10 Tech Trends & Weak Signals to Watch in 2025
With the new year approaching, it’s time to look to next year with a keen eye on tech trends and weak signals. I expect to either accelerate in adoption, have breakthrough moments, or continue to advance with potential future breakthroughs in the next three or so years.
My 2025 tech trends naturally fall into three categories: Game Changers, Foundational Breakthroughs, and Weak Signal Wild Cards.
Game Changers are set to have a significant impact on industries, societies, and markets in 2025 and beyond. Will transform how we work, learn, and live.
Foundational Breakthroughs are major technological advancements needed for game changer technologies to succeed.
Weak Signal Wild Cards present the opportunity to be a future game changer of a foundational breakthrough but still in a nascent stage with a number of headwinds to overcome.
Let’s look at the leading tech trends in each.
Game Changers
Artificial Intelligence (AI): This may not seem new. I’m sure we are all suffering a bit from AI fatigue, but that doesn’t discount the fact that AI represents one of the biggest technological shifts we’ve seen in our lifetimes, perhaps in anyone’s lifetime. In 2025, AI’s impact on nearly all industries will continue to grow, with significant advancements in Artificial General Intelligence (AGI). Fast-moving AI advancements will move beyond chatbots to AI Co-workers, Personalized AI, Digital Clones, and AI Wearables.
2. Humanoid Robotics: Citi analysts recently estimated that Humanoid Robots could create a $7 trillion market in the next 25 years. New foundational modals, multimodality, dexterity advancements, and edge computing make a world in which robots seamlessly move among us more of a reality. Just ask Clone Alpha, Tesla Optimus, or Figure 02.
3. BioTech and Synthetic Biology: Synthetic biology is another area I expect we will continue to see rapid advancement in. Allowing for gene editing (CRISPR), cellular agriculture, and biomanufacturing. Innovations in gene synthesis, metabolic engineering, and biofabrication are pushing the boundaries of what can be created in the lab.
Recommended by LinkedIn
Foundational Breakthroughs
4. Advance Compute: HP has been touting advance compute innovations for a number of years, but with compute intensive applications like AI on the rise we are seeing this area explode with innovation. From super computers to computers-on-a-chip, chips cooled by microfluidics, and composable computing, as seen with HP Boost, advance compute innovations are coming to market faster and faster.
5. Clean Tech: Energy-hungry technologies such as AI are fueling clean energy demand. We have seen a plethora of clean tech products and services focusing on energy efficiency and/or sustainable reuse, and I expect that to accelerate in the new year, too.
6. Nuclear Energy: Speaking of AI’s impact on the world energy supply, we will see increased demand for nuclear energy and small modular reactors to help power the supercluster data centers that are required to power AI.
7. Next-Gen Energy Storage: Solid-state batteries are seen as the successor to current lithium-ion batteries, offering greater energy density, faster charging times, and enhanced safety. That’s why companies like Toyota and QuantumScape are leading R&D efforts to commercialize solid-state batteries by the mid-2020s.
Weak Signal Wild Cards
8. Quantum Computing: A little farther on the horizon is the practical adoption of quantum computing. From cryptography to drug development, materials science, and more, quantum computing holds the potential to solve some of the most complex problems not solvable with classical computing today. The opportunity for this tech trend is ripe, but a few headwinds must be overcome first.
9. 6G Networks and Hyperconnectivity: 6G is forecast to offer speeds 500x faster than 5G, enhancing Internet of Things (IoT) applications, real-time AR/VR, and autonomous systems. Operating at such higher-frequency bands will require new cellular infrastructure and device enhancements.
10. Space Tech: Will space travel be for non-billionaires too? Technologists, aeronautics, and space engineers seem to believe so. Space exploration is poised for commercial dominance, with private companies pushing boundaries in space tourism, mining, and settlements.
In the new year, we will dive deeper into the tech trends in each category, analyzing their potential, the major players and boundary-pushing startups, headwinds and tailwinds, and unexpected outcomes.
This prepares us to harness these tech trends so we can anticipate what’s coming and take advantage of them instead of being disrupted by them.
Fantastic insights, Andrew! I’m particularly intrigued by the focus on AI and HPC. It’s fascinating how these ‘weak signals’ can evolve into transformative forces in the tech landscape. From my perspective, the energy efficiency of new technologies will play a critical role in shaping these trends, especially as AI and data centers continue to scale. It’s exciting to see these discussions driving innovation. Which of these trends do you think will have the most significant impact in the short term?