Guilgamesh
540062
20207
668
E-textiles
If you meet up and talk to me in 2020, I’ll likely be covered in electronic textiles. Why carry some electronic gadget you can easily lose when we can just wear our computers? We’ll develop clothing that can constantly project the video of our choosing (unless it turns out being so annoying that we ban it). Imagine wearing a robe covered in a display that actually projects the night sky in real time. Imagine talking to people over the “phone” just by making a hand gesture and activating electronics in your lapel, then merely thinking about what you want to say (thought-to-speech interfaces). The possibilities of e-textiles are limitless.
Amorphous metal
Amorphous metals, also called metallic glasses, consist of metal with a disordered atomic structure. They can be twice as strong as steel. Because of their disordered structure, they can disperse impact energy more effectively than a metal crystal, which has points of weakness. Amorphous metals are made by quickly cooling molten metal before it has a chance to align itself in a crystal pattern. Amorphous metals may be the military’s next generation of armor, before they adopt diamondoid armor in mid-century. On the green side of things, amorphous metals have electronic properties that improve the efficiency of power grids by as much as 40%, saving us thousands of tons of fossil fuel emissions.
Bulk diamond
We’re starting to lay down thick layers of diamond in CVD machines, hinting towards a future of bulk diamond machinery. Diamond is an ideal construction material — it’s immensely strong, light, made out of the widely available element carbon, nearly complete thermal conductivity, and has among the highest melting and boiling points of all materials. By introducing trace impurities, you can make a diamond practically any color you want. Imagine a jet, with hundreds of thousands of moving parts made of fine-tuned diamond machinery. Such a craft would be more powerful than today’s best fighter planes in the way an F-22 is better than the Red Baron’s Fokker Dr.1.
Aerogel
Aerogel holds 15 entries in the Guinness Book of Records, more than any other material. Sometimes called “frozen smoke”, aerogel is made by the supercritical drying of liquid gels of alumina, chromia, tin oxide, or carbon. It’s 99.8% empty space, which makes it look semi-transparent. Aerogel is a fantastic insulator — if you had a shield of aerogel, you could easily defend yourself from a flamethrower. It stops cold, it stops heat. You could build a warm dome on the Moon. Aerogels have unbelievable surface area in their internal fractal structures — cubes of aerogel just an inch on a side may have an internal surface area equivalent to a football field. Despite its low density, aerogel has been looked into as a component of military armor because of its insulating properties.
Carbon nanotubes
Carbon nanotubes are long chains of carbon held together by the strongest bond in all chemistry, the sacred sp2 bond, even stronger than the sp3 bonds that hold together diamond. Carbon nanotubes have numerous remarkable physical properties, including ballistic electron transport (making them ideal for electronics) and so much tensile strength that they are the only substance that could be used to build a space elevator. The specific strength of carbon nanotubes is 48,000 kN·m/kg, the best of known materials, compared to high-carbon steel’s 154 kN·/kg. That’s 300 times stronger than steel. You could build towers hundreds of kilometers high with it.
Metamaterials
“Metamaterial” refers to any material that gains its properties from structure rather than composition. Metamaterials have been used to create microwave invisibility cloaks, 2D invisibility cloaks, and materials with other unusual optical properties. Mother-of-pearl gets its rainbow color from metamaterials of biological origin. Some metamaterials have a negative refractive index, an optical property that may be used to create “Superlenses” which resolve features smaller than the wavelength of light used to image them! This technology is called subwavelength imaging. Metamaterials would be used in phased array optics, a technology that could render perfect holograms on a 2D display. These holograms would be so perfect that you could be standing 6 inches from the screen, looking into the “distance” with binoculars, and not even notice it’s a hologram.
Metal foam
Metal foam is what you get when you add a foaming agent, powdered titanium hydride, to molten aluminum, then let it cool. The result is a very strong substance that is relatively light, with 75–95% empty space. Because of its favorable strength-to-weight ratio, metal foams have been proposed as a construction material for space colonies. Some metal forms are so light that they float on water, which would make them excellent for building floating cities, like those analyzed by Marshall T. Savage in one of my favorite books, The Millennial Project.
Superalloys
A superalloy is a generic term for a metal that can operate at very high temperatures, up to about 2000 °F (1100 °C). They are popular for use in the superhot turbine areas of jet engines. They are used for more advanced oxygen-breathing designs, such as the ramjet and scramjet. When we’re flying through the sky in hypersonic craft, we’ll have superalloys to thank for it.
Transparent alumina
Transparent alumina is three times stronger than steel and transparent. The number of applications for this are huge. Imagine an entire skyscraper or arcology made largely of transparent steel. The skylines of the future could look more like a series of floating black dots (opaque private rooms) rather than the monoliths of today. A huge space station made of transparent alumina could cruise in low Earth orbit without being a creepy black dot when it passes overhead. And hey… transparent swords!
Bulk fullerenes
Diamonds may be strong, but aggregated diamond nanorods (what I call amorphous fullerene) are stronger. Amorphous fullerene has a isothermal bulk modulus of 491 gigapascals (GPa), compared to diamond’s 442 GPa. As we see in the image, the nanoscale structure of the fullerene gives it a beautiful iridescent appearance. Fullerenes can be made substantially stronger than diamond, but for greater energy cost. After a “Diamond Age” we may eventually transition to a “Fullerene Age” as our technology gets even more sophisticated.
TheBitSlinger
Advanced prototype... A T-1000... Mimetic polyalloy
Robbann
"in the year 2000, we'll have flying cars and people will take a commute rocketship to their work on the moon every morning"
NeckDeepInAHorse
Graphene?! Anywhere?!?!?!
PurpleAttackHelicopter
"10 predictions that will come false in 2020"
SodaRayne
most of them are already false...
Neoqueto
Diamond is a terrible construction material because of being too brittle.
baeelin
2020 you say? I feel your timeline is... Aggressive
theheatman
I'm sure they invented transparent aluminium in the 1980's. Just ask Montgomery Scott
Ternarian
Computer! Hello, Computer!
ohyouhere
Electronic fashion is such a stupid idea, and all the examples given are idiotic.
zucchino
Technology is annoying enough already without being in every part of every dorpnigle's clothing, projecting movies and stupid music nonstop.
GodzillaHarddiskson
Indeed. I saw that and thought, yeah. I barely let people touch my phone, projecting it for everyone to see is unlikely
mindstorm8191
Yeah, why would you want to project a video onto your own shirt? You couldn't even see it
Yetiphobia
You can't see the NERD SLUT that's on there now, so what's the difference?
YouThinkThatsBad
Absolutely. Just because we have computerized fabric doesnt mean the fashion industry is going to run wild with it or the public embrace it.
mormacil
My first idea was novelty commercial crap and camoflage.
pirateninjaunicornattacksquad
#2 fuck that man, that's how the T-1000 happens!
flicknice
No mention of clear wood?
IAmTheBadW01f
Can we soak logs in it?
ThatsMySecretCapImAlwaysHorny
You can only soak clear logs in clear wood, otherwise it goes opaque.
ashmenon
e-textiles, that exciting meeting point between touchscreen technology and sexual harassment.
rowelive
Ahhh a fine line full of possibilities :)
DickCumButthole
Transparent knives....invisible knives....invisible guns?...help
reasonablemoron
Invisible guns with invisible soldiers. Terrifying thought
IMadeThisOnlyForDestinyCodeBegging
"ID tagged guns and ID tagged soldiers."
DrakesOnaPlain
All this info is old as fuck.
HelloYesThisIsDoggo
As the son of a gem setter (jeweller), I know the plane thing is utter rubbish. Diamonds can break when put against other diamonds.
HowCanUsernamesBeRealIfMirrorsArentReal
As a mech engineer, I highly dislike this kind of post. -1 for all the inaccuracies.
HaykDavtyan
#1 Its all fun and games until someone decides to do some serious research in the playground
rowelive
Well who kicked you out of the sandbox :)
catsandcheetos
My dissertation is going to be on the toxicity of carbon nanotubes. Here's to hoping I don't find anything since they're so fucking cool! ;)
Lostchild12
IIRC Fullerenes have already found to be toxic.
GunGunTrio
It's 2020 now. You're E-Textile shirt probably says "Quit hoarding toilet paper". Oh you wacky clothes you.
Jalopenis
You forgot unobtanium.
methaiasgrey
And urbanite
ZenraiBaishuu
They would have mentioned it but they couldn't get a picture
Saravanth
couldn't *obtain, there, ftfy
GorramBatman
We found it. We found the transformium
MattDerKomponist
I couldn't believe that was seriously part of a movie.
ZOMGNO
That little grey rock sells for 20 million an ounce!
Gaehhn
And Narrativium
reux
When you fuse adamantium to vibranium
mindstorm8191
And Graphene
JazzHandsFan
... Graphene is real... (not to mention the future of everything if they can work out the production and semi conduction).
BklynPunisher
Very true! Graphene, carbon nanotubes, aerogel. Man the future will be awesome if we humans don't fuck it up.
helgur
SideEffectsOfJuice
The hell am I looking at?
stevenwonder
21jump street (21st century ed.)
Br0doSwaggins
Talonotw
So all these super-strong, super-indestructible building materials... how recyclable are they?
MatticusRoss
The efficency and greeness of their production is important. Good call
mynameisnotalice
Hey, they will save us a lot of fossil fuels! In a time where no fossil fuels will be left! Isn't that great?
Lostchild12
But, but, big oil supporters say fossil fuels are infinite.
logmicj
Graphene super capacitors are going to change the world so much, lighter and safer than Li ion and charge ridiculously fast.
fuelpergallon
Graphene everything: transistors, thermal metamaterials, plasmonics, etc...
JazzHandsFan
It'll be like Star Wars/Star Trek irl, only better.
FuzzyX
The world does need a safer battery when lithium ion is known for battery fires.
JazzHandsFan
Graphene capacitors could make electric cars BEYOND practical. Much less weight, more range, and more powerful internal computer components.
popejubal
Capacitors charge up and discharge very quickly and that's great. But they don't tend to hold a large charge. Is graphene good for that?
krazybender
Extremely. Capacitors require a large amount of surface area to hold charge. Graphene is hella conductive and basically 2D in nature, so (1)
krazybender
it has a high surface area-volume ratio. You should check out YouTube for people that have made supercapacitors out of activated carbon. (2)
krazybender
And supercapacitors have a much longer charge life than batteries, which lose their efficiency after so many charges.(3)
krazybender
Source: me I'm an EE at Cal Poly and did a research paper on graphene.
Esarai
Yes. Graphene supercaps break our current conception of capacitors. They store a ridiculously large charge and don't discharge all at once.
Esarai
When the first graphene capacitor was made using graphene and tape, they stuck an LED to it. It didn't turn off for 20 minutes.
Esarai
They built it by hand. Imagine what these could do if properly machined with much smaller plate spacing.
Esarai
The trick is figuring out how to make industrial, macroscopic quantities of the stuff.
Rijtjeshuis
Wasn't transparent aluminum mentioned in 'star trek: voyage home' as future tech by Scotty? Cool.
destroyyourself
yas
Uhlume
Indeed it was, guess why people wanted to make it... Star Trek has inspired a large number of technologies over the decades.
Ilikeyogurt
I told ppl this and only got "wtf are on about?" looks. Never could find reliable sources for the info. Still, thank you
popejubal
Transparent aluminum has been around for millenia (rubies and sapphires are transparent aluminum), but making it in useful quantities is 1/2
buggeredifiknow
Corundum crystal is transparent aluminum
buggeredifiknow
That was a question, btw
DevonGronka
No, that was a statement. =P
popejubal
the future tech part of the Star Trek movie. 2/2
TheZett
Aluminium
Rijtjeshuis
No.
MyBrainIsPlastiDipped
The windows of the ships in Star Trek are made of transparent aluminum. It's been mentioned a couple of times over the years.
littletalkss
Aluminum =/= alumina. Alumina is aluminum oxide, a ceramic material
TheBugL
Aka sapphire
Imnotverygood
Every trekkie here is scowling at you right now. Through the internet.
popejubal
It's the same in this case since transparent aluminum is made by oxidising the aluminum in the right way.
[deleted]
[deleted]
popejubal
It's pretty neat. Essentially making synthetic rubies/sapphires in large enough amounts to be useful, but leaving out the impurities that1/2
popejubal
give the sapphires and rubies their pretty colors. We've been able to make it for a while now, but it's too expensive currently. 2/2
MarshallBriggs
I wonder how much research was put into this before you just slapped it on imgur.
RhealityBytes
Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn’t stop to think if they should.
HowlingDysphoria
"Your scientists?" People get their own scientists now?? I would like 2 scientists please
RhealityBytes
It's a Jurasic Park Quote.
HowlingDysphoria
Oh
TheMonkeyBarrel
also consider the format it is written in. very naive. you'd swear this guy came out of a time machine. we can't even decide if we really1/2
TheMonkeyBarrel
want to save this planet by switching to green energy, let alone make any of these things available in the common marketplace... 2/2
natangold
Probably about as much time as it took to copy and paste from https://lifeboat.com/ex/10.futuristic.materials.
temporaryname1
I remember seeing that exact picture of the "invisibility cloak" in my 2nd grade year book 15 years ago
dwimmerlaik
there was a much MUCH better invisibility cloak developed by some people but has sense disappeared online. I think the military grabbed it.
Jerthanel92
I was gonna say, I recognized tgis from the early 2000s
watercolortitties
Hello fellow mid 20 year old
VyctorSaturday
I saw it 12 years ago in a magazine!
Counterfit
*does math* fuck I'm old
TheFifthPlanet
Transparent alumina?
v
tooomanysteves
I know right? Life imitates art. Bloody amazing.
Thisiscotty
haha i remember this :D i cant remember the star trek movies name though
Shoodlenoodle
Goddammit, you beat me to it.. those could have been my Internet points
Imaloserbabysowhydontyoukillme
Now that's what I browse Imgur for.....good show....bloody good show
ThatOneGuyWhoDidThatOneThingAtThatOnePlaceThatOneTime
Exactly my thoughts. Perfect gif use. +1
capnsebastian
I thought of this right away too. Ever since I first watched that scene, I've been obsessed with how genius the idea was.
artisviolent
Best. Part.
impeesa
I am so glad you found this Gif- it is exactly what I thought of
SocialyRetardedLumpOfStardust
Thank you! imgur comments deliver again...
KawaiiInari
Right! I just watched this last night.
TheMythicalJackalope
Is it like transparasteel in Star Wars?
dembonz00
"Just please use the keyboard!" - "Aye. How quaint."
MargoMcKnew
I love that this is one of the top comments :')
pictsiegirl
This made my day!
HeadedForEternity
I need seven red sheets of this. All strictly perpendicular.
HypersonicHero
It's actually closer to a ceramic interestingly enough.
DetectiveSherlockHolmes
I love how friendly he says computer
ZombieEinstein
Much like the warp drive - a Star Trek writer came up with some BS, and a real scientest went "wait a minute... that actually could work"
OdeToBouncer
The satellites in geostationary earth orbit are in the "Clarke Belt". SF writer Arthur C. Clarke wrote about SATCOM... in 1945.
PutItInNeutral
I've heard Clarke credited as the inventor of the telecom satellite. But that's probably like saying DaVinci invented the helicopter.
Rc58
I like how their description for it talks about a space station, but ignores the more interesting visual of being ON the space station
Moohasha
That was exactly what I thought when I read that!
GreaterDog
Transparent alumina is undoped sapphire. It's insanely expensive as a building material, and it would be opaque for >1" thick
otakon17
I was JUST thinking the same thing!
1metalnation
It's not at all stronger than steel, OP interchanges hardness for strength. If that was true, glass would be stronger than steel
Cube193onXbox
Yes but could it be melted by jet fuel?
justtwobrothers
But can it melt transparent alumina beams?
serney
There be whales here!
UpvoteSquirrel
Maybe he was the person that invented it. We don't know that.
Helirapetor
Classic movie logic
theeggmanANDthewalrus
I think in the novelization, Scottie knew he invented it, he just told him so it'd be a stable time loop. Though I could be wrong.
iggyface
Since he was an engineer he would have to know his famous predecessors from his education I'd imagine.
jdavis1186
You are correct. The novelizations have tons of great details like that.
Bunsen
Transparent alumina is normally called "sapphire." It's been around for a while. It's a common industrial material, though expensive.
Fuzzysteve
Got to love how sapphire and ruby are the same thing, but with different trace elements.
RelativeVelocity
Together they formed Garnet!
Bacxaber
https://m.popkey.co/24a5b3/q0Exb.gif
samjc23
I think you're mistaken - sapphire is a common industrial material, but it's not referred to as transparent alumina.
DrTacticalKeyboard
no this is referring to ALON aluminum oxynitride
stayawhilestayforever
*picks up mouse* Hello, computer.
mikeatike
I was working as a teachers assistant in college and was helping him set up a computer. The desk had no room for a mouse, so I just handed
mikeatike
it to him. He spoke "hello computer?" into it, and I started laughing. None of the kids in the class did. Sad.
mikeatike
We failed them all.
stresstwig
i do this at work when my compu misbehaves.
QuiGonChuck
Immediately what came to my mind as well lol +1
DrakusFett
"Just use the keyboard." "How quaint."
MyBigMouth
Ahh a keyboard, how quaint
stayawhilestayforever
Proceeds to type faster than folks who've only ever used a keyboard.
SJohnson23
And with only nine fingers too.
TheDreaded1
tap... taptap... tap... tapatapatapatapatapatapatktktktktktktktktk
tomyironmane
Bah, give Chief Engineer Scott a pack of gum, a ball of twine, and three sticks and he'll BUILD you a keyboard.
davethedavedave
And everyone in the 24th century knows morse code.
Ashkaari
At a rate that a computer of those days would absolutely not be able to handle.
stayawhilestayforever
Indubidibly
TK421isAFK
This scene is frustrating. We'd had this for 80 years when that movie was made: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sapphire#Common_applications
Fuckweasel
It's been along time since I saw this movie, please refresh me as to what Sapphires have to do with this scene?
TK421isAFK
The Enterprise crew needs to build an aquarium in the Klingon ship they stole to carry a couple humpback whales back to their (future) 1/?
TK421isAFK
time. Some alien ship was circling the Earth, searching for their relatives - the (then) extinct humpback whales. The aquarium would 2/?
TK421isAFK
supposedly need walls 6 inches thick, if made from acrylic (perspex), so Scotty shows a fabrication company how to make a "transparent 3/?
[deleted]
[deleted]
TK421isAFK
It was indeed funny, but Star Trek has always had technology that was plausible - eventually. This was just ignorant.
GTimgur
Same, stuck in my memory all these years.
thefunbatman
Also, that level of opacity would be considered translucent, not transparent.
1metalnation
It can have greater that 80% transparency with current tech.
WhyDontICare
That is technically correct
AuntSharron
thiskidjoe
Did it before I could.
StephenStrangeMD
* Alumina, is an aluminum oxide crystalline material not exactly the transparent aluminum from Star Trek.
betterave
Obligatory: you must be fun at parties.
BigDaddysMeatWagon
I'd party with him.
1metalnation
The iPhones have actually started using an aluminum based glass, too bad it's brittle as fuck
betterave
Pertinent username
Fingstar
You had me at planes made of diamonds
poogie67
Doppler Effect in action. The approaching tip is shifted faster.
viila
Ah, good old CMOS rolling shutter...
AZDan2012
I've never seen this before.
btraqnasty
Planes will never made of diamonds it just doesn't make sense
ZachsAnomaiy
btraqnasty
Am engineer, not poet
Freudberg
Sqlut
ive never seen such lazy rotor blades
poogie67
Wonder Womaaaan!
Freudberg
qu'est ce que c'est?
celedream
What the what it is
SirError
Omelette au fromage
Freudberg
ah.
DatWiggle
lol this needs more up doot
AmIDoingThisLeft
I ain't buying no diamonds so they better find a use
MsGrowl
Well, they have for quite some time. Metals and gems used for jewelry like diamond, gold platinum have much more significant industrial use.
AmIDoingThisLeft
Egg sack lee
DoctorNumberFour
Diamonds are actually very common.
AmIDoingThisLeft
That's what I was just saying. I'm Fuckin bad at getting my point across
LetumComplexo
Diamond is a stupid material to make planes out of. Metal has a certain amount of elastic bend to it that diamond doesn't.
SilentHowling
Lighter & stronger than metal. Don't cover the skin of the plane with it but make everything that makes sense to out of it ftw.
thisisnotenoughyet
Beautiful like diamonds in the sky...
LetumComplexo
Without that property planes would jerk and jolt with every little change in air density. It would be completely unstable.
TheoLu
Just like my one uncle.
TygrF
If they don't name the first airplane of diamonds "Lucy", I don't want to live on this planet anymore.
capnsebastian
Boy there are a ton of creative engineers on imgur, i must say. Thanks a lot captain obvious.
ThatOnePolarBearOnTheLeft
That's not going to stop the average rapper though.
aqueueforyou
Dude, even if it needs to be integrated with another material that does have some flexibility, it is an amazing material. Think seashells
Dragunbayne
OP didn't say the whole plane would be. Parts, like engine parts.
StubbornViking
Those parts require that aforementioned elastic bend. Engines require lots of motion, diamond wouldn't be able to hand that kind of motion.
1metalnation
Ah yes, the parts that need to have a a property called toughness, which is the ability take stress and return to normal shape without 1/?
1metalnation
Everything, causing a spectacular mechanical failure. 3/3
1metalnation
Deforming. Diamond is HARD, it is not tough. Under enough stress diamond shatters. Last thing a jet engine needs is diamond dust in 2/3
latvianmodder
Steven Universe fan here. What did you say about shattering a diamond?
cosmicmatt
Nice.
CheddarIsBeddar
The issue is that diamond is hard, but very brittle compared to steel. Engine forces would likely fracture diamond parts.
CheddarIsBeddar
A good example of this is when the hydraulic press channel crushed a diamond. It seemed much easier than metals, carbon fiber, or acrylic.
LetumComplexo
He kind of did. He specifically said "moving parts made of fine tuned diamond machinery". That implies whole sections. Which is stupid.
Tanishh
Haha @ superalloys being 'the future' of flight. Superalloys are what everyone uses now and are trying to get rid of. Ceramic composites
KingNova
Superalloys have been in use since the 50s though we will probably never get rid of them since it costs so much to test new materials.
Tanishh
are way lighter and can withstand hundreds more degrees, for way higher efficiency. Calling superalloys the future of planes is like calling
jargok
Yep most high tolerance seals on moving parts are made from highly polished ceramics.
Rc58
I thought it was weird that they were calling decades old tech "the future"
Tanishh
the internal combustion engine the future of cars.
chinablue
The future past, https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=jay+leno+turbine+car
DevonGronka
Cars: now with WHEELS!
skipweasel
Metal foams have been around for donkey's years and have never amounted to much. My brother has his name on a patent from the 70s for a use
XorSwap
My dad works R&D with concrete, and let me tell you, concrete foam is hilarious. Whenever people are touring the plant, he makes sure to
XorSwap
throw a huge block of concrete thats like 90% air but still looks heavy at someone. It literally floats down before it hits someone.
DevonGronka
I was gonna say. My dad had a block from when he did design work for the navy. It's nifty seeing aluminum float, but not life changing.
anvil
Prove it.
skipweasel
https://www.google.com.au/patents/US3823743 He's Colin.
skipweasel
https://www.google.com.au/patents/US3823743 He's Colin.
Zultharr
Disprove it.
anvil
The burden of proof lays with the claimant, not with the listener. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophic_burden_of_proof
Boomquisha
Gottem
ComehereAreyouticklish
Lawyered
Zultharr
OBJECTION!
ShowMeYourButtonhole
How long is a donkey's year?
dembonz00
It's half a Mule Year.
ShowMeYourButtonhole
PenisOfDeath
How long is half a Mule Year?
NoonetoldmethatIcouldchangethis
A quarter horse
IOnceOwnedMoonMoonButOnceHeTriedToLickMyBallsAndRanAwayIMissHim
It equals to a donkey year.
TheDudeanator
Metal foam is used in balancing car tires instead of lead or steel adhesive backed weights.
ThatsMySecretCapImAlwaysHorny
Why would you use a lightweight material for balancing? You'd need a larger weight for the same mass needed to balance the wheel.
TheDudeanator
Whatever metal is mixed with the foam is heavy, just different ratios of foam to metal.
ThatsMySecretCapImAlwaysHorny
But why not leave all the air bubbles out and make a smaller cheaper less conspicuous weight?
TheDudeanator
These are thin(1/8inch), inch wide, fairly heavy, adhesive backed foam metal weights. GM uses them from the factory.
EvilKam
Centripedal force. As the wheels spin faster, tiny weight changes have profound effects on stability. Tiny adjustments are needed.
ThatsMySecretCapImAlwaysHorny
You mean cutting off 1mm gives a finer granularity of weight adjustment than cutting 1mm off a lead weight?
SauceOfTheBoss
Dude this post is like how ppl from the 1920s wrote about us having flying cars by the 1980s. Change doesn't happen in 4 years
sharkba1t
In hightech consumer products its 10-25years which is one of the shortest cycles of any category/industry. EG: Internet came good in the 1/4
sharkba1t
90's started late 60's. tablets were around 90's big by late 00's, mobile phones start in the 90's massive by 05 smart phones around 2/4
sharkba1t
04 massive 2010 pc starts in 80's massive in 90's etc and im only talking in terms of time between a viable early 3/4
sharkba1t
products and consumer take up, not theoretical concept. Which these are. nano tubes are already 20years old 4/4
ravenwing7
Or 60, evidently.
MaximumRadius
Yeah, change doesn't happen until someone figures out how to make money out of it.
Rc58
You don't believe that we'll have diamondoid armor in maybe 30 years? Pfft. Some saucy boss you are
IOnceOwnedMoonMoonButOnceHeTriedToLickMyBallsAndRanAwayIMissHim
Not with that attitude it doesn't.
CyberInstwad
Not with that *altitude it doesn't.
CandidGamera
Ah, yes, I remember in 1981, we had this big vote on whether we should use flying cars from now on, seeing as attitude is what dictates ->
CandidGamera
<-progress or lack thereof. Sadly those opposed to flying cars won, and the flying car industry, who had been building flying cars since ->
CandidGamera
<- the 1920s, waiting for the 1980s to roll around so they could finally start selling them, said "Okay" and just didn't start selling them.
chinablue
We have flying cars but we don't call them that, we call them helicopters but they are only for the wealthy and military.
9Gag12YrOld
we have flying cars but they cost more than houses and are utterly useless and impractical
DevonGronka
There's been ways to get aircraft cheaply for a while. can you imagine what a nightmare regulation would be, though, if everyone and his 1/2
DevonGronka
mother were flying? people are already stupid and dangerous enough on the ground.
ColonelCasual
There's a slight gap between light up clothing and telekinetic wearable computers.
ICanSeeForever
Also I can afford a bunch of t-shirts but I still only have one phone. I don't want one shirt I gotta wash all the time.
dweadpiewitwobbits
*Me tweaking nipples* "COME IN BERLIN COME IN BERLIN"
NamesAreStupid
This made me laugh more than it really should have
CoughedupFurball
Or was it just right?
favdumpthrowaway
And transparent outer walls on buildings doesn't mean the people, furniture, electric wiring and water pipes, etc. are transparent.
Anthf
It will be nice to get all your raping and thieving done in one fell swoop
KlatnYelox
But what about your conquering?
satisfiedbadger
... You don't know
drphibbs
Yeah, lost me there too.
Allitis
But it's only a slight gap.
Ihatewhenpeopledonotspacebetweenwords
I'm stilling waiting for my favorites folder!! @sarah
rocketpanda
Also if they have thought-to-speech why the hell do I need hand gestures?
TwistedAttitudes
So that you don't accidentally call someone when you remind yourself to call them?
GodHelpMeToBeGood
But where are the robots that take over the world?
thugmittens
I'm curious to see what schools will do for a dress code with those clothes.
KlatnYelox
They probably wouldn't have much of a hard drive, so it'd be internet-based. Thus, they'd restrict their network.
ColonelCasual
The School Dress Terms of Service and User Agreement Policy.
thugmittens
Oh lawd. Too soon.
ArthurHastings
And all people will do with light up clothing is put memes on it and annoy the fuck out of everyone
rocketpanda
No, it will change the world! Didn't you pay attention?
pandro
Multiple sci fi stories expect any display device will include advertising. yay.
ydoihaveto
Is that like a Gap for midgets?
JamesProton
And if they think that we'll have it by 2020, oh boi will they be disappointed..
glassweaver
Yeah. In 1999, I heard hydrogen fuel cell & self driving cars were "less than 10 years from market." I laughed then, and I'm laughing now.
jsnforce
Yeah, I mean...electronics manufacturers still think curved TVs are a good idea.
Maryia
And I hope they won't appear so soon
IndyAndyJones
But we will have 14 Pokemon Go upgrades.
Dreamspitter
Example weve had cyborgs for awhile https://youtu.be/aQfVZnuJyvk "The future is already here but not widely distributed yet" -William Gibson
FriendlyNeighbourhoodCanadian
There's been plenty of brain connected prosthetics in the last few years. I can almost see it being consumer available by 2020.
JamesProton
That's a big leap for 3 years. It's very rudimentary and will continue for the next decade or so at least.
FriendlyNeighbourhoodCanadian
If it's medically available then consumer available comes next?
JamesProton
Those aren't readily medically available, more like prototypes.
yarow12
You mean we still don't have flying cars yet?
FriendlyNeighbourhoodCanadian
Yeah we do actually
swagbornslayer
In 2020 well have favorite folders
Dreamspitter
Werent those supposed to launch last quarter? I forgot about them.
ColonelCasual
Hey guess what... you were right.
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iLynux
But why
KarlSharx
Lexus is working on one that ACTUALLY hovers using super conductors (I think)
sector46
Well, nothing has been made to work outside of a special area (park has magnets): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZwSwZ2Y0Ops
vitfall
REAL hover boards. Not those two wheeled lies.
jimmythejedi
Just over three years away? NOPE!
PolishSpaceProgram
What? We've still got 10 years to... oh shit
PenisOfDeath
Aw man, I would love to wield a real Captain America shield while wearing the night sky!
SuharuStormrage
But then your rim would belong to the Nords.
CossackHD
All your rim are belong to nords!
skk329
3 years?! Shit im old.
tzxAzrael
.... i had a moment. "hah! 2020? that might be nearly a decade away, but it still won't happen!"
DaPastry
Well to be fair you could make a wearable computer its just not going to be light or pretty
johnblah
To be fair you could take all the components of today's smart phones and spread it all out in a jacket or something similar and I bet 1/2
johnblah
You wouldn't notice added weight and others wouldn't notice it. Might be be able to text from thought but meh it could have commercial uses.
TheGhostofElizabethShue
All I know is they're going to be a game changer as far as getting mugged goes.
PTKrieg
"Everybody get buck naked!" -Rodney 'Quills' Dinkins, 2004 World Series of Dice
koopaya
I was thinking aggravated assault. "Man shot today over supremacist hate speech playing on his t shirt in Central Park..."
Atlasraven
Imagine if his tshirt was hacked to say that. The plot thickens...
TheGhostofElizabethShue
See I was thinking "Someone nicked my phone and now I'm going to die of exposure."