The Higgs boson provides the last missing particle of the Standard Model, and its existence thus confirms several of the conceptual limitations of the Standard Model. Therefore, the fact that we discovered the Higgs boson only confirmed that there is something on the way to new phenomena in particle physics.
At the moment, it is however too early to be allowed to claim whether the Higgs boson is a portal to anything new.
Maybe someday we will be able to envision a technology that exploits the Higgs Boson in particular in the future.
Maybe. This is always something impossible to predict. We can definitely check out general relativity and GPS systems for an existing example along these lines.
Interesting. BTW, I thought the graviton is also part of that model but that hasn't been found yet. It's a coincidence I was talking about it yesterday.
The graviton is not part of the Standard Model, in the same way that gravity is not part of it. There are two reasons behind this.
For the second reason, the direct observation of a graviton is thus not something we could do today.
I hope this clarifies.