What are your top 5 technologies of the next 15 years?

Discussion in 'Science and Technology' started by RAMA, Apr 7, 2012.

  1. gturner

    gturner Admiral

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    A person's soul can exist inside a machine just fine, although it might have to co-exist with the machine's soul in some sort of pairing. Even the Data General Eclipse, a 32-bit minicomputer, had a soul, which Tracy Kidder wrote about back in the 1980's.
     
  2. Kemaiku

    Kemaiku Admiral Admiral

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    Now you know all pre-megabyte era computers are going to Hell. ;)
     
  3. RAMA

    RAMA Admiral Admiral

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    Yes, and I've already countered this argument 2 or 3 times.

    RAMA
     
  4. Crazy Eddie

    Crazy Eddie Vice Admiral Admiral

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    ^ And the last two times you "countered" it on this board by either ignoring it and continuing to speculate on how exponential growth would effect technology, or you changed the subject to something else entirely.

    The possibility of a point of "diminishing returns" is really a dash of cold water on the very CONCEPT of "singularity theory." It posits the very strong likelihood that we will eventually reach a point where computer technology cannot be improved any further, where AIs cannot get any smarter, microchips can't get any smaller or faster, and brain-machine/body integration cannot get any smoother or any less awkward without massive expenditures for very little gain. At that point, what appear to be exponentially growing technologies crystallize into things that remain relatively unchanged for thousands of years and whatever we have working at that point is what we're stuck with for the long term.

    Do you allow for that in your predictions, or do you simply wish it away and go on imagining?
     
  5. RAMA

    RAMA Admiral Admiral

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    Actually I directly countered it, as far back as before this thread started, on other threads. I did it first on the origins of science fiction "firsts" thread that I started. I still stand by it and see nothing new to change my mind on it.
     
  6. RAMA

    RAMA Admiral Admiral

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  7. sojourner

    sojourner Admiral In Memoriam

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    One example of one advance is not evidence to support an exponential curve of further advances.
     
  8. Crazy Eddie

    Crazy Eddie Vice Admiral Admiral

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    You countered it the same way you did just now: by posting links to more technologies you assumed would continue to grow exponentially.

    You DO realize, of course, that nanotube-based microchips could very well bring about the flattening curve whose existence you continue to deny; depending on the expense of actually producing those nanotubes and the difficulty of reducing their size and/or increasing their speed, we could already be approaching that point of diminishing returns where further advancement fails to yield an increase in performance.
     
  9. RAMA

    RAMA Admiral Admiral

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    *sigh* There are mountains of evidence, in fact, it's not in dispute...however, by posting that link, I'm leading you guys to what I've said earlier in other links rather than explain it all again. It's only one piece to the puzzle, not the whole.

    RAMA
     
  10. sojourner

    sojourner Admiral In Memoriam

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    Your puzzle pieces don't fit. That's what we've been trying to tell you.
     
  11. RAMA

    RAMA Admiral Admiral

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    You guys speak about beliefs as well as from a narrow linear viewpoint(which I don't blame you for) and past experience, I can cite evidence. I can also cite what's happening right now to make my beliefs and predictions happen...in other words, I'm painting a picture that creates a climate where the potential exists. My central belief is almost a certainty, but the implications of it are not. Taking it all into account, I'm talking about a time where the frame of reference has changed, and you aren't prepared for it yet.

    So what's my unscientific (though researched) view to what's possible:

    Singularity..the actual moment when machine AGI is smarter than us before 2050, based on mathematics and models: 100%
    Singularity before 2050...as a paradigm shift for all humanity as described by proponents: 75%
    Computer passing Turing test before 2030: 95%
    Brain uploading before 2040: 100%
    Other transhuman tech common before 2040 including brain "downloading"(like matrix): 100%
    Nanotech assemblers common before 2045: 90%
    Nanotech material becoming common before 2030: 100%
    Foglet technology before 2050: 80%
    Possibility a singularity leads to takeover by machines AGI: 50%
    Possibility of an artilect war: 40%
    Untethered human acting robots or androids before 2040: 100%
    Renewable energy technology taking the lead over traditional energy resources by 2040: 75%
    Solar power satellites before 2040: 30%
    Fusion power: 10 fusion plants by 2050: 90%
    Pollution control through biotech and nanotech at a high level before 2040: 90%
    Genetically customized drugs common before 2025: 90%
    Water scarcity post 2020: 0%
    Farming technologies ending hunger before 2040: 90%
    MIssion to Mars before 2035: 50%
    Asteroid mining before 2040: 40%
    Mission to another star 2100..most likely by Von Neumann machines: 90%








    RAMA
     
  12. Crazy Eddie

    Crazy Eddie Vice Admiral Admiral

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    The thing is, you have only ever cited pop-sci magazines as supporting evidence for any of these claims and then promptly ignored the practical criticisms for why those lofty predictions seemed overly optimistic -- which you did again, just now, when you ignored the very POSSIBILITY of a logistical curve creating a development plateau.

    It isn't even that anyone here doubts the singularity IN PRINCIPLE. It's that your interpretation of the theory has been consistently overreaching and over-optimistic; rather than being based on a thoughtful analysis of the technology, it seems to be based mostly on you being really impressed by pop-sci magazines.
     
  13. RAMA

    RAMA Admiral Admiral

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    It is true I post pop-sci information, mainly because these keep pace with developments faster than most other forms of reporting, and that's what it takes to keep up. However, it is also true, where possible, I try to post information right from the expert's page, or a story where the expert(s) are given a chance to speak. I HAVE also posted from studies at labs and universities. By "expert" I mean someone in that field, or inventor, or even sometimes science writers or speculators who specialize in such information. Kurzweil it so happens is an expert in many fields and also highly accurate in his speculations/predictions.

    Ok so I'll spell it out:

    Main thread:

    http://www.trekbbs.com/showthread.php?t=135417&highlight=science+fiction+firsts

    http://www.trekbbs.com/showpost.php?p=5392858&postcount=76

    http://www.trekbbs.com/showpost.php?p=5397785&postcount=83

    http://www.trekbbs.com/showpost.php?p=5420341&postcount=93

    http://www.trekbbs.com/showpost.php?p=5392341&postcount=65

    I also countered the criticism of software view though I couldn't find the link: Basically:

    http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/...paign=d926cde8e7-UA-946742-1&utm_medium=email

    http://dirkriehle.com/publications/2008-2/the-total-growth-of-open-source/
     
  14. Kemaiku

    Kemaiku Admiral Admiral

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    Me thinks he was one of these people that hammer and snip the puzzle pieces until they "fit" and declare it "done" in whatever mangled state it ends up.
     
  15. Crazy Eddie

    Crazy Eddie Vice Admiral Admiral

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    But they don't, though. They keep well ahead of developments, projecting the most extreme and most successful applications of that technology to predict how it might manifest if everything comes out alright. They do this specifically to keep their readers interested -- readers like you, who turn on their every word and never look back at old pop-sci magazines to see if the projections actually came true.

    Look back, if you will, at the PopSci archives for a blast from the past. A 1995 issue of Popular Science features wirelss phone jacks, portable refrigerated beer coolers, a self-driving truck with an inertial guidance system, an experiment to produce acetylinic carbon as a possible clean-burning (and stealthy) aviation fuel, a two-in-one washer/dryer (WTF?! I want one!) and a VERY BRIEF article about the development of the P6 microarchitecture.

    Pay close attention to two things in this magazine. First: of all the technologies and devices showcased in the articles, the only one that actually took off and saw widespread use was the P6 (it eventually evolved into the Pentium Pro and the Pentium III), and second, that this magazine is about 40% ads. More importantly, some of the actual articles aren't articles, but more ads disguised as articles by startup companies hoping to hype their products in a pop-sci magazine (the P6 article, ironically, is one of them).
    Didn't address the issue at all, you neatly skirted it by saying "It'll just paradigm shift and go back to being exponential."

    IIRC, the followup questions were a half dozen variations of "Based on what?" to which you answered by quoting more pop-sci articles.

    Christopher points out that your prediction of a steady exponential growth is over simplistic.

    Your response: "But we have so much to learn and I have so much optimism!" followed by more popsci articles.

    Christopher explains that you cannot project a short-term trend indefinitely.

    Your response is that even Kurzweil acknowledges this... but what about paradigm shifts?!
    Christopher points out that people who actually work with AI on a practical level don't take much stock in singularity theory (which is true).

    Your response: "That's true, but they're just being pessimistic!"

    Basically, all of your responses hinge on many subtle variations of "Cool technology is cool! Here's a hyperlink! I'm sure it'll keep getting cooler if you just give it a chance!"

    I refer you back to the pop-sci magazine from the archives and the fact that the majority of the technologies showcased there either failed or vanished into obscurity. Why did this happen, RAMA? It happened because TECHNOLOGY isn't the only thing we need to be looking at when we make those kinds of predictions. Technology isn't developed in a vacuum, there is also politics, finances, wars, disasters, personal disputes, legal disputes, random chance and a fickle consumer market that doesn't always reward innovation with success (seriously, where the HELL can I get one of those two-in-one washer/dryers?!?!?! I shouldn't have to move my laundry from one door to the other between cycles... what is this, Soviet Russia?!).

    You're trying to project the singularity by JUST looking at the technology. It's not merely that this is an oversimplification of the way technology works, it's not merely that the logistic curve is implied in the cyclical development model that YOU YOURSELF suggested (and there's no reason to assume paradigm shift you keep mentioning would be in any way useful to computer technology). It is the fact that not everything that is POSSIBLE is actually practical, and not everything that is practical is widely done or used. Projecting the singularity would require one to recognize not only that a certain technology is achievable, but to determine to what extent that achievement will be distributed among society and whether or not it will be adopted by consumers or governments at all. If it DOES happen, it's not something you'll be reading about in pop-sci magazines; the first that most of us will know about it is when sentient androids and/or helpful AIs start showing up at Best Buy, asking us to buy them.
     
  16. sojourner

    sojourner Admiral In Memoriam

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    Bestbuy
     
  17. Bisz

    Bisz Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    1) Autonomous cars. Maybe not fully like we saw in Demolition Man (and countless other movies) but we are already headed there.

    2) Flexible, foldable display screens/touch interfaces. Your iPhone will be a pen and you'll unroll the screen out of it.

    3) Your phone will be your wallet. All of your cards, everything, will be digitally stored on your phone and accessed via RFID.

    4) You will control your iTV by talking to it.

    5) Your computer will be able to satisfy you sexually...
     
  18. Epsilon IX

    Epsilon IX Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    ^ROFLMAO!!!:guffaw:

    These would be mine:
    1) Real life TBs1-5, plus the ancillary vehicles
    2) VISORs
    3) Nanotechnology
    4) Holodecks
    5) Flying cars:p
     
  19. Crazy Eddie

    Crazy Eddie Vice Admiral Admiral

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    They never have these locally, the bastards. Just the two-units-in-one stacks that always seem way too small for the pricetag.
     
  20. RAMA

    RAMA Admiral Admiral

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    Sorry but the issue was directly addressed. You stated simply that exponentials don't continue indefinitely to which I reply this is true, but they develop to the point where a new paradigm takes over, and this is not fantasy, there are already 5 demonstrably true levels of paradigms that have taken place, Moore's Law is the 5th. An extension of Moore's Law takes place with the 3D chip example I gave, and nanotubes are also developing apace. These will be the 6th paradigm. It is also true that exponentials are not infinite, however the upper limit is often so far above we have now that it hardly makes a difference. How does this skirt the issue in any way? It shows the main thrust of the curve(s) still continue.

    The second issue, is that such exponenetials are not a natural law, which is also directly addressed in the Kurzweil quote I posted.

    The third, is Christopher's (supported by several software posters from this board) suggestion that software has not kept pace with this info curve, which is also demonstrably untrue based on the two articles I posted.

    Conclusion: the criticsm by exponential not being natural law or finite in info tech (and by extension anything that becomes an infotech) is not valid.

    Edit: Continuing this post now as I was busy earlier:

    You mention I cite pop-sci articles, which in itself usually quotes experts, but I also refer Christopher to Hans Marovec's work, which as I state is more detailed than I can get here, and is almost completely freely available online. The proof I cite foir software's expoenetial comes from an industry report as well as a government report. One pop-sci page I assume you are talking about is Kurzweil's own page, which is a site that collects information and info exchange on the subject, since Kurzweil is a major expert on many of the subjects he discusses, and has worked in multiple fields himself, I can consider him a good source of quotes on the subject, therefore I don't consider those "pop-sci".

    At this point, the meme for the Singularity is picking up amongst scientific circles, and usually there first. Economists, educators, and a very small trickle of politicans following behind. As I have argued with you on other threads, I point out where political roadbloacks(mostly useless and backwards), war (the Pinker statistics that suggest violence is decreasing and eaths in wars are lower as wars are lower scale), poverty(the rising billion--based on hard UN data), technological limitations(AGI specifically, which is now past it's "sticking point" period), innovation limitations (there are now major forums for those involved to make this stuff happen in reality not least of which is Singularity University) and funding limitations (the explosion of DIY innovator, the Technophilanthropist and projects like xprize and kickstarter; also the fact that we are going to turn to exponential economy, as the stock market is undervalued) can be mitigated or why they are not a hinderence to the continued acclerated change leading to a SIngularity. In fact, the curve continues upward even through economic blips like recessions, wars etc. It is very far from a one dimensional development, and as some of our conversations revolved around this, I'm surprised you're even bringing this up again or maybe you didn't realize why I was establishing those conditions allowing for the change. Disasters are always a possibility, but that's always the case, and I always said these could affect future history no matter what our path is.

    As part of this info availabilty change, I don't just have to stick with magazines that are months out of date, I get multiple feeds of info especially on technological change right to my smartphone, literally thousands of articles through apps, email, etc. When I look deeper, then I go online to research it. It's ironic this fundamental change is also an example of the potential of exponential tech.





    RAMA
     
    Last edited: Nov 17, 2012