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Predictions

Minority Report

Directed by Steven Spielberg, the movie Minority Report takes a leap into the future and shows us some fancy technological innovation

The future-predicting technology that drives the premise of the sci-fi blockbuster Minority Report is silly at best.
And when the film hit theaters in 2002, the gadgets seemed pretty unrealistic, too. But eerily enough the slew of dreamed-up gizmos shown off throughout John Anderton’s daring escape are hardening into reality.

No, our government hasn’t yet imprisoned a group of nude psychics to combat crime. But some of the latest over-the-top gadgets are making director Steven Spielberg and writer Philip Dick appear to be fortunetellers themselves — of the technology world, at least. Here’s some disturbing, or just plain cool, tech teased in the movie that’ll be hitting home in one form or another.

Gesture-based Computer Interfaces

A visually awesome, albeit seemingly impractical piece of tech that the film highlights is the 3-D-hologram computer interface that Anderton controls with graceful hand gestures. Mgestyk Technologies is playing off the same idea with its gesture-based interface, which consists of a 3-D camera and software that translates hand movements into commands to control computer applications and games. From looking at the demo video, the interface appears to be a bit laggy, but progress is progress.

Flexible Displays

Spielberg and Dick clearly aren’t optimistic about the future of print, because in Report the medium is entirely replaced with thin, flexible electronic displays. Even better, the displays automatically update with the latest news articles, presumably from futuristic RSS feeds. Thanks to the United States’ tendency to dump billions of dollars into military funding, we’ll see a gadget just like that in about three years. Composed of specialty polymer and thin stainless-steel substrates, the screens will display characters with the electrophoretic ink (E-Ink) technology seen on today’s e-book readers (e.g, the Amazon Kindle). Hopefully by then E-Ink will achieve color.

3-D Holograms

Probably the cheesiest scene in Report is the one where Anderton is watching a home video of his wife and pre-kidnapped son. But more interestingly, the video is projected as a 3-D hologram, making it appear as if his wife and son are standing right in front of him. CNN tried to recreate that effect with its recent election coverage. Granted, the anchors and reporters being videotaped weren’t actually looking at holograms. Instead, they were looking at monitors, and CNN used 44 small, fixed cameras and 20 computers to insert virtual holograms with real-time effects processing. Fake holograms! Wait, that’s kind of redundant, isn’t it?

Identity-Detecting Advertisement Cameras

Surely you recall the scene in Report when Anderton is trying to run from the PoPo — but cameras keep scanning his eyeballs, only to play targeted advertisements based on his identity. A new display from NEC is creepily similar. Announced in July and premiering in Japan, NEC’s display utilizes a miniature camera to detect a person’s age and sex so it can play specific commercials aimed at a shopper’s demographic. Don’t get a black-market surgeon to remove your eyeballs just yet: Playing ads on a TV isn’t nearly as invasive as the ubiquitous holograms in Report. But it’s the same intrusive, identity-probing idea.

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Predictions

Predictions That Back to the Future Part II Got Right

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Robert Zemeckis’ and Bob Gail’s movie imagining what 2015 would look like was not so far from reality after all.

On October 26 1985, Doc Brown and his underage sidekick, Marty McFly travel to the future in a Delorean generated by 1.21 jigawatts of power, arriving in their hometown of Hill Valley on October 21, 2015. The future they landed in was full of flying cars and technology beyond the wildest imaginations of viewers at the time:

Watching multiple TV channels simultaneously

Back to the Future Part II imagined how we might watch television in the future – with several channels playing on the screen at the same time. This prediction soon became reality when DirecTV debuted their Game Mix feature, allowing viewers to watch 8 NFL games simultaneously.

Video games without hands

With Wii taking video games from controller-based to motion-based, it is safe to say that in a few years’ time a new gaming system will be released which operates without the use of a controller at all – just like the video game Marty impresses two kids with in Back to the Future Part II.

Cameras everywhere

The notion that cameras are everywhere is completely realistic. Nowadays, we carry cameras around with us everywhere in our mobile phones – and security cameras can even be found in ATMs and traffic lights.

Personal targeted advertising

Targeted advertising is increasingly used today rather than traditional advertising to the masses. Google, for example, has an algorithm enabling it to scan Gmail messages and position ads relevant to the keywords it finds in those mails on the user’s screen. Amazon routinely suggests items of interest based on users’ past purchases. And the growth of big data analytics and the Internet of Things will ramp up personalized advertising even further.

TV glasses

At the dinner table, Marty Jr. and the Marlene both watch TV on personal TV glasses. Devices like this are already available on the market.

Video conferencing

Another accurate prediction is the ability to video chat. Beyond conventional business video conference calls, applications and programmes such as Skype and Facetime allow us all to see and hear the person we’re calling in real-time.

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Predictions

Online Shopping and Email

online shoppingA video console not only for surveillance, but also for online shopping and e-mail, as predicted in 1967.

This video clip from 1967 displays incredible foresight about the future of on-line shopping and email on home computers. It’s easy to laugh at the primitive credit/debit displays on the home computer screens, but remember this video was made almost 20 years before the term “internet” became commonplace. And most consumers didn’t become comfortable with online shopping until 2000 or later.

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Predictions

Brain Capacity Increase

In 1965, comic strips predicted that the human brain would soon be directly connected to computers. Will this become a reality?

Our New Age

Detail from the December 26, 1965 edition of the Sunday comic strip “Our New Age”

Athelstan Spilhaus’ predictions in a 1965 edition of the comic strip Our New Age may not be entirely serious, but they’re still laughably far off the mark today: the artist imagined that by 2016, we’d be able to improve our intelligence with magic smart pills and by hooking our brains directly to computers. Of course, the next prediction in that strip is that by 2056, our holiday dinners cooked by robots could be served to us by friendly, intelligent animals trained to be household helpers – including kangaroos.

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Predictions

The Jetsons

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50 years ago, the famous series “The Jetsons” predicted how our lives would look in 2063. So, what do we have already and what comes next?

The Jetsons were the futuristic compliment to Hanna-Barbera’s the Flintstones. It had a catchy theme tune and a whole bunch of wacky ideas about what 2063 would look like.

The show was a product of its era, one of the space race and a near delirious belief in the inexorable progress of technology. Its predictions, therefore, are of the utopian variety — the Jetson family live in a world where “housework” consists of pressing a button to switch on a Roomba-like hoover, and they still complain about the effort. But what else, apart from said robot, did they get right? And what did they get very, very wrong?

The first season of The Jetsons aired in 1962, with a run of 24 episodes. While a couple of seasons were added later on in the 80s, with more awareness of what impact computers would have on our lives, here’s what was surprisingly accurate about the first run:

Flatscreens everywhere

George may sit down of an evening with a physical newspaper (who remembers those?), but he watches his favourite shows on a flatscreen TV. Indeed, nobody just makes phone calls any more — everyone uses some kind of video phone.

Portable media devices

We’re not going to claim that The Jetsons invented iPhones or iPads, but in many scenes it’s not uncommon to see characters walking around watching what look to be some kind of small TV-like device. We’ll give them this one.

Interactive media

George uses a “televiewer” to catch up on the news — a wall-mounted flatscreen which displays a newspaper-like page, but with images that move and text that updates. It’s almost a tech version of the newspapers from the Harry Potter universe, which puts it close to modern apps like Flipboard.

Household robots

Rosey the maid — a talking, humanoid robot on wheels who acts both as housekeeper and nanny — is one of the main characters. We probably won’t have to wait until 2063 for these kinds of robots to become a normal sight in homes across the developed world, especially with ageing populations who’ll need care.

Runaway environmental degradation

It is implied that humanity lives in the sky because the ground has become too polluted to support terrestrial life. If there’s one thing we do know about the times we live in, it’s that climate change is threatening existing ecological systems and the consequences could lead to mass extinction of many animal and plant species, along with the desertification of formerly lush savannah or other temperate grasslands. In 2063 we will have fled this horror for the skies above, a bit like the town of Springfield moving a mile down the road after its garbage debacle.

Nanotechnology

When George arrives at work his car folds down into a briefcase for him to carry inside. In a future with objects made of tiny nanobots, such a car is theoretically possible. Until then, here’s an F1 car sculpted on a nano scale.

And there are the things that weren’t so on the money:

Regular space travel

In the episode “The Good Little Scouts”, George takes Elroy and his scout trip on what is implied to be a rather routine camping trip to the Moon (with hilarious consequences, of course). While space travel will undoubtedly have advanced by 2062, it seems overly optimistic to think that visiting the Moon will be quite that easy by then.

The working week

George Jetson works a nine-hour week. That’s three hours a day, three days a week. One day we might see a world with so much material abundance that even a blue-collar worker like George has such a short week, but as our methods of production have improved we’ve just ended up making more stuff instead of ramping down our hours. The dream of shortening the working week remains, sadly, just out of reach, no matter what some think tanks might argue.

Flying cars

The Jetson family “car” is a kind of bubble-topped spaceship. In real life, the flying car has struggled to get beyond the prototype stage, despite the attempts of many different manufacturers. You can go buy one right now, if you want. It’s just unlikely that you’ll be able to get full use of it.

We can forgive them missing out on the internet, too. That one took almost everyone by surprise (well, not everyone).

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Predictions

Visit to the World’s Fair of 2014

Isaac Asimov’s look at the world of 2014

Isaac Asimov’s look at the world of 2014 – written in 1964.

The New York World’s Fair of 1964 is dedicated to “Peace Through Understanding.” Its glimpses of the world of tomorrow rule out thermonuclear warfare. And why not? If a thermonuclear war takes place, the future will not be worth discussing. So let the missiles slumber eternally on their pads and let us observe what may come in the nonatomized world of the future.

What is to come, through the fair’s eyes at least, is wonderful. The direction in which man is traveling is viewed with buoyant hope, nowhere more so than at the General Electric pavilion. There the audience whirls through four scenes, each populated by cheerful, lifelike dummies that move and talk with a facility that, inside of a minute and a half, convinces you they are alive.

The scenes, set in or about 1900, 1920, 1940 and 1960, show the advances of electrical appliances and the changes they are bringing to living. I enjoyed it hugely and only regretted that they had not carried the scenes into the future. What will life be like, say, in 2014 A.D., 50 years from now? What will the World’s Fair of 2014 be like?

I don’t know, but I can guess.

One thought that occurs to me is that men will continue to withdraw from nature in order to create an environment that will suit them better. By 2014, electroluminescent panels will be in common use. Ceilings and walls will glow softly, and in a variety of colors that will change at the touch of a push button.

Windows need be no more than an archaic touch, and even when present will be polarized to block out the harsh sunlight. The degree of opacity of the glass may even be made to alter automatically in accordance with the intensity of the light falling upon it.

There is an underground house at the fair which is a sign of the future. if its windows are not polarized, they can nevertheless alter the “scenery” by changes in lighting. Suburban houses underground, with easily controlled temperature, free from the vicissitudes of weather, with air cleaned and light controlled, should be fairly common. At the New York World’s Fair of 2014, General Motors’ “Futurama” may well display vistas of underground cities complete with light- forced vegetable gardens. The surface, G.M. will argue, will be given over to large-scale agriculture, grazing and parklands, with less space wasted on actual human occupancy.

Gadgetry will continue to relieve mankind of tedious jobs. Kitchen units will be devised that will prepare “automeals,” heating water and converting it to coffee; toasting bread; frying, poaching or scrambling eggs, grilling bacon, and so on. Breakfasts will be “ordered” the night before to be ready by a specified hour the next morning. Complete lunches and dinners, with the food semiprepared, will be stored in the freezer until ready for processing. I suspect, though, that even in 2014 it will still be advisable to have a small corner in the kitchen unit where the more individual meals can be prepared by hand, especially when company is coming.

Robots will neither be common nor very good in 2014, but they will be in existence. The I.B.M. exhibit at the present fair has no robots but it is dedicated to computers, which are shown in all their amazing complexity, notably in the task of translating Russian into English. If machines are that smart today, what may not be in the works 50 years hence? It will be such computers, much miniaturized, that will serve as the “brains” of robots. In fact, the I.B.M. building at the 2014 World’s Fair may have, as one of its prime exhibits, a robot housemaid*large, clumsy, slow- moving but capable of general picking-up, arranging, cleaning and manipulation of various appliances. It will undoubtedly amuse the fairgoers to scatter debris over the floor in order to see the robot lumberingly remove it and classify it into “throw away” and “set aside.” (Robots for gardening work will also have made their appearance.)

General Electric at the 2014 World’s Fair will be showing 3-D movies of its “Robot of the Future,” neat and streamlined, its cleaning appliances built in and performing all tasks briskly. (There will be a three-hour wait in line to see the film, for some things never change.)

The appliances of 2014 will have no electric cords, of course, for they will be powered by long- lived batteries running on radioisotopes. The isotopes will not be expensive for they will be by- products of the fission-power plants which, by 2014, will be supplying well over half the power needs of humanity. But once the isotype batteries are used up they will be disposed of only through authorized agents of the manufacturer.

And experimental fusion-power plant or two will already exist in 2014. (Even today, a small but genuine fusion explosion is demonstrated at frequent intervals in the G.E. exhibit at the 1964 fair.) Large solar-power stations will also be in operation in a number of desert and semi-desert areas — Arizona, the Negev, Kazakhstan. In the more crowded, but cloudy and smoggy areas, solar power will be less practical. An exhibit at the 2014 fair will show models of power stations in space, collecting sunlight by means of huge parabolic focusing devices and radiating the energy thus collected down to earth.

The world of 50 years hence will have shrunk further. At the 1964 fair, the G.M. exhibit depicts, among other things, “road-building factories” in the tropics and, closer to home, crowded highways along which long buses move on special central lanes. There is every likelihood that highways at least in the more advanced sections of the world*will have passed their peak in 2014; there will be increasing emphasis on transportation that makes the least possible contact with the surface. There will be aircraft, of course, but even ground travel will increasingly take to the air*a foot or two off the ground. Visitors to the 1964 fair can travel there in an “aquafoil,” which lifts itself on four stilts and skims over the water with a minimum of friction. This is surely a stop-gap. By 2014 the four stilts will have been replaced by four jets of compressed air so that the vehicle will make no contact with either liquid or solid surfaces.

Jets of compressed air will also lift land vehicles off the highways, which, among other things, will minimize paving problems. Smooth earth or level lawns will do as well as pavements. Bridges will also be of less importance, since cars will be capable of crossing water on their jets, though local ordinances will discourage the practice.

Much effort will be put into the designing of vehicles with “Robot-brains”*vehicles that can be set for particular destinations and that will then proceed there without interference by the slow reflexes of a human driver. I suspect one of the major attractions of the 2014 fair will be rides on small roboticized cars which will maneuver in crowds at the two-foot level, neatly and automatically avoiding each other.

For short-range travel, moving sidewalks (with benches on either side, standing room in the center) will be making their appearance in downtown sections. They will be raised above the traffic. Traffic will continue (on several levels in some places) only because all parking will be off-street and because at least 80 per cent of truck deliveries will be to certain fixed centers at the city’s rim. Compressed air tubes will carry goods and materials over local stretches, and the switching devices that will place specific shipments in specific destinations will be one of the city’s marvels.

Communications will become sight-sound and you will see as well as hear the person you telephone. The screen can be used not only to see the people you call but also for studying documents and photographs and reading passages from books. Synchronous satellites, hovering in space will make it possible for you to direct-dial any spot on earth, including the weather stations in Antarctica (shown in chill splendor as part of the ’64 General Motors exhibit).

For that matter, you will be able to reach someone at the moon colonies, concerning which General Motors puts on a display of impressive vehicles (in model form) with large soft tires*intended to negotiate the uneven terrain that may exist on our natural satellite.

Any number of simultaneous conversations between earth and moon can be handled by modulated laser beams, which are easy to manipulate in space. On earth, however, laser beams will have to be led through plastic pipes, to avoid material and atmospheric interference. Engineers will still be playing with that problem in 2014.

Conversations with the moon will be a trifle uncomfortable, but the way, in that 2.5 seconds must elapse between statement and answer (it takes light that long to make the round trip). Similar conversations with Mars will experience a 3.5-minute delay even when Mars is at its closest. However, by 2014, only unmanned ships will have landed on Mars, though a manned expedition will be in the works and in the 2014 Futurama will show a model of an elaborate Martian colony.

As for television, wall screens will have replaced the ordinary set; but transparent cubes will be making their appearance in which three-dimensional viewing will be possible. In fact, one popular exhibit at the 2014 World’s Fair will be such a 3-D TV, built life-size, in which ballet performances will be seen. The cube will slowly revolve for viewing from all angles.

One can go on indefinitely in this happy extrapolation, but all is not rosy.

As I stood in line waiting to get into the General Electric exhibit at the 1964 fair, I found myself staring at Equitable Life’s grim sign blinking out the population of the United States, with the number (over 191,000,000) increasing by 1 every 11 seconds. During the interval which I spent inside the G.E. pavilion, the American population had increased by nearly 300 and the world’s population by 6,000.

In 2014, there is every likelihood that the world population will be 6,500,000,000 and the population of the United States will be 350,000,000. Boston-to-Washington, the most crowded area of its size on the earth, will have become a single city with a population of over 40,000,000.

Population pressure will force increasing penetration of desert and polar areas. Most surprising and, in some ways, heartening, 2014 will see a good beginning made in the colonization of the continental shelves. Underwater housing will have its attractions to those who like water sports, and will undoubtedly encourage the more efficient exploitation of ocean resources, both food and mineral. General Motors shows, in its 1964 exhibit, the model of an underwater hotel of what might be called mouth-watering luxury. The 2014 World’s Fair will have exhibits showing cities in the deep sea with bathyscaphe liners carrying men and supplies across and into the abyss.

Ordinary agriculture will keep up with great difficulty and there will be “farms” turning to the more efficient micro-organisms. Processed yeast and algae products will be available in a variety of flavors. The 2014 fair will feature an Algae Bar at which “mock-turkey” and “pseudosteak” will be served. It won’t be bad at all (if you can dig up those premium prices), but there will be considerable psychological resistance to such an innovation.

Although technology will still keep up with population through 2014, it will be only through a supreme effort and with but partial success. Not all the world’s population will enjoy the gadgety world of the future to the full. A larger portion than today will be deprived and although they may be better off, materially, than today, they will be further behind when compared with the advanced portions of the world. They will have moved backward, relatively.

Nor can technology continue to match population growth if that remains unchecked. Consider Manhattan of 1964, which has a population density of 80,000 per square mile at night and of over 100,000 per square mile during the working day. If the whole earth, including the Sahara, the Himalayan Mountain peaks, Greenland, Antarctica and every square mile of the ocean bottom, to the deepest abyss, were as packed as Manhattan at noon, surely you would agree that no way to support such a population (let alone make it comfortable) was conceivable. In fact, support would fail long before the World-Manhattan was reached.

Well, the earth’s population is now about 3,000,000,000 and is doubling every 40 years. If this rate of doubling goes unchecked, then a World-Manhattan is coming in just 500 years. All earth will be a single choked Manhattan by A.D. 2450 and society will collapse long before that!

There are only two general ways of preventing this: (1) raise the death rate; (2) lower the birth rate. Undoubtedly, the world of A>D. 2014 will have agreed on the latter method. Indeed, the increasing use of mechanical devices to replace failing hearts and kidneys, and repair stiffening arteries and breaking nerves will have cut the death rate still further and have lifted the life expectancy in some parts of the world to age 85.

There will, therefore, be a worldwide propaganda drive in favor of birth control by rational and humane methods and, by 2014, it will undoubtedly have taken serious effect. The rate of increase of population will have slackened*but, I suspect, not sufficiently.

One of the more serious exhibits at the 2014 World’s Fair, accordingly, will be a series of lectures, movies and documentary material at the World Population Control Center (adults only; special showings for teen-agers).

The situation will have been made the more serious by the advances of automation. The world of A.D. 2014 will have few routine jobs that cannot be done better by some machine than by any human being. Mankind will therefore have become largely a race of machine tenders. Schools will have to be oriented in this direction. Part of the General Electric exhibit today consists of a school of the future in which such present realities as closed-circuit TV and programmed tapes aid the teaching process. It is not only the techniques of teaching that will advance, however, but also the subject matter that will change. All the high-school students will be taught the fundamentals of computer technology will become proficient in binary arithmetic and will be trained to perfection in the use of the computer languages that will have developed out of those like the contemporary “Fortran” (from “formula translation”).

Even so, mankind will suffer badly from the disease of boredom, a disease spreading more widely each year and growing in intensity. This will have serious mental, emotional and sociological consequences, and I dare say that psychiatry will be far and away the most important medical specialty in 2014. The lucky few who can be involved in creative work of any sort will be the true elite of mankind, for they alone will do more than serve a machine.

Indeed, the most somber speculation I can make about A.D. 2014 is that in a society of enforced leisure, the most glorious single word in the vocabulary will have become work!

https://www.nytimes.com/books/97/03/23/lifetimes/asi-v-fair.html

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Predictions

The iPad of 1935

How would you imagine the book reader of the future? This is the way it was presented in 1935.

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The book reader of the future (April, 1935 issue of Everyday Science and Mechanics)

There’s no denying that devices like the iPad, Kindle and Nook have dramatically changed the way that many people consume media. Last year, online retailer Amazon announced that electronic book sales had surpassed print book sales for the first time in history.

The future of the book has quite a few failed predictions in its wake. From Thomas Edison’s belief that books of the future would be printed on leaves of nickel, to a 1959 prediction that the text of a book would be projected on the ceiling of your home, no one knew for sure what was in store for the printed word.

The April, 1935 issue of Everyday Science and Mechanics included this nifty invention which was to be the next logical step in the world of publishing. Basically a microfilm reader mounted on a large pole, the media device was supposed to let you sit back in your favorite chair while reading your latest tome of choice.

It has proved possible to photograph books, and throw them on a screen for examination, as illustrated long ago in this magazine. At the left is a device for applying this for home use and instruction; it is practically automatic.

Additional text accompanying the illustration reads, “You can read a ‘book’ (which is a roll of miniature film), music, etc., at your ease.”

Though René Dagron was granted the first patent for microfilm in the year 1859, it was New York banker George Lewis McCarthy who developed the first practical use for microfilm in 1925, allowing him to make miniaturized copies of bank documents.

Eastman Kodak bought McCarthy’s invention in 1928 and the technology behind the miniaturization of text was adopted rapidly throughout the 1930s. In 1935 the New York Times began copying all of its editions onto microfilm.

Microfilm was a practical instrument for archiving printed material for a number of institutions in the 1930s, including Oglethorpe University, which was preparing the Crypt of Civilization. The Crypt was sealed in 1938 and is intended to be opened in the year 8113. The December, 1938 issue of Popular Science included an article on the preparations necessary for that enormous time capsule, including the use of miniaturized text not unlike the concept above.

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Predictions

Tesla Predicts the Portable TV

TeslaIs prediction the way to invent the future? For the portable TV it was certainly the case.

In 1926 Nicola Tesla gave an interview to Collier’s Weekly in which he predicted something that sounds remarkably like portable television. Perhaps most interestingly, he mentions that this technology would be used to watch war unfold, “just as though we were present.”

NEW YORK, Jan 25 – (AP) – Application of radio principles will enable people by carrying a small instrument in their pockets to see distant events like the sorceress of the magic crystal fairy tales and legends, Nikola Tesla, electrical inventor, predicted today. Mr. Tesla, who on several occasion has tried to communicate with the planet Mars, made his predictions in an interview published in the current issue of Collier’s Weekly.

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Postcards of “How Life in France Would Look in a Century’s Time”

Futuredays illustrates the great expectations for the year 2000 entertained by Jean-Marc Coté and his fellow artists more than a century ago.

Starting in 1899, a commercial artist named Jean-Marc Côté and other artists were hired by a toy or cigarette manufacturer to create a series of picture cards as inserts, according to Matt Noval who writes for the Smithsonian magazine. The images were to depict how life in France would look in a century’s time, no doubt heavily influenced by Verne’s writings. Sadly, they were never actually distributed. However, the only known set of cards to exist was discovered by Isaac Asimov, who wrote a book in 1986 called “Futuredays” in which he presented the illustrations with commentary.

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The possibilities of science must have seemed endless, and technologies that would fundamentally change society would seem all but likely, as in one illustration that shows books being ground up and fed directly into the ears of schoolchildren. While it may seem a bit to Matrix-like to become a reality, one could argue that this is fundamentally what an audiobook is or what the Internet does with information. We may not be at the point where information is fed directly into our brains, but reality isn’t that far off.

 

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In light of the Industrial Revolution in France in the early part of the 19th century, automation would have been rife with possibilities. Among the collection, personal automatons — or robots as we call them — showed up prominently. Clearly, the artists felt they would be a big part of the future, taking care of many of the mechanical tasks used in daily life, such as robot barbers.

 

 

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Initial technological strides made in electromagnetism and wireless communication led to the invention of the telephone and radio during the latter decades of the 19th century. To the artists, it seemed certain that these technologies would play an important part in the future, so a machine was imagined that would transcribe spoken language into print, something that the automated audio transcription services or voice recognition services of today now make possible.

 

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The artists also imagined how robots would have an even bigger impact on society, as in helping farmers plow fields. Robots on farms are on the rise, as bots have been developed to milk cowspick only ripe strawberries, and even kill weeds.

 

 

 

france2Another card shows video calls imagined from the technology of the day (a projector), but functionally the same as Apple’s FaceTime, Google Hangout, or any other standard video conferencing software.

 

 

 

 

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The artists were fascinated by the possibilities of flight. This makes sense, considering that powered gliders were in development during the 1890s, the first Zeppelin was being constructed in 1900, and the Wright brothers made their historic flight in 1903. But personal flight was envisioned to be much more integrated into daily life, envisioning that wings would help people do all sorts of things like delivering mail…physics be damned!

 

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But the scope of using machines to do work wasn’t seen to be limited to smaller scale activities. Why not use machines to allow a single person to construct buildings? We aren’t there yet, but recent advances in 3D printing almost beg for houses and other buildings to be printed out, if the technology could be worked out.

 

 

 

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Other types of advances in projection were expected as well, allowing microscope or telescope images to be much more visible. While projection technologies like these were developed, today digital instruments and monitors are the workhorses for microscopy.

Imagining the future is vital to progress, as it means technological advances are the result of deliberate efforts to make ideas reality, rather than simply humans reacting to their surroundings like animals. These illustrations are a testament to a handful of very creative artists who tried to bring a vision of the future to the masses. How unfortunate that the people of the time never got to seem them.

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Quotes

Famous people and industry experts haven’t always got it right when it comes to future predictions

“It’s a great invention but who would want to use it anyway?”

Rutherford B. Hayes, U.S. President, after a demonstration of Alexander Bell’s telephone, 1876.

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“Television won’t last because people will soon get tired of staring at a plywood box every night.”

Darryl Zanuck, movie producer, 20th Century Fox, 1946.

“I think there is a world market for maybe five computers.”

Thomas Watson, chairman of IBM, 1943

Whirlwind installation at MIT

“Remote shopping, while entirely feasible, will flop – because women like to get out of the house, like to handle merchandise, like to be able to change their minds.”

TIME, 1966, in one sentence writing off e-commerce long before anyone had ever heard of it.

Time_Magazine_logo

“I predict the Internet will soon go spectacularly supernova and in 1996 catastrophically collapse.”

Robert Metcalfe, founder of 3Com and inventor of Ethernet, writing in a 1995 InfoWorld column.

Metcalfe is well aware how silly his prediction came to look. He ate his words—literally. In 1999, addressing the Sixth International WWW Conference, Metcalfe put a copy of his infamous column into a blender, pureed it, and drank it.

robert metcalfe with george bush