These are the future tech products that Alphabet's Eric Schmidt thinks will change the world

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Eric Schmidt

REUTERS/Beck Diefenbach

Eric Schmidt

Google has led some of the biggest tech innovations, from self-driving cars to super-fast internet access.

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So what are the next big things that will change the world?

Eric Schmidt, the executive chairman of Google parent company Alphabet, just gave his short list of the biggest game-changing tech innovations he expects in the next five to ten years.

Speaking at Alphabet's annual shareholders meeting on Wednesday, Schmidt stressed that these aren't necessarily things that the company is working on. But many of them are. And the ones that aren't provide a good window into the kind of things that one of the company's top execs is thinking about.

Here's what he highlighted:

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Fake meat

Schmidt is excited about the potential of a great steak, grown organically.

Impossible Foods cheesburger

Impossible Foods

Impossible Foods cheeseburger

Right now there are a handful of startups trying create "meat" products from plants or cells grown in a lab. Including, for example, Impossible Foods, a company Google tried to buy last summer. The cattle industry contributes substantially to global warming, so fake meat could provide a better environmental alternative.

"Even if you don't like the idea, imagine if it tastes really good," he said.

3D-printed buildings

3D printing has been a buzzy industry for a while now. But Schmidt is particularly excited about the potential for the technology in architecture. People are already using 3D printing to design and build structures much more quickly, Schmidt says.

"Imagine if we can get the cost of those buildings down by a factor of 3 or 4 or 5 using new materials and allow you to remodel them very quickly and things like that," he said. There are people working on this."

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Maybe this technology is something that Sidewalk Labs, an Alphabet subsidiary focused on improving cities, is mulling over...

Virtual reality

You can't talk about the future these days without bringing up VR and augmented reality.

Google Cardboard

Google

Google has a bunch of projects in this area of course, including its cheap headset, Cardboard, and its more advanced design, Daydream. Schmidt also said that he's excited about the potential to use more augemented reality - which layers digital images over the real world - in the workplace.

"Google Glass was a first attempt at that, with much more coming," he said.

Smartphones in the medical world

"It's pretty clear that the mobile phone is going to be a life-saver for you, in that it's going to be your primary health monitoring device," Schmidt said.

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Google's biotech arm, Verily, is actively working on ways to get smartphones and smartphone accessories into hospitals. Apple, too, is expanding its healthcare-related focus.

Self-driving cars

More than 30,000 people in the United States die in car crashes every year. Self-driving cars can change that.

Google self-driving car

AP Photo/Tony Avelar

"This needs to be a national priority - figuring out how to use this technology to save lives," Schmidt said.

Obviously, Google is one of the companies leading this charge.

Machine learning in education

Schmidt doesn't expect machine learning to oust teachers from classrooms, but he expects more educators to start using machine learning to recognize patterns that will help them tailor their lesson plans to individual students.

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He says that he's talked to several startups that are already doing this, with positive results.

"The teacher teaches differently (but the teacher is crucial) and the students learn much better," Schmidt says.

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