What new technologies are coming up in the not so distant future?

What new technologies are coming up in the not so distant future?

>Five years?
>10 years?
>15 years?

Other urls found in this thread:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_emerging_technologies
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stepped_reckoner
rsc.org/chemistryworld/2016/07/quantum-computer-simulates-hydrogen-molecule-complex-calculations
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buran_(spacecraft)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antimatter_weapon
twitter.com/AnonBabble

Hello? Anyone there?

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_emerging_technologies

the most comprehensive list for a jump off point. there is a lot coming our way.

VR and AR
Quantum computing
Genetic engineering
Autonomous vehicles
Electric vehicles
Reusable space launch systems

Every single thing on your list has been taking off since the early 1990s.

If it didn't happen in 25 years it won't happen at all.

robot loli

oh youre a particularly idiotic breed of motherfucker arent you

The first mechanical computer was invented in 1822 and the first programmable one in 1936 you fucking tard. The progression was extremely slow up until about 20 years ago

In vitro meat

Robot dicks

I've seen 2 virtual reality booms, which led to nowhere.
It was even more sophisticated by the way, since there were virtual gloves and even suits being sold.

Quantum computing is "right around the corner" since 2001 at least.

Genetic engineering has been around since the 80s. Didn't progress much.

Autonomous vehicles are a joke. Back in 1993 there was Mercedes Vamp prototype and the Navlab, which successfully traveled autonomously, but never went into production.

Fully electric vehicles have been sold in the 90s - Chrysler TEVan, GM EV1, there were some nissans and toyotas too. Led to nowhere.

Reusable space launch systems - Buran.

Every tech was just as good as the modern one, save the whole internet integration and apps.

It is just another circle of milking the young gullible fools for shekels.

The year of the Linux desktop.

Phones,
GPU,
Watch,
a freezer,
lots of bluray,
TVs, (and monitors also)
HDDs
SSDs,

a lot of thing now that 'im thinking about it. Maybe one new of each a year per company, it's going to be a great century to be alive user.

WHO HOLDS BACK THE ELECTRIC CAR

>nintendo power glove
>sophisticated

Also, quantum computers are already being used regularly at universities and such. Its exactly like when people said the room sized computers in the 70s/80s would never be used by regular people and then laughed at guys like steve jobs or bill gates for making personal computers
genetic engineering has come leaps and bounds since the 80s, most of the perceived lag is from the pushback from religious groups due to ethical reasons. But just do a google search of genetic engineering in regards to diabetes or neutrophenia or various other disorders and you'll find out that there's been tons of advancements made. My cousin would be dead right now if it weren't for advancements in genetic engineering (super broad field by the way) in the late 90s/early 00s.
Autonomous vehicles are already statistically safer and better drivers than the average person, and the newer ones that are half and half basically make it impossible to get into an accident

I kind of agree with you in regards to electric cars, the energy/pollution output required to make them is way more than any gas powered vehicle. Hydrogen fuel cells or some other sort of power generator is the way to go, not electric as we now have it.

But basically you're a fucking idiot luddite who sounds like every old person ever. And you obviously haven't used the new VR headsets if you think its exactly like the garbage they had in the 80s/90s. Sure its not like you're living in a virtual environment, but it definitely does add to gaming experiences (if used on the right games), or even movies. Less so for movies admittedly

Yes all of that is true but it was all experimental at the time. It's still experimental now but theres a key difference here. Back then it was like "hey lets see if the tech we have can do this" then they tried it and were like "OK it can do this but its gonna be impossible to sell anytime soon,maybe in the future"

Now It's the future and they're like "oh cool tech is cheap now lets do this and sell it"

Pure fusion bombs

The ecofaggots. With their anti-nuclear campaigns the price has been climbing for a while. Currently it's almost just as expensive a common econobox car.

Most of it wasn't prototyping. It was consumer-oriented. You could go and buy and electric Toyota or a VFX-1.

The VFX-1 was way way more comfy than a Vive, because it had counterweights at the back of the head.

why are you posting this, no one cares about this show anymore

non-flammable molex to sata

>and the newer ones that are half and half basically make it impossible to get into an accident
Like the Tesla that didn't see a fucking truck and killed the driver?
Then Tesla said "lol jk, it's not autonomous, it's just a cruise control so it's the drivers fault"

Sillicon will be replaced in the next 25 years

Look up how much they cost to manufacture. They were experiments, yes some made it to consumers but in limited one time release and never intended to be a sustained product for any significant amount of time.

Hands free dildos.

VR helmets (yes, it was "helmet", not "headset" back then) ranged from $800 to $1600, depending on the screen quality and the bells and whistles that came with it.

Same price as now, pretty much.

And by the way the difference is that the very idea of paying $800 for a game gadget was outrageous back then.

Now you are used to pay the same price for a phone or a graphics card, the Jews trained you well.

Deep analysis of phrasing and word usage online to track people regardless of whether they're otherwise anonymous or not.

Initial research has shown that you can fairly reliably determine different posters by their choice of words, spelling, grammar, preferred structures, colloquialisms, etc. Paired with other surveillance techniques, it will prove extremely capable, so even using anonymising services and programs won't do you any good!

This field has historically had limited use, such as what's used in Biblical analysis, but it's coming to a spy agency near you! :3

False the first mechanical computer was built in 1694 en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stepped_reckoner

Wasn't turing complete though. Babbage did propose a machine that was turing complete in the 1800s, but never built it

Nope, universities don't regularly use quantum computers.

D-wave's quantum computer isn't really a quantum computer. However, there have been some very encouraging developments in quantum computers recently.

Recently google was able to use a proto-quantum computer to calculate the electronic structure of hydrogen with an approach that is scalable.

This has made us in the chemistry community moist. Quantum chemistry simulations take months on regular computers. Quantum computers could speed up these simulations by a factor of a lot.

rsc.org/chemistryworld/2016/07/quantum-computer-simulates-hydrogen-molecule-complex-calculations

Research has also shown that if you imitate a famous writer like cormac mccarthy, one can stymie authorship recognition

>> buran
>> reusable

>> mercedes vamp
Required safety driver approval to change lanes making it not autonomous.

>> GM EV1
Used lead acid batteries for crying out loud

Yes these technologies have existed, but they weren't practical.

Teslas should not be 'self driving'. Teslas don't use lidar, which they need because we haven't solved computer vision.

>> buran
>> reusable

Buran was designed to be carried by a plane and take off on it's own in the upper atmosphere. And yes, it was reusable, that was the whole purpose of Buran.

>Required safety driver approval to change lanes making it not autonomous.
Because of the traffic regulations. Teslas need your approval too, they don't overtake on their own.

>Used lead acid batteries for crying out loud
So what?

>because we haven't solved computer vision.
No, because when the car fucks up someone's gotta take responsibility. And it won't be Musk. We are talking about billions in lawsuits here. If an "autonomous" car as much as scratches another car you can bet your ass I'm suing the manufacturer for millions.

No buran was built as the soviet's response to the space shuttle. They did launch it into space, but with a non-reusable launch system

Gene therapy is going to be the next big thing. In science fiction, designer babies are illegal but the rich make them anyway. Real life will play out the same way.

If you think the class divide is bad now, just wait until these genetically engineered babies start to grow up. We'll have an actual caste system and you won't be able to change your caste because you're marked by your own genetics.

You clearly have no idea what you are talking about. Buran was created to surpass the shuttle. Where shuttle had the empty cargo room in the middle Buran had full-sized engines and fuel tanks. It was launch system + the ship.
Only the early versions were used with an external launch system.

Ah fuck no. We can't do gene therapy for shit. We don't have a clue what genes we should modify to get mad gains. Current methods like crispr are still so bad at modify human embryos that even the ethics free Chinese are calling for a moratorium on that sort of work.

Never heard of him, so consider that joke whooshed.

Do you have a single fact to back that up? Buran very much had an empty cargo room that was not filled with fuel.

The only buran that was launched was launched with an energia booster.

What you posted is an atmospheric test article, a full size model of buran fitted with jet engines to test the atmospheric maneuvering capability of the airframe.

In some ways buran was superior to the shuttle, but it most certainly did fly into orbit under its own power. Your post is a disservicd to the soviet engineers who made buran and energia.

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buran_(spacecraft)

That was not a joke. See practical attacks against authorship recognition

...

That it can be done is beside the point. A new level of intrusive surveillance will emerge that most people won't even be aware of, and those that do won't easily be able to consistently circumvent.

Authorship recognition is already here and already fucking scary.

I'm looking forward to wireless induction electricity. Right now you pretty much just see it in your phones and watches but I can't wait till you have an entire desk that has induction on the surface.
Set your phone on your desk and it begins charging and now you can initiate a transfer as if it were plugged in via usb.
Wireless keyboard and mouse that never die.
No wires running to power monitor or most peripherals

Even wireless electricity is going to be amazing.
You can put lights and switches anywhere.
Mount your razor thin tv anywhere.

It will become a lot scarier when you can easily and effortlessly match up the computational data with all the little stuff, like cross-referencing the use of certain grammatical structures by dialect, word etymology by sociolect, misspellings and grammatical errors by the differing rates in second language speaker groups, spelling and words specific to dialects, punctuation by education level. There are a huge variety of ways you could analyse text, once someone has the ability to do every way, holy shit, some Sup Forumstards gonna really get vanned.

I'm hoping for robot kidneys.

I'm going to be donating one of mine to my dad so he doesn't die at 50.

20 years from now I want to be able to get one off Amazon with free shipping instead of borrowing one from my spawn

>Oh look a retard who cannot browse wikipedia

Servers and data centers that no longer need pen testers because the machines can patch themselves and identify and research threats.

Nice clock, Ahmed!

God I wish Ahmed had taken a fucking bomb to the white house to show Obama his "clock"

What are you most excited to see?

What MCU/MPU is that? I'd assume it would have an internal oscillator.

>Also, quantum computers are already being used regularly at universities and such.
Nope. There's of course research being done on quantum computers and there's recently been a major breakthrough, but still none of it is practically relevant. If you want to compare it with the development of computers: We are basically figuring out how to build a proper electron tube and getting closer.

>Hydrogen fuel cells or some other sort of power generator is the way to go, not electric as we now have it.
Hydrogen fuel cells are shit. They are pretty much less efficient than batteries in every way.

>Socketed rom in a breadboard

For what purpose

6TB DIMMs of 3d Xpoint memory within the next year for the enterprise market, maybe another 5 years before consumers see something similar.

>What new technologies are coming up in the not so distant future?

That's a shitty title

I'd have asked "What upcoming technologies have you excited?"

Much better for starting a discussion, faggot

lrn2thread

>The ecofaggots. With their anti-nuclear campaigns the price has been climbing for a while. Currently it's almost just as expensive a common econobox car.

>you'll never have a fucking awesome nuclear powered electric car

I'm sorry.

>en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_emerging_technologies


>en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antimatter_weapon

>A major obstacle is the cost of producing antimatter even in small quantities. As of 2004, the cost of producing one millionth of a gram of antimatter was estimated at US$60 billion.[10] By way of comparison the cost of the Manhattan project to produce the first atomic weapon was estimated at US$23 billion at 2007 prices.[8]

>Smaller one off assassination weapons are more economically feasible: A modern MK3 hand grenade contains 227 g of TNT.[11] One billionth of a gram of positrons contains as much energy as 37.8 kilograms (83 pounds) of TNT,[10] making the 2004 cost of a 'positron hand grenade' (10 trillionth of a gram of antimatter, 378 g TNT equivalent) that could be fitted in a sniper's bullet US$600,000. This excludes the cost of the micro containment device, if such a thing is possible.

Wikipedia is amazing

>It was even more sophisticated by the way, since there were virtual gloves and even suits being sold.

stupidly realistic gaymen.

All of them are possible. They just dont get enough funding or the right one.
VR-AR has limitless options outside of mug games
QC is the best that would happen to maths in centuries
GE may be difficult but will be needed for Space Exploration (we have GMO already)
AV, just look tesla and google + advances in AI and Neural Webs
EV, do you even Graphene?
Reusable Space Launchers, look at SpaceX and the need to supply the ISS makes this a priority for most Space Agencies

Just wait and see

Not exactly new or technological but embryo selection is going to be economically sound for any individual in the next 5 years.

>VR will probably stop being a meme in 5 years.
>10 years we will get full impersion senses included (sexbots senpai)
>15 years we ded family

I think the biggest thing that will have a huge impact is probably self-driving cars, it will happen in the next 10-30 years.

Will have enormous impact to transportation and delivery.

Think about it, personalized delivery costing a couple of dollars at most, items delivered to you within an hour of purchase any day of the week, anytime of the day.

Stores will be converted to showrooms, you pick the items and they get delivered to you. They might add some automated drop off into your house or right next to your house as well. GPS showing you exactly where package is and estimated time when it will arrive. Delivery can be rerouted via your phone or location, oh you want your item at location X now in 10 minutes? Sure, $3 more.

Cars will be reloaded by other cars mid travel, extremely efficient.

Equip a van with a cook or hell even an automated kitchen, self driving making food on the go and delivering it? Maybe, just maybe.

Car ownership will probably not be needed, transportation prices will plummet. Driving will be banned on certain streets.

Car accidents will make headlines, which also means hardly any organ transplants since 90% of them are from car accidents, so growing organs might become a thing as well.

Another huge tech that will happen is cheap ass low powered sensors in EVERYTHING.

Every food item will have a sensor, will probably be embedded in the sticker/barcode and can detect simple shit like temperate and store info like expiry date.

Anything containing liquids will have a way to measure weight, and can monitor your drinks. Running out of milk? Fridge scans food every X minutes, sees milk is nearly empty, fridge orders more milk on next grocery delivery, etc.

Sensors in your clothes, you don't need a smartwatch, when your clothes can keep track of shit. Your shoes will have the info about how much you walked, in fact you probably generate enough power to run quite a few clothes sensors while you walk.

Toilets will get sensors, analyze your shit and piss and tell you if you are getting sick or missing some minerals and vitamins.

Eventually you'll get super small sensors that will be embedded into your body.

AI, the biggest and most significant change in the future.

Even if AI doesn't reach human intelligence and I bet it eventually will. AI assistant programs will augment human capability.

I think operating systems and programs will benefit the most, you'll simply explain what you want and the computer will try to do it, while you give more input on how to adjust it and such.

For example, in the future photoshop maybe voice/text driven. You give it commands and it interprets and does it for you. I want a logo for company X with a parrot, a skydiver and call it something cool which isn't yet used, will relate to 15-24 year olds, gaming company. Computer will research the topics, add meaning, find references and attempt a design. Then human will further adjust the output, until they have what they need.

I'm excited for full-color 60+ hz e-ink displays, flexible displays, holograms, augmented reality, cheap (but not shit) displays being integrated into everything and all that visuals-related tech. I saw an ice cream fridge in the store recently with a color display embedded in the glass, was really cool. Maybe in 30 years you can make cheap fake 3D windows so your underground student flat feels like a fucking penthouse or cottage or space station near jupiter, we already have simulated sunlight windows although they work on completely different principles, they really look genuine.

>Five years?
Network Superintelligence
Cryptocredit

Enjoy.

years?

Australia still using ADSL1