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Technology 100 Years From Now.

Video phones will never catch on to widespread use. Most people are like me, they don't want the other person their talking to to see the look of raging indifference on their face as they listen to someone ramble on.
Yes, they will, and they already have. There are useful for the Deaf.

Most people don't need or want a whellchair. But wheelchairs have been around for over a hundred years.
 
^But, that's not "catching on to wide spread use", unless everyone in the future will be deaf.

It won't involve surgery-the nanites will build it inside you on command.

that's where the "until the implant process can be cheap and painless" part of my post comes in.
 
^But, that's not "catching on to wide spread use", unless everyone in the future will be deaf.

It won't involve surgery-the nanites will build it inside you on command.

that's where the "until the implant process can be cheap and painless" part of my post comes in.

Well if finn turns out to be right about everyone being deaf in the future we can safely predict that one of the most popular technologies will be a much improved ocular implant.
 
Video phones will never catch on to widespread use. Most people are like me, they don't want the other person their talking to to see the look of raging indifference on their face as they listen to someone ramble on.
Yes, they will, and they already have. There are useful for the Deaf.

Most people don't need or want a whellchair. But wheelchairs have been around for over a hundred years.

That's not widespread use
 
There will be significant strides in genetic technologies, with a significant population of genetically engineered humans, who will for the most part be little better at the average task than a regular human, and will continue to have to compete with the broader base of regular humans who have above-average talents in given fields; I'm however that they will be healthier, and I suspect that they will be happier;

In a similar vein, there will probably be tailored drugs for those that can afford them, taking the edge off widespread human neurological failings such as depression, etc.;

Somatic gene therapy may exist, but I doubt it; serious, which is to say particularly useful, genetic engineering will be germ-line only, I believe--although I hope I'm wrong;

There will be no strong nanotechnology in the Drexlerian sense, but great advances in materials science based on an understanding of nanoscale physics and chemistry, and I would suspect nanotechnology-lite in the form of biological synthesis of ordinary macromaterials will be possible, although it sort of already is, given that every visible lifeform on Earth is essentially a nanotech-cum-macromechanical device already;

Strong AI will have been developed, although it will likely be the subject of mistrust and fear, and its integration into mainstream society will be slow; weak AI by contrast will likely ensure a freedom from work, although perhaps only in the First World, with the possibility that Third World societies will collapse as the markets for their industrial product do;

There will be no space colonies, probably, and no interplanetary settlements, let alone interstellar missions, but that's largely because we're complete losers.
 
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