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by goatlover 3085 days ago
It is incredible, and most people didn't see it coming, but compared to the scifi stuff I read and watched as a kid, the future doesn't feel all that mind-blowing, at least so far.

Part of it is living through it and adjusting to the changes, but I was also born into a world that had TVs, telephones, microwaves, VCRs, satellites, space programs, and personal computers. Computer networks and games existed back then. Miniaturization and Moore's law was known about.

I think living through the early 20th century might have been more mind blowing.

2 comments

It's because there's a difference between cool and usable.

For example - compare a Virtual Reality 3D city you can scroll around on your computer, visiting different houses, "chatting" with them, then reading what they posted on their public refrigerator door, then maybe reading some books from their shelf, watch a movie together then you "walk" to a library ... To the internet (Facebook + Wikipedia).

What's cooler? Obviously #1.

What's more usable? #2.

If you could go back in time to the 70s, what would you show on a futuristic movie?

#1, since the you want to "wow" your audience, who won't have to deal with such mundane issues as vertigo, or rapid navigability, or searchability.

But it's not that we can't do #1. We not only could do it, but there were many tries (VRML was supposed to be the "next big thing" since the 90's). It's just that our current UI is better.

That's the problem: living through it and adjusting to changes.

How do you feel about the chance of living twice as long as your current life expectancy?

Sounds great right?

Does it also feel just as great that you already have twice the life expectancy of 140 years ago?

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2013/11/die-ano...

Does that double life expectancy take into account infant mortality rates? It's not like people living into their 70s was that unheard of back then, it's just that it was easier to die younger.

And yeah, I'm living through it, but it still feels largely like the world I was born into with some additional advances in computing. A huge part of the world is based on incremental improvements on stuff that has existed since the earlier 20th century.