HP Innovation Journal Issue 08: Winter 2017 | Page 9

Shane Wall, Chief Technology Officer for HP, Global Head of HP Labs, speaking at the HP Reinvent World Partner Forum 2017 force a fundamental change in the way we approach development and design. They’ll drive a need for cyber security even into places you’d never expect to need it. It’s at the cellular level, literally, when we are look- ing at hacked pacemakers 2 and the ability to edit DNA (CRISPR). It becomes our responsibility as technolo- gists, as humans, to focus on security and to focus on how we can get to a new model for a safer future. Cyber resiliency is a proactive security concept that can be thought of, in some ways, as akin to developing the body’s immune system. A healthy immune system is a barrier against germs and disease, and cyber resiliency would start with barriers to intrusion. Beyond that, the focus is on imme- diate detection and auto-response to isolate and neutralize the threat, extract it and come back to a known state. Cyber-resilient design is already fundamental to building the world’s most advanced security into HP’s current personal systems and printers. 3. Digital manufacturing For the last 150 years or so, we’ve ap- proached manufacturing in basically the same centralized way. We design in one 2 The Verge location, manufacture in a low-cost ge- ography, or in large automated facilities. Manufactured goods then are loaded on con- tainer ships and sent around the world. Not a scalable model in a world of rapid growth and urbanization. Digital manufacturing will drive profound changes in the business landscape. Digitally designed, digitally printed or manufactured on demand. No staging, no warehouses. HP and channel partners are in a unique po- sition with regard to 3D print technology, which is at the heart of this manufacturing transformation. HP’s Multi Jet Fusion — alone among leading 3D contenders — has end-to- end digital capability and a growing range of printable materials rapidly expanding across manufacturing applications. The vision won’t be fully realized this year or next…but in a five-year time frame, we’ll see an increasing number of parts and objects manufactured in this way, at or near the point of use. (To learn more: see Innovation Journal Issue 7.) Over the next 30 years, how we live, where we live, and how we work is all go- ing to change in a profound way. We have choices about how we’re going to react to it or respond to it. We believe that the vision that we call Blended Reality — taking our physical world, how we live, and combining it with our digital reality — will allow us to move with greater agility through a fast-changing world. And at HP, we believe that inventing and leveraging new technology can improve our world in “small but mighty” everyday ways — and in much larger ways, to address the biggest problems that humanity will face in the future.  Dion Weisler is the President and CEO of HP, a ~$55 billion annual revenue business that includes personal com- puters, mobility devices, technical workstations, printers, graphics solu- tions, managed-print services and Internet services. Ron Coughlin is the President of HP’s Personal Systems Business. This group focuses on PCs, tablets, accessories and other related services for all cus- tomer segments and represents a $35 billion annual revenue business for HP. Enrique Lores is President of HP Imaging, Printing & Solutions —  a $20 billion business that develops, engineers and brings to market inno- vative and secure printing solutions and supplies. Shane Wall is Chief Technology Officer, HP and Global Head, HP Labs. Shane drives the company’s technology vision and strategy, new business incubation and the overall technical and innovation community. @ShaneWallCTO Issue 8 · Winter 2017 · Innovation Journal 9