12.21.09
Contact:
Patrick Tucker
Senior Editor
THE FUTURIST
Director of Communications
World Future Society
301-656-8274
ptucker@wfs.org
Futurists Release Top Ten Forecasts for 2010 and Beyond, plus hundreds more.
Bethesda,
Maryland - The OUTLOOK 2010 report from THE FUTURIST
magazine examines the key trends in technology, the
environment, the economy, international relations,
etc., in order to paint a full and credible portrait
of our likely future. The magazine has released the
top ten forecasts from Outlook 2010, plus more than
250 forecasts from previous reports on the World
Future Society’s Web site.
http://www.wfs.org/forecasts.htm
Among the ten most provocative forecasts from this
year’s report:
1. Your phone will tell you when you’re in love.
Mobile devices are enabling new spontaneous
connections in real-world settings, including love
connections. One day soon, your phone will play
matchmaker, recommending that you introduce yourself
to someone nearby whose online profile displays
tastes or passions similar to yours. Impossible? An
iPhone application called Serendipity is currently
being commercialized by MIT researchers. -Erica
Orange, "Mining Information from the Data Clouds,"
July-Aug 2009, p. 17
2. In the design economy of the future, people
will download and print their own products,
including auto parts, jewelry, and even the kitchen
sink. Rapid prototyping, or 3-D printing, and
devices like the RepRap self-reproducing printer are
allowing people to design, customize, and print
objects from their home computers. In the future,
cheaper versions of these devices could disrupt
manufacturing business models, resulting in far
cheaper products individually tailored to every
customer’s desire. -Thomas A. Easton, "The Design
Economy," Jan-Feb 2009, p. 43
3. The era of brain-to-brain telepathy dawns.
Neuroscientist David Poeppel says that telepathic
communication between brains is possible, so long as
"communication" is understood to be electromagnetic
signals and not words. Technologies like
magnetoencephalography, which pick up the various
signals the brain sends out, could be used to pick
up specific signals and convey them. If you could
train your brain to signal in Morse code, sensors in
a helmet could pick up the message and send it to
another helmet. -Patrick Tucker, "Reinventing
Morality," Jan-Feb 2009, p. 23
4. Tomorrow’s inventors will spend their days
writing descriptions of the problems they want to
solve, and then letting computers find the
solutions. Invention programs like Gregory
Hornby’s "evolutionary algorithm" have been used to
invent real-world objects, such as a special space
antenna, based entirely on engineering
specifications. Continued advances will increasingly
rely on cross-fertilization between the fields of
biology and computer science. As a result, we will
develop not only software that can produce better
inventions but also inventions that are able to
adapt to their environments. -Robert Plotkin,
"The Automation of Invention," July-Aug 2009, p. 24
5. Micronations built on artificial islands will
dramatically shift the face of global politics.
New forms of government and unusual political models
will begin to emerge, including corporate
nation-states, religious states, tax-free zones,
single-function countries, cause-related countries,
and even rental nation-states, where organizations
can "rent a country" for a year or two to test a
specific project. -Thomas Frey, "Own Your Own
Island Nation," May-June 2009, p. 30
6. Young people will read more, and the old will
play more video games. According to the 2007
American Time Use Survey from the Bureau of Labor
Statistics revealed some surprising findings. In
2007, adults aged 75 and older spent nearly twice as
much time playing video games (about 20 minutes) as
they did in 2006. Teens aged 15–19 spent twice as
much time reading as they did before (about 14
minutes) and less time using a computer for games or
casual surfing. -World Trends & Forecasts,
Nov-Dec 2008, p. 14
7. Ammonia may become the fuel of choice for cars
by 2020. As a candidate source for hydrogen used
in fuel cells, ammonia (comprising one nitrogen and
three hydrogen atoms) is plentiful, easier to
liquefy than methane, and emits nitrogen rather than
carbon, thus having fewer negative impacts on the
climate. -J. Storrs Hall, "Ammonia, the Fuel of
the Future," Sep-Oct 2009, p. 10
8. Algae may become the new oil. According to
researchers at a Department of Energy plant in New
Mexico, single-celled microalgae, grown in pond
water, produce a biofuel that is lead-free and
biodegradable, emits two-thirds less carbon dioxide
and other pollutants than gasoline, and can run any
modern diesel engine. Even better, algae require
only a fraction of the land area of biofuel-producing
crops. -Robert McIntyre, "Algae’s Powerful
Future," Mar-Apr 2009, p. 25
9. Radical methods of altering the planet may be
the only way to prevent the worst effects of climate
change. Geoengineering may be inevitable
because, even if humans could instantly end all
greenhouse gas emissions, global temperatures would
continue to increase for the next 20–30 years,
triggering feedback loops and more warming.
Potential megascale geoengineering projects include
sending space mirrors into orbit, sequestering
carbon in the ground in biomass charcoal, and
increasing the amount of carbon that the ocean can
absorb by forcing plankton blooms in the seas. -Jamais
Cascio, author of Hacking the Earth, reviewed by Bob
Olson, July-Aug 2009, p. 51
10. The existence of extraterrestrial life will
be confirmed or conclusively denied within a
generation. New space missions and advanced
computer technology could confirm the existence of
extraterrestrials soon. Scientists using NASA’s
Spitzer Space Telescope have found that at least
20%-and perhaps as many as 60%-of Sun-like stars
could have rocky planets. Next generation, AI-driven
space probes may allow us to plot the location of
every planetary body in the known universe. Among
the more than 300 extra-solar worlds already
discovered, probably one has some form of life,
according to Dimitar Sasselov, an astronomer and
director of Harvard University’s Origins of Life
Initiative. -Gregory Georgiou, "The Real Life Search
for E.T. Heats Up," Nov-Dec 2008, p. 20
All of these forecasts plus dozens more were
included in the report that scanned the best writing
and research from THE FUTURIST magazine over the
course of the previous year.
This year, THE FUTURIST has also made public the
contents from Outlook 2006, 2007, 2008, and 2009,
more than 250 forecasts in all relating to 2010 and
beyond.
http://www.wfs.org/forecasts.htm
The Society hopes this report, covering developments
in business and economics, demography, energy, the
environment, health and medicine, resources, society
and values, and technology, will assist its readers
in preparing for the challenges and opportunities in
the coming decade.
The 2010 Outlook report was released as part of the
November-December issue of THE FUTURIST magazine.
THE FUTURIST is a bimonthly magazine published
continuously since 1967 by the World Future Society
and is a principal benefit of membership, read by
25,000 members worldwide. The magazine is also
available in newsstands throughout the United
States.
Among the many influential thinkers and experts who
have contributed to THE FUTURIST are: Gene
Roddenberry, Al Gore, Alvin and Heidi Toffler,
Buckminster Fuller, Frederik Pohl, Isaac Asimov,
Vaclav Havel, Hazel Henderson, Margaret Mead, Robert
McNamara, B.F. Skinner, Nicholas Negroponte, David
Walker, Lewis Lapham, Arthur C. Clarke, Kofi Anan,
and Ray Kurzweil.
The focus of THE FUTURIST is innovation, creative
thinking, and emerging trends in the social,
economic, and technological areas. More information
can be obtained at
www.wfs.org.
Editors: For more information on Outlook 2009, THE
FUTURIST magazine or the World Future Society, feel
free to contact World Future Society president Tim
Mack, 301-656-8274 ext. 104,
Tmack@wfs.org, or director of communications
Patrick Tucker at 443-756-4205 or
ptucker@wfs.org. More information about the
World Future Society can also be obtained from the
Society’s Web site,
www.wfs.org.
CONTACT INFORMATION
Patrick Tucker
World Future Society
Email World Future Society
301-656-8274
