ANOTHER UN REPORT:
https://sdgs.un.org/sites/default/files/documents/105902%20pager%20Chapter%203%20final.pdf
Nanotech
Nano-imprint lithography; nano technology applications for decentralized water and wastewater treatment, desalination, and solar energy (nanomaterial solar cells); promising organic and inorganic nanomaterials, e.g., graphene, carbon nanotubes, carbon nano-dots and conducting polymers graphene, perovskites, Iron, cobalt, and nickel nanoparticles, and many others
Biotech
biotechnology, genomics, and proteomics; gene-editing technologies and custom designed DNA sequence; genetically modified organisms (GMO); stem cells and human engineering; bio-catalysis; synthetic biology; sustainable agriculture tech;
Digital Tech
Big Data technologies; Internet of Things; 5G mobile phones; 3-D printing and manufacturing; Cloud computing platforms; open data technology; free and opensource; Massive open online courses; micro-simulation; E-distribution; systems combining radio, mobile phone, satellite, GIS, and remote sensing data; data sharing technologies, including citizen science-enabling technologies; social media technologies; mobile Apps to promote public engagement and behavioral change;
pre-paid system of electricity use and automatic meter reading;
digital monitoring technologies; digital security technology.
Neurotech
Digital automation, including autonomous vehicles (driverless cars and drones); IBM Watson; e-discovery platforms for legal practice; personalization algorithms; artificial intelligence; speech recognition; robotics; smart technologies; cognitive computing; computational human brain models; meso-science powered virtual reality.
Mapping these technologies to the SDGs could be a productive way to engage the science and engineering community more broadly.
Leave no one behind in their plan to put everyone in their bondage. Stamped, vaxed and in their view, under their thumb and in their service totally.
"Leveraging the social technology of sharing in urban slums"...all of a sudden they're so concerned? Or is it because they know that those in the "slums" are wise enough to see past the rhetoric? Growing up around Newark NJ, I know a lot of black people who were totally against all the BLM/ anti-cop propaganda.