Microsoft Imagines 2019....10 Years From Now.........Crazy Crazy Stuff.......

Some ya'll are making light of the change from 99 to 09. Most people did not have broadband in 99. Being on Napster watching your song DL at 4.5 kb/s wasnot fun. No youtube. Square Nokia with the green screen. No cameras, touch screens, bluetooth, mp3 ringtones etc. with your phone. DVD's just got poppin.Only ballers had those old Plasma's that weren't even HD and cost like $10,000. Dreamcast graphics. Still going to get pictures developed. Alot haschanged
 
I wouldnt trust a digital wallet for anything
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Originally Posted by raptors29

I don't believe this. They told me in 1st and 2nd grade, that we would have flying cars by now. That was in 1996 and 1997.

Flying cars is different from computer technology. The computer industry is already on the curve to sheer ridiculousness.

Flying cars IMO won't happen IMO until we have a new mainstream way to power automobiles other than oil based internal combustion engines. A mew powerplantthat is suitable for flight other than jet engines, propeller engines, etc. Possibly levitation, so you won't be restricted to wing based lift flight.Safety? It's one thing to crash on the ground, but a mid air collision basically means certain death. I'm assuming computers will be flying these cars,because there is no way this will work with human beings controlling thousands of flying vehicles. I mean logistically there is much that needs to be done inregards to flying cars before mass production. Once those first few hurdles are overcome, ##%# will look just like the computer field is lookng now thoughbelieve me. Computer tech is already spiraling out of control. Just look at your ipod. I think ipods came out maybe 5-6 years ago? Now look at your iphone.
 
Originally Posted by ThrowedInDaGame

Originally Posted by wj4

That's cool and all, but I highly doubt it. 10 years is not far off...

From an electrical engineering standpoint, I don't see anything in that video that is far fetched
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. You guys fail to grasp the concept of EXPONENTIAL growth. The video can be summed up in 2 words, exponential growth. This will be a recurring theme in my post. Look at technology from lets say the year 1 B.C. to 1800 B.C. Look at technology from 1800-1900 B.C. From 1900-1950, from 1950 to 2000. From 2000-now. Technology has advanced farther in the last 9 years than it it did in the first 1,800 years of modern B.C. time and defiantly more than in the 10,000+ years before the year 0. Its hard for you guys and myself to fathom because it's exponential. It's easy to extrapolate a line, not so much a curve becuase it difficult to gauge where on the curve you are.

You probably arn't familiar with Moore's law in regards to the semiconductor industry. I suggest you look into it as well as the related exponential growth of the computer industry before further comment. That goes for anyone in this thread who feels as if the video is as NT puts it "ducktales". To put everything in lay mans terms, devices are being halved in size, so you operating speed is doubled. Halving devices also means you can increase complexity and the amount of "stuff" you can fit on a chip. Check out Intel's chip progression. These guys are crazy
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The chips are getting more complex so they can do more stuff that you guys call "cool". That is just 1 aspect of computer tech, but it is the main catalyst.

Technology is not linear, I feel as if we are approaching the turning point on the curve, the point where growth becomes almost vertical. I'd say we reach the "knee" of the exponential graph around 2020-2030. Really the knee will come when computers start inventing all of the new stuff. The human mind has limitations, the computer does not. Right now, one computer has the intelligence level of a rodent (correct me if im wrong). Eventually 1 computer will have more intelligence than the entire human race. This is not science fiction, this is a computer engineering inevitability, a singularity that can not be avoided unless we destroy ourselves before that point. What happens when computers surpass human intelligence and begin to invent their own devices, nobody knows. We just have to sit around and wait.

All of this is a result of Moore's law and exponential growth. The current semiconductor design is reaching it's zenith, actually it's reaching the point where quantum mechanics can not be ignored, but that's another topic for another day. So for any engineers, physicist who come in here with that nonsense, human beings will either find a new device or find away around these effects. I'm sure of it.

I suggest that those of you who are technologically inclined or simply have a passion for computers read "The singularity is near" by Raymond Kurzweil. He conveys the point I am trying to get across much better with evidence, research, and studies. At 1:25 AM, its hard for me to type out Executive Summaries of technology.

Anyways, the bigger question is how affordable will the stuff be.
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That post was awesome. Completely Digestible and im copping that book
 
Originally Posted by kiid23

Originally Posted by ThrowedInDaGame

Originally Posted by wj4

That's cool and all, but I highly doubt it. 10 years is not far off...

From an electrical engineering standpoint, I don't see anything in that video that is far fetched
grin.gif
. You guys fail to grasp the concept of EXPONENTIAL growth. The video can be summed up in 2 words, exponential growth. This will be a recurring theme in my post. Look at technology from lets say the year 1 B.C. to 1800 B.C. Look at technology from 1800-1900 B.C. From 1900-1950, from 1950 to 2000. From 2000-now. Technology has advanced farther in the last 9 years than it it did in the first 1,800 years of modern B.C. time and defiantly more than in the 10,000+ years before the year 0. Its hard for you guys and myself to fathom because it's exponential. It's easy to extrapolate a line, not so much a curve becuase it difficult to gauge where on the curve you are.

You probably arn't familiar with Moore's law in regards to the semiconductor industry. I suggest you look into it as well as the related exponential growth of the computer industry before further comment. That goes for anyone in this thread who feels as if the video is as NT puts it "ducktales". To put everything in lay mans terms, devices are being halved in size, so you operating speed is doubled. Halving devices also means you can increase complexity and the amount of "stuff" you can fit on a chip. Check out Intel's chip progression. These guys are crazy
pimp.gif
The chips are getting more complex so they can do more stuff that you guys call "cool". That is just 1 aspect of computer tech, but it is the main catalyst.

Technology is not linear, I feel as if we are approaching the turning point on the curve, the point where growth becomes almost vertical. I'd say we reach the "knee" of the exponential graph around 2020-2030. Really the knee will come when computers start inventing all of the new stuff. The human mind has limitations, the computer does not. Right now, one computer has the intelligence level of a rodent (correct me if im wrong). Eventually 1 computer will have more intelligence than the entire human race. This is not science fiction, this is a computer engineering inevitability, a singularity that can not be avoided unless we destroy ourselves before that point. What happens when computers surpass human intelligence and begin to invent their own devices, nobody knows. We just have to sit around and wait.

All of this is a result of Moore's law and exponential growth. The current semiconductor design is reaching it's zenith, actually it's reaching the point where quantum mechanics can not be ignored, but that's another topic for another day. So for any engineers, physicist who come in here with that nonsense, human beings will either find a new device or find away around these effects. I'm sure of it.

I suggest that those of you who are technologically inclined or simply have a passion for computers read "The singularity is near" by Raymond Kurzweil. He conveys the point I am trying to get across much better with evidence, research, and studies. At 1:25 AM, its hard for me to type out Executive Summaries of technology.

Anyways, the bigger question is how affordable will the stuff be.
laugh.gif


That post was awesome. Completely Digestible and im copping that book

Word yo. Duke got me wanting to imagine what actually can happen in the future.
 
I'm beginning to doubt if Microsoft will even make it another 10 years. Maybe they should concentrate on the current generation and get their %*+!straight.
 
Originally Posted by shoeking2101

Originally Posted by kiid23

Originally Posted by ThrowedInDaGame

Originally Posted by wj4

That's cool and all, but I highly doubt it. 10 years is not far off...

From an electrical engineering standpoint, I don't see anything in that video that is far fetched
grin.gif
. You guys fail to grasp the concept of EXPONENTIAL growth. The video can be summed up in 2 words, exponential growth. This will be a recurring theme in my post. Look at technology from lets say the year 1 B.C. to 1800 B.C. Look at technology from 1800-1900 B.C. From 1900-1950, from 1950 to 2000. From 2000-now. Technology has advanced farther in the last 9 years than it it did in the first 1,800 years of modern B.C. time and defiantly more than in the 10,000+ years before the year 0. Its hard for you guys and myself to fathom because it's exponential. It's easy to extrapolate a line, not so much a curve becuase it difficult to gauge where on the curve you are.

You probably arn't familiar with Moore's law in regards to the semiconductor industry. I suggest you look into it as well as the related exponential growth of the computer industry before further comment. That goes for anyone in this thread who feels as if the video is as NT puts it "ducktales". To put everything in lay mans terms, devices are being halved in size, so you operating speed is doubled. Halving devices also means you can increase complexity and the amount of "stuff" you can fit on a chip. Check out Intel's chip progression. These guys are crazy
pimp.gif
The chips are getting more complex so they can do more stuff that you guys call "cool". That is just 1 aspect of computer tech, but it is the main catalyst.

Technology is not linear, I feel as if we are approaching the turning point on the curve, the point where growth becomes almost vertical. I'd say we reach the "knee" of the exponential graph around 2020-2030. Really the knee will come when computers start inventing all of the new stuff. The human mind has limitations, the computer does not. Right now, one computer has the intelligence level of a rodent (correct me if im wrong). Eventually 1 computer will have more intelligence than the entire human race. This is not science fiction, this is a computer engineering inevitability, a singularity that can not be avoided unless we destroy ourselves before that point. What happens when computers surpass human intelligence and begin to invent their own devices, nobody knows. We just have to sit around and wait.

All of this is a result of Moore's law and exponential growth. The current semiconductor design is reaching it's zenith, actually it's reaching the point where quantum mechanics can not be ignored, but that's another topic for another day. So for any engineers, physicist who come in here with that nonsense, human beings will either find a new device or find away around these effects. I'm sure of it.

I suggest that those of you who are technologically inclined or simply have a passion for computers read "The singularity is near" by Raymond Kurzweil. He conveys the point I am trying to get across much better with evidence, research, and studies. At 1:25 AM, its hard for me to type out Executive Summaries of technology.

Anyways, the bigger question is how affordable will the stuff be.
laugh.gif


That post was awesome. Completely Digestible and im copping that book

Word yo. Duke got me wanting to imagine what actually can happen in the future.


A. Computers take over the world and make everything free and jolly.. discover everything about the ocean/universe.. cure diseases.. good life

B. Computers take over the world and destroy everything, maybe even the universe unless something from some other planet/galaxy wipes them out before then..
 
Originally Posted by Illuztrious

I'm beginning to doubt if Microsoft will even make it another 10 years. Maybe they should concentrate on the current generation and get their %*+! straight.


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It would be cool, but maybe in 49382928098239023892308 years.

That stuff would cost trazzzilllions of money.
 
Originally Posted by jakecuevas

Originally Posted by presequel

from 1999 to 2009 we didnt make that huge of a jump as that video is showing. thats more like......20 years. MAYBE.
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internet....

the thing your using

comps...the other things your using...

how about itunes??ipod??

SMH
exactly and thats just apple
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dvds are already becomeobsolete when I can remember just yesterday how I got my first dvd with the player..the movie was eraser btw.. its amazing how we take technology for grantedsometimes. I'm still amazed by the things we have now! I'm here playing street fighter on my HDTV against someone across the world and viewing my bankstatements through my ipod which is all done by tapping the screen.
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I didnt wach the entire video but from what I saw most of it looked far fetched. Touch style Newspaper? C'mon now. How can I expect innovation like thiswhen they can't even get the surface out.
 
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