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Experts Fear Future Will be Like Sci-Fi Movies

Posted by Zonk on Mon Sep 25, 2006 06:10 AM
from the oh-no-robots dept.
segphault writes "In the year 2020, Luddite terrorists attack technology infrastructure and artificial intelligences dominate earth! Or at least that's what 700 experts predict in the latest poll conducted by the Pew Internet and American Life Project (pdf). Is the future really going to be like a science fiction movie? Ars Technica provides a humorous overview of the survey results. From the article: 'Are these scenarios really indicative of future trends? Given the prevalence of many of these concepts in science fiction content, it is obvious that the ideas themselves are at least relevant enough to warrant consideration. That said, the nature of the survey and the way that the scenarios are presented makes the entire thing seem less plausible. In looking at classic science fiction films of the past, from Blade Runner to Soylent Green, one realizes that few of them really predict with any accuracy the world we live in today. Culture and technology can change in radically unpredictable ways, and today's experts may lack the foresight to perceive the future with the clarity of Hari Seldon.'"
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  • not a problem (Score:5, Funny)

    by gEvil (beta) (945888) on Monday September 25 2006, @06:13AM (#16183129)
    (http://evil.google.com/)
    As far as I'm concerned it won't matter what happens, just as long as I get my soma.
    • Re:not a problem by ePhil_One (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @08:24AM
    • Re:not a problem by ObsessiveMathsFreak (Score:3) Monday September 25 2006, @09:03AM
      • Re:not a problem (Score:4, Insightful)

        by LordEd (840443) on Monday September 25 2006, @09:33AM (#16184981)
        We're talking about the sci-fi future... I think i'd rather start buying stock in spice. I hear that stuff is both addictive and keeps your customers alive longer.
        [ Parent ]
        • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
      • Re:not a problem by cloudkiller (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @02:09PM
    • ... and my jet pack! by BenSchuarmer (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @09:21AM
  • running man by LosManos (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @06:16AM
  • by Jerk City Troll (661616) on Monday September 25 2006, @06:17AM (#16183151)
    (http://anti-slash.org/)

    By 2020, the people left behind (many by their own choice) by accelerating information and communications technologies will form a new cultural group of technology refuseniks who self-segregate from “modern” society.

    Wait, which is it? The people left behind will self-segretate but not all of them do so my choice? My prediction is that in the year 2020, pulp [wikipedia.org] will be written by lousy artificial intelligence. What do you think, George [slashdot.org]?

  • Time Travel (Score:5, Funny)

    by Weedlekin (836313) on Monday September 25 2006, @06:18AM (#16183159)
    is also a prevalent theme in science fiction, but that doesn't mean we'll be doing it in the foreseeable future.
  • Which SciFi movies? by xtracto (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @06:18AM
  • Disappointed... by geoff lane (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @06:22AM
  • Spandex (Score:5, Funny)

    by this great guy (922511) on Monday September 25 2006, @06:22AM (#16183189)
    Is the future really going to be like a science fiction movie?
    I hope not. Don't want to be dressed in spandex for the rest of my life.
  • Blade Runner issues haven't happened yet... by zymurgy_cat (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @06:23AM
  • Vision of the future (Score:4, Funny)

    by Rik Sweeney (471717) on Monday September 25 2006, @06:24AM (#16183201)
    (http://www.parallelrealities.co.uk/)
    Hopefully none of the visions of the future will ever feature any of these quotes:

    • No, what you have are bullets, and the hope that when your guns are empty I'm no longer be standing, because if I am you'll all be dead before you've reloaded.
    • You Maniacs! You blew it up! Ah, damn you! God damn you all to hell!
    • I'm sorry Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that.
    • Because I choose to.


    (10 points to the first person to name them all)
  • Soylent Green is people by klang (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @06:24AM
  • Ah, pessimism by i_should_be_working (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @06:25AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • 1984. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by caluml (551744) <slashdot@@@spamgoeshere...calum...org> on Monday September 25 2006, @06:25AM (#16183215)
    (http://calum.org/)
    I more fear that it will be like 1984. Cameras everywhere, mass surveillance, no criticism of the rulers allowed.
    • Re:1984. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 25 2006, @06:34AM (#16183265)
      Welcome to today!

      London has cameras everywhere.
      NSA wiretaps?
      Criticising Bush is "anti american".

      We *ARE* in 1984 already.
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:1984. by kthejoker (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @09:07AM
      • Re:1984. by TheRaven64 (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @09:54AM
    • Have you looked outside lately? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 25 2006, @06:39AM (#16183303)

      I more fear that it will be like 1984. Cameras everywhere, mass surveillance, no criticism of the rulers allowed.

      Aren't we pretty near the 1984 society already? This [progressive.org] would no longer be news today.

      [ Parent ]
    • Re:1984. by Yvanhoe (Score:3) Monday September 25 2006, @06:50AM
      • Re:1984. by Vinnie_333 (Score:3) Monday September 25 2006, @08:34AM
    • Re:1984. by KDR_11k (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @07:16AM
    • Re:1984. by owlnation (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @07:48AM
      • Re:1984. (Score:5, Interesting)

        by elrous0 (869638) * on Monday September 25 2006, @09:00AM (#16184511)
        You forgot Newspeak.

        It's funny, but I recently worked with a prison system where they had introduced a new program called "TruThought" [truthought.com] that was so Orwellian it was fucking creepy. The sad thing is that I was apparently the only one who noticed this. It was all I could do not to laugh (and, perhaps, cry) as the Truthought "trainers" rattled off points that could have been written by Orwell himself (it was literally "Newspeak" with a different name). Makes me wonder if the entire program didn't start off as a sick joke (some guy writing it as a riff on his boss, only to have it taken seriously).

        -Eric

        [ Parent ]
        • Re:1984. by Dread_ed (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @05:23PM
    • Re:1984. by Lord_Dweomer (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @08:10AM
    • Re:1984. by Azathfeld (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @08:10AM
      • Re:1984. by GigsVT (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @09:30AM
      • Re:1984. by Magada (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @09:53AM
        • Re:1984. by UpnAtom (Score:2) Wednesday September 27 2006, @04:22PM
      • Re:1984. by UpnAtom (Score:2) Wednesday September 27 2006, @04:30PM
    • Re:1984. by jschrod (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @08:20PM
    • Re:1984. by mgblst (Score:3) Monday September 25 2006, @09:21AM
    • 4 replies beneath your current threshold.
  • I hope fusion energy is in that future by Marrow (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @06:26AM
  • F451 by kneeless (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @06:26AM
    • Re:F451 (Score:5, Insightful)

      by flawedconceptions (1000049) on Monday September 25 2006, @06:48AM (#16183341)
      Bradbury's future was marked by huge video screens in the living room, little speakers in the ears, people pursuing dangerous hobbies because their lives had become empty (street racing, in the novel), and a disinclination towards knowledge (books) in favour of a false sense of reality being fed to citizens through the media.

      Golly gee, I hope that's not our future.
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:F451 by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @07:25AM
        • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:F451 by jimmichie (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @07:18AM
  • Eh? by Max Threshold (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @06:30AM
    • poppycock (Score:5, Insightful)

      by misanthrope101 (253915) on Monday September 25 2006, @07:14AM (#16183493)
      Oh, just stop already. I love that book, and I do think that civil liberties have taken a severe beating, but we aren't even close to being in a world like the one Orwell described. We have surveillance, yes. I do mentally associate much of Fox News with the Two Minute Hate. I concede the doublespeak angle, the use of language to mislead rather than inform. And yes, there is the equivalent, many equivalents, of Room 101.

      But we don't have telescreens in every room that can listen and watch us. Yes, they listen to our phone calls without a warrant, but no, you don't have to guard your facial expression for fear of being tortured in Room 101. Saying that our situation is that bad trivializes the suffering and deaths of those whose situation is that bad.

      I detest the rantings of O'Reilly and Coulter as much as the next thinking biped, but they do not consitute the Thought Police. Morons may impugn your patriotism for being skeptical of the President's policies, true, but no one, even Coulter, is saying you should be tortured for doing it.

      There is no boot in the face, forever and ever. We are being pwned by bible-thumping do-gooders who are not burdened by the humility and self-doubt that plague those of us who can't think of ourselves as instruments of divine providence. They don't think of themselves as power-hungry. That is why our world is so alien to Orwell's fictional one. I'm about halfway done with Orwell's essays, and basically he thinks that people are good, except for those who are bad. But the world really isn't that way. The bad things are done not by inherently bad people, but by people who think they are doing good, but lack the capacity to doubt themselves, their convictions, and their methods. Mix in political conviction with religious faith, bind them together, and you get borderline megalomania, which I think characterizes Ashcroft, Perle, Cheney, and Bush pretty well. They aren't evil (well, maybe Cheney--he's scary), only immune from self-doubt, because they think that the ultimate arbiter of good, meaning God, is firmly on their side. If you are on God's side, then there is only one other side, really.

      But this sort of megalomania is seductive even to non-religious people. I'd bet Pol Pot and most other Communist leaders just thought they were doing what was right, they lacked the capacity for self-doubt, and they were surrounded by those who told them what they wanted to hear. There aren't that many authentically bad people in the world. I think Orwell actually gave human beings too much credit, because being rational himself, he assumed that, a few stupid people aside, most people were rational. So even his "bad guys" are rational--they want power, and will use "the boot in the face" to get and keep it. But in reality we have clean-cut, Christian soldiers torturing people to death because they think they're fighting for freedom and democracy. People will do horrible things for noble words, and still sleep like babies at night. Evil is more complex and insidious than Orwell made it out to be.

      Anyway, rambling aside, our world is not like the one Orwell created in his books. There are similarities, yes, but ours differs from his in nature and degree. If you use up all your superlatives now, if you shout "tyranny" now, what words will you use when it gets worse?

      [ Parent ]
      • Mod parent up by pwroberts (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @07:33AM
      • Re:poppycock (Score:5, Interesting)

        by sukotto (122876) on Monday September 25 2006, @08:17AM (#16184079)
        if you shout "tyranny" now, what words will you use when it gets worse?

        Revolution.

        (I really liked your post btw)
        [ Parent ]
        • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
      • Re:poppycock by sdpuppy (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @08:39AM
      • Re:poppycock by Dionysos Taltos (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @08:45AM
        • Re:poppycock (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Grym (725290) * <.ude.tv. .ta. .2ecirpna.> on Monday September 25 2006, @09:36AM (#16185041)

          "It gets worse every day. I agree with almost everything you wrote, but you seem to imply the momentum downward has stopped. It hasn't. It hasn't even remotely begun to swing in another direction. There was thought it would change in 2004, but it didn't. We, Americans, have a chance once again in November to start turning this beast around. However, one day we are going to run out of opportunities."

          Tell me you aren't naive enough to believe that our society's problems are solely of republican origin or that the democrats are the panacea, because they're not. In fact, it's clear you've fallen victim to the biggest lie of all: that elections are what decides the fate of our country.

          I'm not necessarily referring to smoke-filled rooms when I say this either. Much of the problem is that there is momentum within our systems of power that prevents effective change from occurring (ex. term-limit legislation). In other cases, it is the system itself that causes the problem (ex. the elastic-clause of the Constitution). Again, like the GP said, we do ourselves a great disservice when we assume that someone behind the curtain is the single source of all our woes.

          -Grym

          [ Parent ]
          • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
      • Re:poppycock by TheWoozle (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @09:30AM
      • Re:poppycock by kabocox (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @09:39AM
        • Re:poppycock by AnyoneEB (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @01:50PM
          • Re:poppycock by kabocox (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @04:56PM
      • Re:poppycock by Dausha (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @10:25AM
        • Re:poppycock by AnyoneEB (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @01:59PM
        • Re:poppycock by misanthrope101 (Score:2) Tuesday September 26 2006, @06:40AM
        • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
      • Re:poppycock by uglylaughingman (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @10:45AM
      • Re:poppycock by Guuge (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @10:46AM
      • Re:poppycock by tringstad (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @10:47AM
      • Re:poppycock by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @11:42AM
      • Re:poppycock by Coffeehound (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @11:52AM
        • Re:poppycock by Grishnakh (Score:2) Wednesday September 27 2006, @01:14PM
          • Re:poppycock by Coffeehound (Score:1) Wednesday September 27 2006, @06:41PM
      • Re:poppycock by Kismet (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @02:11PM
      • Re:poppycock by QuantumFTL (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @11:30PM
      • Re:poppycock by VShael (Score:1) Tuesday September 26 2006, @06:48AM
      • Re:poppycock by Max Threshold (Score:2) Wednesday September 27 2006, @08:17PM
      • Re:poppycock by Grishnakh (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @06:21PM
      • 2 replies beneath your current threshold.
  • Hari Seldon... by Zaatxe (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @06:32AM
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 25 2006, @06:33AM (#16183261)
    I predict that the poor and stupid will continue to breed at over twice the rate of the wealthy and educated such that eventually we will reach a high-water mark in technological development. After that point some continued advances will be made but I believe we will see a gradual decline as there simply aren't enough people to sustain the extreme level of specialization we see in society today.

    And, oh yeah, I predict lots of attendant unpleasantness - first-world cities emptied as birth-rates decline, then re-filled with unassimilated, superstitious immigrants (or, in the case of societies largely closed to immigration like Japan, just plain emptied). Noone to care for the elderly in once-wealthy societies. And lots, lots more fanatical religion and superstition. A new dark ages.

  • Dark Angel future.. by joshetc (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @06:34AM
  • by Monkelectric (546685) <[moc.cirtceleknom] [ta] [todhsals]> on Monday September 25 2006, @06:36AM (#16183283)
    (perhaps Penn Jilette?) "The future will be a lot like now but with better special effects."
  • Slashdot appears to agree by gringer (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @06:41AM
  • Prediction (Score:3, Interesting)

    by StormReaver (59959) on Monday September 25 2006, @06:43AM (#16183313)
    The one author who just about nailed his terrifying vision of the future is George Orwell. His time frame was off by 25-30 years, but that was his only big error.
    • Re:Prediction by KDR_11k (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @07:28AM
    • Re:Prediction by Xouba (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @03:45PM
    • Re:Prediction by TheRaven64 (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @10:24AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Perhaps, but 2020? by l3xii (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @06:44AM
  • "virtual reality" alone kills this by misanthrope101 (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @06:46AM
  • Exponential trends; unknown endgame (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Saeger (456549) <farrellj.gmail@com> on Monday September 25 2006, @06:47AM (#16183337)
    (http://singinst.org/)
    Sure, nobody can know for certain what the future will bring specifically, but one incontrovertable observation is that since the beginning of time overall progress has been accelerating exponentially.

    The closest real-world parallel to Hari Seldon's "Future History" would be Ray Kurzweil's Law of Accelerating Returns [kurzweilai.net] (a generalized "Moore's Law"), which makes the point that all evolutionary processes building on past progress accelerate exponentially, and it's only towards the knee-end of the curve -- like now -- that you notice the most change.

    Genetics, Nanotechnology, and Robotics/AI (GNR) will play a huge part in the coming decades; the only question is how well we'll be able to guide how it all unfolds. Take for example just one implication of advanced nanotech: The Molecular Manufacturing "replicator" in every home -- at the same time such a device creates vast "wealth without money" [bath.ac.uk] for the poorest of people, it also removes concentrated power from the former elite, which in of itself isn't a bad thing except that we're... only human, so the primitive-reaction could be bad.

    It's my opinion that it's actually in our best interest to make sure that we either merge with AI, or that benevolent AI "take over" before our selfish monkey-brain fucks everything up with the increasingly powerful tech at our disposal.
  • by tygerstripes (832644) on Monday September 25 2006, @06:55AM (#16183383)
    52 percent of respondents agree that... 46 percent of respondents believe that... 42 percent agree that... 52 percent agree with the assertion... and 42 percent believe...
    Excuse me, but did anyone notice that the level of agreement to the vast majority of these statements hovers around the 50% mark? With a sample of 700, that's statistically significant in itself.

    Assuming the questions were posed in a "Y/N" fashion, what this study tells anyone with a statistical background is that there is no fucking consensus whatsoever. These guys have no idea - pick any question about 2020 and pose it to one of these guys. They're almost exactly as likely to say "yes" as "no".

    It's interesting that this study was done, and it makes an interesting read, but it produced almost exactly no significant results.

  • by kahei (466208) on Monday September 25 2006, @06:55AM (#16183387)
    (http://www.hwacha.net/)

    According to expert futurologists, we face a nightmarish future -- a future without expert predictions of the future!

    "People will get sick of it," said a spokesman for the Institute for Predictions. "They just won't want any more baseless predictions -- so people will stop making any."

    Professor Isaac Sagan of the University of Pontification agrees. "In the future, people will almost certainly have gotten sick of hearing me talk about what will happen in the future. Very likely, I'll have to find another job -- such as fry cook, or hat salesman."

    Although vapid, uninteresting predictions of the future are currently at a record high, even those who attempt to make actualy useful predictions foresee a downward trend.

    "At some point, real problems are going to become impossible to ignore," pointed out Dr. Bob Gore of the Smartville College, Oxford. "With climate change already depopulating some areas, and the deepening split between the American, Muslim, and Chinese spheres of influence, it's only a matter of time until people just don't have the time to talk about whether, in future, they will have the time to make predictions about... hang on, I can't remember how I started this sentence."

    Whoever you listen to, one theme is clear -- futurologists and the kind of 'experts' who appear in newspaper articles as 'experts predict' will one day die out, and that day may be sooner than we think. Which gives us all a ray of hope for the future.

  • by Uukrul (835197) on Monday September 25 2006, @06:56AM (#16183395)
    ...maybe it's a good idea to vote schwarzenegger for president. Just in case.
  • It's never like what scientists say... by consumer_whore (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @06:57AM
  • SF is not really about the "future" by SABME (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @06:59AM
  • Best prediction of the future... by Down_in_the_Park (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @06:59AM
  • Firefly - good call (Score:5, Funny)

    by 1stpreacher (848239) on Monday September 25 2006, @07:01AM (#16183421)
    America and China end up being the superpowers. And the Alliance is looking out for the good of all (except those that don't agree with it) ...



    Smart man that Joss is.

  • In 1960... by denisbergeron (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @07:09AM
  • There is a real risk, and a chance deal with it by grouchyDude (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @07:10AM
  • Oh, great, what's next?` by WgT2 (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @07:11AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • In the words of Alan Kay ... by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @07:11AM
  • Why the fear? by houghi (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @07:17AM
  • Whatever happens, by Pictish Prince (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @07:19AM
  • by ettlz (639203) on Monday September 25 2006, @07:20AM (#16183533)
    (http://ettlz.blogspot.com/ | Last Journal: Sunday February 12 2006, @06:53PM)
    ...war was beginning.
  • Theater by kurtis25 (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @07:23AM
  • Navel-gazing report by Lazerf4rt (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @07:23AM
  • the gems... by salec (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @07:31AM
  • A note to future Slash-dotters: by Ixne (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @07:36AM
  • So that's the future? by hal2814 (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @07:39AM
  • Hari Seldon by ElephanTS (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @07:41AM
    • Re:Hari Seldon by Prof.Phreak (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @09:29AM
  • Hindsight and the Faustian Bargain by hey! (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @07:44AM
  • People are Explorers by avapex (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @07:45AM
  • Some of the best predictions by OriginalArlen (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @07:49AM
  • Umm ok 14 years from now. by bxbaser (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @07:59AM
  • This is stupid... by Lillesvin (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @08:00AM
  • Luddites are Misunderstood. by kaleco (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @08:09AM
  • I for one... by belligerent0001 (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @08:10AM
  • Boiling Frog by PinkyDead (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @08:11AM
  • The question is... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by johansalk (818687) on Monday September 25 2006, @08:20AM (#16184109)
    Who will own the Artificial Intelligence? If it's some corporate head like Rupert Murdoch or some Government head like George Bush then count me with the luddite terrorists.
  • There should be a lucky guess out of thousands by smchris (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @08:23AM
  • Chicks with big hooters and wierd latex foreheads by gatkinso (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @08:24AM
  • Failure to predict the future we live in today... by Jakuta (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @08:26AM
  • SciFi is a reflection of the present by Opportunist (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @08:41AM
  • Experts... by Yvanhoe (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @08:41AM
  • Twilight Zone: Examination Day by Voidsinger (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @09:00AM
  • Judgement still out on luddites by smchris (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @09:04AM
  • Star Trek? by dlim (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @09:10AM
  • meaningless by oohshiny (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @09:19AM
  • Coming true (Score:4, Insightful)

    by wonkavader (605434) on Monday September 25 2006, @09:22AM (#16184821)
    SciFi is never right. Never. In the whole, that is. Bits come out right, and if we ignore all the wrongness, that makes them look clever, but it's just a point or two taken out of context for most works. The same sort of cherry picking, in a more extreme form, makes bible prophesy look reliable.

    SciFi folks may do a better job of predicting than the average schmoe, but they don't do fantastically well. This is because technology changes and we're all living in bonazaland. (Marshall McLuhan's term for the fact that we're all living in the world of our youth, mentally, and the fact that it is impossible for us to see the world the way the kids do.) We don't see what's already happening.

    Also, when we do make a look into the future, we cannot see far enough. When computers first appeared, the world expected them to be huge and brilliant. SciFi had them running planets. Meaning one big computer, running a planet. Who guessed that they'd still be stupid, 50 years later, but so small and so cheap that they run coke machines?

    Further, when technology changes, it has a ripple effect. Things change all around it. That coke machine now has a computer in it. It knows what was bought at what time. Who thinks about the little things like that in toto? One or two may occur to a writer, or even fifty. But thousands of such small effects? And together, they change society.

    But SciFi is right now and then, and we take those points out of context and those POINTS appear brilliant. HG Wells described the use of the atomic bomb. Never mind that he thought that, because of nuclear decay, it would keep exploding for years.

    For SciFi that gets things right, the key is to look for SciFi without Sci. Orwell, for instance: 1984 is amazingly prescient. Look in various totalitarian countries (like or own, more and more) for bits and pieces which appear. Nothing on the whole, but lots of bits.

    At the other end of the spectrum, John Varley looks horribly dated, these days, because he wrote about tech and sex. Well, sex hasn't changed, so he still describes a future, there (though it seems more like a wet dream than a possible future) but the tech in his books looks impossible or silly, now. This is a man who eschewed word processors while writing SciFi -- Talk about Bonazaland.

    Philip K. Dick still seems current, since Phil didn't even know how light bulbs work. All his work is about society and ethics and the nature of reality. It ain't coming true, but it still grabs ya!
  • future predictions always changing by peter303 (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @09:38AM
  • Reasonable doubt over predictions... by Attis_The_Bunneh (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @09:41AM
  • three DisneyWorld visions of future (Score:4, Interesting)

    by peter303 (12292) on Monday September 25 2006, @09:42AM (#16185155)
    The "Future" is popular enteraintment at Disney theme parks. The vision changed three times. When disney opened Tommorrowland was all about spoace ships, supercars, and the house of tommorrow. A couple decades later, post-Earth Day Epcot had more ecological friendly vision of the future. Finnaly, the future is now all about digital entertainment gizmos- fancy TVs, phones, the InterNet.
  • Translation by Schraegstrichpunkt (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @09:44AM
  • Any chance... by Conspiracy_Of_Doves (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @09:44AM
  • It's Max Headroom all over again by packageman (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @10:04AM
  • the role of science fiction by Corson (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @10:10AM
  • Brave New World by taxman_10m (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @10:17AM
  • Gattaca seemed to nail it by gatkinso (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @10:38AM
  • Bladerunner has been correct in several prediction by Kodack (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @11:08AM
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  • madmax by zogger (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @11:11AM
  • The only futurist I need is Alvin Toffler by Hasai (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @11:16AM
  • Experts by thorkyl (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @11:27AM
  • The future by Maxo-Texas (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @11:54AM
  • My prediction by nEoN nOoDlE (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @12:01PM
  • Well if the Movies and Books are correct by ajnsue (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @12:16PM
  • Bad Sci-Fi Future vs. Bad Bruckheimer Present by Ranger (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @12:27PM
  • More of the same only different by palantir (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @02:52PM
  • the red pill or the blue pill by naratom_is_me (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @03:19PM
  • Experts Fear? by nurb432 (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @04:30PM
  • Best Sci-Fi Film Depicition by SonicSpike (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @07:15PM
  • Same Source by Tablizer (Score:1) Monday September 25 2006, @10:18PM
  • Soylent Red Blood Halloween Genocide Reality by ImitationEnergy (Score:1) Tuesday September 26 2006, @05:25AM
  • Reach out and ... by donak (Score:1) Tuesday September 26 2006, @07:55AM
  • so y ou're the voice in the wilderness? by misanthrope101 (Score:2) Monday September 25 2006, @07:25AM
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  • 14 replies beneath your current threshold.
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