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Ask HN: Do you feel like you live in the future?

17 points| Errorcod3 | 11 years ago | reply

I was walking through the parking lot at work and a car moves silently past me, and I got the feeling that I am in the future with everyone walking around with computer screens in their hands and cars with mysterious propulsion.

21 comments

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[+] a3n|11 years ago|reply
I sometimes feel like I'm living in the world of the movie Brazil, a nightmare of bureaucracy and thuggish government with sprinklings of technological toys. Artisanal bread and a circus in our pockets.
[+] Errorcod3|11 years ago|reply
I have never watch Brazil. Is it worth my time?
[+] nosuchthing|11 years ago|reply

  "We eat in restaurants, buy branded toiletries, build 
  skyscrapers, create legislative institutions, travel in 
  flying machines, write poetry, and search for meaning in 
  relationships, temples, and scientific books. Humans have 
  discovered antibiotics, sent probes into space, decimated 
  rainforests, shared a billion views of clips of kitten 
  behaviour, and decoded their own genomes.


  But there is one thing that humans have singularly failed 
  to do, and that is to properly understand their own behaviour. "

  — Robert Aunger and Valerie Curtis:
  Gaining Control: How human behavior evolved




  The Thirties had seen the first generation of American 
  industrial designers; until the Thirties, all pencil 
  sharpeners had looked like pencil sharpeners; your basic 
  Victorian mechanism, perhaps with a curlicue of 
  decorative trim. After the advent of the designers, some 
  pencil sharpeners looked as though they'd been put 
  together in wind tunnels. For the most part, the change 
  was only skin-deep; under the streamlined chrome shell, 
  you'd find the same Victorian mechanism. Which made a 
  certain kind of sense, because the most successful 
  American designers had been recruited from the ranks of 
  Broadway theater designers. It was all a stage set, a 
  series of elaborate props for playing at living in the 
  future. 
  - William Gibson
[+] LarryMade2|11 years ago|reply
Yeah, here are some of my observations on it...

Artifical skylight: http://twistedsifter.com/2015/02/scientists-develop-artifici...

Self Driving Cars http://www.extremetech.com/tag/self-driving-cars

Hololens http://www.theverge.com/2015/1/21/7868251/microsoft-hololens...

Wikipedia/Google - look up just about anything within seconds

Siri/speech interface multi lingual live translation

Commercial space projects - Virgin Galactic, Blue Origin, SpaceX

Self driving cars, Electric Cars, drones, etc... list is growing.

[+] M8|11 years ago|reply
No, future is when your body is just a replaceable peripheral device. Everything is progressing so slowly at the moment :(.
[+] codeonfire|11 years ago|reply
There are a few things that I thought we would (should) have in the mainstream based on science encyclopedias of long ago:

1. Spaceplane - this was a big thing a while back and is no longer talkeda bout. Military needs are what drove the technology for airliners, and there is no longer a need for aircraft crews. So they built missile-like X planes instead.

2. Ocean thermal energy conversion - Is a big tower that sits in the ocean and grabs energy from the differences in water temp. This was on the cover of one of those kid's future science books. It hasn't been built that I know of.

3. Robotic crop harvesting - I don't think these are here yet

4. Bipedal robots - I think we are almost there but again, there are more practical designs for military purposes.

5. Robotic surgery, tele-presence surgery - not sure if this is a thing yet.

[+] kylebennett|11 years ago|reply
> 2. Ocean thermal energy conversion - Is a big tower that sits in the ocean and grabs energy from the differences in water temp. This was on the cover of one of those kid's future science books. It hasn't been built that I know of.

There are demonstration units in existence, but other forms of energy are still too cheap for now.

> 3. Robotic crop harvesting - I don't think these are here yet

There are tech school programs for GPS controlled combines in the Midwest. Its been around for about 10 years.

> 4. Bipedal robots - I think we are almost there but again, there are more practical designs for military purposes.

Boston dynamics has this nailed down. Google acquired them last year, along with 9 other major robotics firms, and are slowly discontinuing certain military contracts if I understand correctly.

> 5. Robotic surgery, tele-presence surgery - not sure if this is a thing yet.

This already exists. In fact, there was a TED talk in 2013 regarding a telesurgical robot that gave haptic feedback with approximate pressures of that area. Can't recall the presenter's name.

[+] nathan_f77|11 years ago|reply
Yep, even when I'm using my "old" iPhone 4S. It's an amazing piece of technology, and weird to think that it's so dated now.
[+] Errorcod3|11 years ago|reply
An iPhone4S is old? I don't even know the differences on iPhones. I still have an old tracfone which I can only call/text from.

I can not have electronics with me at my workplace, so for 8 hours of the day I would not have it on me. Beyond that if I a home I have a computer and if I am out of the house I am actively doing something so I see no need for smartphones.

[+] AnimalMuppet|11 years ago|reply
You can't strike up a conversation in public any more. Everyone is too occupied with their electronics.

You don't get to talk to a human when you call a business - at least, not without great effort. You don't at the grocery store either - self checkout.

Daily life has dramatically de-humanized. Yeah, it feels like I live in the future, but I don't like this part of it.

[+] vbcr|11 years ago|reply
Future was when I watched Steve Jobs flick his finger to scroll through contacts when he was introducing the first iphone. Prior to that I always felt scrolling through 200+ contacts on my sony ericsson phone was unnecessarily hard. It has been almost 8 years since and I can distinctly remember the awe on my face.

I am living in the future ever since.

[+] znt|11 years ago|reply
I feel like I live in 1984. Not sure if this is what future supposed to be like.
[+] gvand|11 years ago|reply
Sometimes it feels like a dumbed down version of the future I expected as a child just a few decades ago, a lot of extremely cool technological improvements but the human race has not improved much.
[+] Varkiil|11 years ago|reply
The only thing that makes me feel this way is that 2020 is only 5 years away and Los Angeles 2013 took place 2 years ago...
[+] pdiddy|11 years ago|reply
After reading William Gibson: yes.