100,000 issues of the new Esquire magazine have a cover made with E Ink. E Ink is awesome.
Just don't read the standard idiotic YouTube comments. Those people have no place in the future.
So what things about living in the future do you love?
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100,000 issues of the new Esquire magazine have a cover made with E Ink. E Ink is awesome.
Just don't read the standard idiotic YouTube comments. Those people have no place in the future.
So what things about living in the future do you love?
A past that I can remember and say "hey, I remember when we didn't have that." Also, awesome.
I love the fact that kids will be saying, "You were born in the 1900s :aimsurp:?"
"Yeah kid. Did you know we had seven continents back then?"
What is happening to my world?
I'm unable to create a folder in the Future.
"I remember when I was a kid...." Then talk about how slow the computers were, and how we actually had to hold our mobile phones.
"Gwandpa! Gwanpa! What awe those big metal things?"
"Those are cars, Jimmy. We used them to keep the population under control."
I dread the day technology passes me by. I don't want to be a useless old man, but it seems inevitable
I remember when my mouse didnt have a scroll wheel.
Oh, hi. So I see you made a thread for me to talk about for six days straight in. :p
The internet and cellphones are a good start! The former has over one billion people, the latter has over two. We are one-third of the way to a completely connected planet. :o This happened in a decade. Computers are taking longer but OLPC is a good start there.
Computers themselves, for that matter. A single average desktop has more computing power than the entire planet did just a few decades ago.
Tomorrow I might be able to say "We can make black holes" which pretty much elevates our species as a collective to Godhood.
Nanotechnology is proceeding apace. We're not even on the cusp of it yet, but very soon it'll arrive in full force.
We're getting increasingly good cloaking devices. We're getting increasingly good exosuits, too. Supersoldiers here we come!
I like how I have all the things I need to survive without needing to hunt, forage, gather, etc. I can turn a tap on and get water. I open my fridge and get food. There's a roof over my head. This isn't the privilege of kings and emperors, it's something regular folks have. Not globally, true, but that situation improves daily.
Splitting the atom, going to the moon, eradicting smallpox entirely - nobody gets smallpox anymore because we completely destroyed it. The only smallpox left on Earth is in a couple of labs in the US and Russia. How cool is that? We're working on the same for Polio, and we're damned close to destroying that entirely as well.
Yeah, I love the future. Gets better every day. :cool:
Edit: We're getting better at cybernetics too. That's always awesome.
I'll bump this thread in 10 years time and we'll evaluate.
"We used to have an ozone. And polar bears!"
"Ooh..."
Pfft none of that will happen
In less than 30 years we'll perfect the ability to have 'virtual' reality and nobody will converse with each other.
I'm going to buy a huge lawn, so I can scare away kids with my lightsaber. :)
That's not true. Everybody that deploys to combat in the middle east gets a smallpox shot. I had one in 2004. It's a horrible shot to get too.Quote:
Splitting the atom, going to the moon, eradicting smallpox entirely - nobody gets smallpox anymore because we completely destroyed it. The only smallpox left on Earth is in a couple of labs in the US and Russia. How cool is that? We're working on the same for Polio, and we're damned close to destroying that entirely as well.
Edit: I bolded the most important part.
Maybe the US army doesn't know, but it is in fact eradicated. There are books written on the subject.
Quote:
Originally Posted by WHO
Wow, Hallmark is tha.
Too bad this will be the last great achievement mankind makes before the black hole eats us alive :(
the futures orange...
I remember hearing about the early days of E Ink quite a few years ago, I *think* back when I was still in high school. I'm glad it's finally coming to fruition. I can't stand the idea of reading a novel off a computer screen, but downloading onto an E Ink reader would be great. It is, after all, a reflective surface rather than a light source - just like real paper, rather than a computer screen.
It's exciting just how fast 'new' technologies are spreading and being integrated into daily life - cellphones, the internet, etc - but the dependence on these rather fallible technologies is a worry. Not because I think it's all going to spontaneously fail, but if people get too accustomed to it then they're rather helpless in those situations where they don't have their favourite gizmo on hand.
Hmm... E Ink + technology that reacts to human thought = Psychic Paper. Oh yes!
For me, the most exciting new technologies are genetic medicine and nanotechnology. There are entirely realistic predictions that in due course, every home might have a small 'nanomachine factory' appliance. You download a pattern for something from the internet, and an army of miscroscopic robots build it for you. Sounds fanciful, but they're getting there - and it'd completely revolutionise manufacturing and consumer culture.
Wha...WHAT IS THIS TRICKERY?!