Sci/Tech

CES Unveiled: My Picks from the Pre-show

Subject(s):
Patrick Tucker's picture

The future has descended on the Venetian in Las Vegas for the annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES). I was unable to pass up the chance to join a small handful of my fellow reporters (by which I mean thousands of bloggers) for CES unveiled, the official pre-conference press event on Sunday night. The preview offered a sampling of the thousands of new products, apps, and startups that will be launching here over the next few days. Everything on display in the ballroom last night was shiny, but not everything was of relevance to the average futurist. Of those products that most impressed me were the ones that epitomize the biggest technology trend of the next ten years, devices that make use of the data you provide, even when you don’t know you’re providing data:

A. I. and the Next American Industrial Revolution

Subject(s):
Patrick Tucker's picture

In the next decade, the United States will use increasingly capable artificial intelligence (AI) to greatly reduce the cost of health care, accelerate research and development into new medicines, improve cars and roads to reduce gridlock, and even regain much of the manufacturing base we lost to countries like China, say researchers in computer science, robotics, and management.

A Whole World of Options for Human Space Flight

Subject(s):
Rick Docksai's picture

Russian spacecraft fleets have been busy the last few months: With the U.S.

How to Read Minds: THE FUTURIST Interviews Neuroscientist Jody Culham

Subject(s):

Your secret plans aren't so secret after all. Last year, using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), which reveals blood flow within the brain, Jody Culham and her fellow researchers at the University of Western Ontario discovered that areas of the brain associated with motion exhibit increased blood flow not only when acting but also when considering whether or not to act. In the January-February issue of THE FUTURIST magazine, we look into the study. Culham explains her work and its applications to FUTURIST magazine deputy editor Patrick Tucker.

Predictions: Technology

Subject(s):
  • In the next 25 years, synthetic biology — the creation of life from nonliving chemicals designed on a computer — could produce thousands of synthetic genomes and life-forms.
  • Alcohol-detection devices could become a standard option for every U.S. automobile by 2020.
  • Hotels will offer customers a selection of dreams as well as the opportunity to study and learn while they sleep by 2030.
  • and more …

The “Internet of Things” as Energy Saver

Subject(s):

Creating networks between everything that uses energy could yield significant efficiencies by monitoring and controlling the grid.

Visualizing Human Intention

Subject(s):

Neuroscientists may predict what you will do before you do it.

Crossing the Species Boundary: Genetic Engineering as Conscious Evolution

Subject(s):

By Jeffrey Scott Coker

Genetic engineering is actually as natural as any process on Earth, and mastering it would enable us to do what microbes do trillions of times every day, but purposefully and with better results.

Autonomous Transportation for the Year 2030

Subject(s):
Patrick Tucker's picture

Sometimes an idea comes along that is so startling, well executed, complex and yet intuitive that it serves as both a perfect reflection of--and fitting compliment to--nature. And an idea like that can eat up your whole morning. If you never believed that design was an act of futurism then allow me to introduce you to Autonomo 2030, an integrated self-driving car system from Australian designer Charles Rattray.

Space-Based Solar Power Could Arrive in Ten Years and Create Millions of Jobs, Say Researchers

Subject(s):
Patrick Tucker's picture

A space-based solar power (SSP) system capable of meeting the energy needs of millions of people could be "deployed within a decade using technologies that are today in the laboratory," says John C. Mankins, a former manager of the Advanced Concepts Studies Office of Space Flight for NASA and widely considered one of the world’s leading experts on space-based solar power.

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