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The Tablet, mankind's childhood object of nostalgia since 10,000 BC. Now called the iPad.
With the recent hoopla over the Apple iPad (and the wise-cracking jokes that come along with such nomenclature), everyone has some sense of what a “tablet” is. The Kindle and various laptops that could flip their screens around were the harbingers of a new phenomenon. Whatever the success of the iPad, we are going to see tablets more and more in the coming years.
Take the projected XO-3 (article courtesy of WIRED), an iteration of a drawn-out project to provide laptops to children in poor countries. Remember the “Dataset” from Vernor Vinge’s sci-fi classic “A Fire Upon The Deep”? With the help of a “Dataset” tablet a medieval lupine species on an undiscovered planet learned human language and constructed powerful cannons in a matter of months. With advanced tablets comes advanced eduction – rendering textbooks, encyclopedias, and possibly even teachers obsolete.
When tablets become flexible and possibly holographic, the central convenience of using tablets over other consoles – personal computers, cellular phones, newspapers, and notepads alike – increases immensely. Go ahead and try one out today by playing the acclaimed video game series “Mass Effect” and using the omni-tool.
Even with our massive national demand for Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issues alone as the driving force, this technology will continue its march toward omnipresent convenience:
I have been at work compiling the best future and technology oriented youtube videos in a playlist and I feel it is pretty fleshed out by now. These videos range from pure entertainment and fun to technical reviews of new technologies. Some are scientific, some are just for fun. All of these videos are from their original uploaders, I am merely compiling them into a playlist named “Our Future” on my youtube channel http://youtube.com/madputz. You can browse through them here in the embedded playlist with the arrows below or go to my youtube channel. I appreciate any comments, feedback, and suggestions and I look forward to making a future tech video of my own one day (possibly a slideshow with music). Here it is below, enjoy!
Before we come up with some kind of Evil Hollywood Science Fiction Artificial Intelligence that for some reason utilizes the horribly inefficient human body as a power source, we are stuck with brains. We are already doing with brains what the machines do with humans in the classic film “The Matrix”.
Animal brains, that is. Scientists at University of Reading have removed the neural cortex of a fetal rat, put it in a nutrient and neuron rich broth surrounding a circuit board, and waited. Over 300,000 rat neurons eventually forged their own new and unique connections with the cortex and circuit board:
“After about five days, patterns of electrical activity can be detected as the neurons transmit signals around what has become a very dense mesh of axons and dendrites. The neurons seem to be randomly firing, producing pulses of voltage known as action potentials. Often, though, many or all of them will fire in unison, a phenomenon known as “bursting”.”
Upon sufficient maturity of this bio-computer, they then equipped it with wheels and sensors. Interestingly, it automatically moved and avoided walls in a rat-like fashion. Don’t expect your mechanical Roomba to become obsolete anytime soon, but better teach your cat some self-control while you wait. Video of rat brain robot in action:
There are also test flights of moths remote controlled very precisely by human hands due to insect chip-brain interfaces. Using a specific species of moth that’s flying trigger is a mere on/off signal, rather than requiring a signal for every beat of its wings, has been a big leap. Scientists can now control these insects with much less battery power, more accuracy (even controlling their place and speed in mid-flight), and better video feedback systems. Cockroaches are old news when it comes to this sort of insect domination, they can be considered perfected to the level of remote controlled vehicles.
Obviously everyone is going to be concerned about privacy. Forward Thinking: Invest in the Fumigation and Extermination Industry while it is still cheap.
Concerning human brains, we’re a bit more complicated than insects, so we fortunately have a few decades remaining before total domination by the evil elite illuminati sponsored machine overlords. But there are quite amazing studies being conducted right now that will surely fuel the flames of conspiracy theorists world wide.
Robot controlled entirely by human thoughts. No physical controls:
Where is this all leading? Renown futurist and engineer Ray Kurzweil predicts that many of us will choose to add computing power and knowledge to our biological brains (just like the rest of our body), enhancing our mental health, capabilities, and intelligence while retaining our core personality, individuality, and humanity. Some say we will lose our unique individualism as we merge with machines, I predict the opposite. Just as an uneducated, starved brain from the medieval dark ages or poverty-stricken Africa is limited in comparison to an educated healthy brain, in the future our minds will expand and become more varied in psychology, ideas, creativity, and perception as we voluntarily tinker with our intelligence, speed of thought, memory, and even how the basic components of our brains are organized. Similar to how a prosthetic leg helps one walk again or a pacemaker allows one to live additional years brain-computer interfaces will be just another step.
Evolution, fortuitous as it is, is quite inefficient. Evolution has brought us to great places, but also to great suffering. As Kurzweil says, we will transcend the limitations of our biology.
Just another natural step in the evolution of the universe, I believe.
Exoskeletons have come a long way. Previous exoskeletons were bulky, required a massive tethered power supply, and just implausible. Science has changed that.
These exoskeleton frameworks could form the foundation for armored power suits in the future. Although the terran marine unit in Starcraft complains of being in a chicken suit, these things will save lives and facilitate victory in the future, assuming robots haven’t filled the role or that war itself isn’t obsolete. Besides serving as advanced armor, they can provide heating or air conditioning, biological/chemical/nuclear protection, basic medical assistance and monitoring, combat communication networks and interactive electronics. Need to stay on guard but need some sleep? Program your suit’s sensors to wake you at any moment of danger.
Regardless, these suits will be very important safety and productivity equipment for construction workers and other forms of demanding labor. I can imagine other civilians putting this technology to good use too.
Independent Work
When it comes to hobbies, this man’s blog is very interesting, he is independently building various life size exoskeleton armors (and working guns) from video games with his very own metal mill http://vrogy.net/
And everyone knows this famous guy, Troy Hurtubise, featured many times on Discovery Channel for his decades long independent project of building a suit that can withstand a Grizzly bear attack after being mauled by a Grizzly himself:
Corporate Projects
The (Incredible) Hulc looks like a very light but powerful exoskeleton, when battery, design, and exoskeleton technology further improve this could be mandatory wear by combat soldiers and mechanics. Check out Lockheed Martin’s short HULC promo video:
The HAL 5 by Cyberdyne (no kidding), is a Japanese suit that has its own glowing panels, which could merge in future iterations to become a form of armor. I love the naming process when it comes to english words in Japan, whether it’s superbeings named after underwear in Dragon Ball or armored suits ominously named after Hollywood science fiction.
These suits can even be marketed towards old ladies that want to do a little gardening! The one below looks like an older version of HAL or a different corporation’s model.
For aging gardeners/farmers
Wait a few years of iterations, combine Vrogny’s armor with the HULC and HAL’s powered skeleton, and you have Iron Man. However, in this case it doesn’t have to be built in a dank cave monitored by terrorists.
Welcome to Future Techie. I will be your guide throughout the duration of this fantastic voyage. Please stop by whenever you want your fill of technology news, videos, articles, and commentary. Yes, even Neo-Luddites can join the fun!