

Thanks for reading,

Matt T. Schott