The future, what will it hold for us?

iannis

Musty Nester
31,351
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Solution to Clinical Immortality:

Step 1) Create an AI
Step 2) Tell the AI to make us Immortal
Step 3) ???
Step 4) Profit
 

Chanur

Shit Posting Professional
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Personally I always thought we would grow new copies of ourselves and download our brains .
 

Palum

what Suineg set it to
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I don't think we're ever going to get to that point, we'll reach rare earth metal wars first.
 

Chanur

Shit Posting Professional
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I also think if we get to the sex bot stage it will just be treated as if its masturbation. Something you do but a real person is preferred for most people.
 

nate_sl

shitlord
204
1
In the near future (as has been the case for the last 20 years), the areas we will see the biggest gains from automation involve taking manual information inputs and running them through a process to achieve desired outputs. While the gains we've made thus far have been on relatively simple processes (think Amazon automating the merchandise sales process), we will increasingly look to automate more complex processes as we run out of low hanging fruit. Professional jobs (accountants, doctors, engineers, analysts, etc.) will slowly transform into reviewing machine outputs for accuracy and working with programmers to design the systems/processes that serve the masses.

I think we will continue to see a reduction in workforce participation, as total work needed to be performed decreases and population rises. What this will mean for society and life as we know it, I have no idea, but I imagine it involves plenty of space drug binges and VR sex parties.
 

Big Phoenix

Pronouns: zie/zhem/zer
<Gold Donor>
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Who really knows. Pretty sure no one ever expected this;

redbox-walmart-665.jpg


To completely replace this

Blockbuster-store.jpg


An entire store condensed into something the size of a refrigerator.
 

Cad

scientia potentia est
<Bronze Donator>
24,498
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I don't know about ya'll, but when I discovered VCD's in like 1999 I wondered who would ever go to blockbuster again once you could download these. I never got DVD's from blockbuster, I stopped when they were still renting tapes.
 

Kuro

Naxxramas 1.0 Raider
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But now where will pre-teens rent 80s softcore horror porn.

The human experience is now the poorer!
 

AladainAF

Best Rabbit
<Gold Donor>
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Fun fact: in 2001 or so, netflix begged blockbuster to buy them out, and blockbuster giggles and said "naw"

Whoopsie.
 

Lithose

Buzzfeed Editor
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I think the two most revolutionary things that are going to happen in the next 20 years will be in the form of carbon manipulation. Breakthroughs in being able to mass produce, cheaply and easily, various allotropes of carbon could revolutionize everything from electronics to structural materials. The second will come from 3d printing; especially if somehow Carbon materials become more readily usable by 3rd printers. The possibilities would be fairly immense. I mean, from everything I've heard producing various kind of carbon structures is very difficult so who knows if there will be some secret technique...but if there is. If people could print structures harder than steel, and with better thermal and electrical properties than copper? Imagine how that would affect global manufacturing.

Just imagining a world where you could prototype and print machines in your own home...it would, I think, easily be as revolutionary as the computer itself. Small time inventors that would have such a low barrier to entry for prototyping and early manufacturing? Would be crazy. (Again though, I'm not chemist and that producing this shit seems to frustrate super geniuses. lol, but 3d printing and carbon I think are the big things to watch for in the next century.)
 

Kuro

Naxxramas 1.0 Raider
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Finally, I could build my Doomsday Device without having to purchase any suspicious materials on the grid!
 

Kharza-kzad_sl

shitlord
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0
The better funded F1 teams have big carbon printers they carry with them to tracks. They can print parts downloaded from the factory back at their home HQ during a race weekend that are fresh out of the wind tunnel or CFD.

I suspect some of the teams are already heavily invested in nanomaterials. If you can have stuff lighter and stronger than carbon fiber, AND have it act as a battery as well, going to be some amazing cars in future years.
 

radditsu

Silver Knight of the Realm
4,676
826
In response to digital recreation of my personality:

Is my brain going to be as efficient as it was when I was a younger man? Or will it faithfully digitize my faults and lapses as it is now?


Also can I get a robot body? With the power of 5 Gorillas? Shaped like an Adrian Barbeau-bot? With chainsaw hands? BZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT TTT!!!!!!!!!!!!

Pod Seven is Flooding! - Sealab 2021 on Adult Swim Video
 

tad10

Elisha Dushku
5,518
583
So while wading through /reddit today I stumbled on the below video. It deals with the future of automation and how basically all of us will at some point be obsoleted. Now I used to be a staunch believer in the Luddite Fallacy, but the more and more I look into this and think about it more, there seems to be a point where the Luddite Fallacy ceases to work.
In answer to your thread title: Singularity in 2200ish or Butlerian Jihad in 2100 or Sweet Meteor of Death in 2028. Basically you're all engaging in a Black Swan fallacy thinking that what's happening now must continue to happen in the future and that something isn't going to come along that will smash your straightline Luddite predictions to bits.
 

Xeldar

Silver Squire
1,546
133
We're gonna have 3d dick picks before I'm able to surf the Cali coast without a wetsuit.