Note: sorry for my extra bad grammar in this post, I’m not sure which tenses I should use when talking about past writings that describe future that is now the past but wasn't then as it was in the future… well you get it...
Every once in a while I come across an article about how the future might look like. Usually these kind of writings turns out to be a total fail when the future date comes. I adopted a habit of collecting these articles in a special folder. Each article is saved with the name of read_me_in_year_YYYY.pdf where YYYY is the year which the current paper is trying to foresee. I’m not allowing myself to read any of these until the year YYYY arrives.
Recently I had the pleasure of opening the first one that I saved in 2008 that tried to predict computers technology for 2015. I found an online copy of that article here: http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/198920
The article is trying its best in 15 technologies, and I think it’s quite safe to say it failed in about 12 of them, but I’ll say it failed all the 15.
- The
. The idea of memory of the size ofmemristor persistent memory that we currently have but that works in the speed of RAM that we currently have, is not new, and if it does turn true in the future it will have to change the entire way operating systems are written. This idea isa lot of fun to play with, and one can actually try it himself with a special hardware such as this http://www.hyperossystems.co.uk/07042003/hardware.htm. But as awesome as it is, we are still going to have to wait for this to become real, if it ever will. - 32-Core CPU.
Especially not for home users. FAIL. They failed to see the Intel Itanium on thefail desktop . It seems like we are stuck at the 8 cores border for quite a while. - End of Stand-Alone Graphics Boards. FAIL. Just a week ago I bought a new graphics adapter for my PC to support my awesome three
monitor setup. - USB 3.0, well, ok. But they made much a bigger deal of it, than what it really is. They also predicted it would have a different connector.
- Wireless Power Transmission. FAIL. They win the FAIL flag here just because we don’t have light bulbs that work on wireless power.
- Windows 64bit, yes it’s here. And
again, they get a FAIL because quoting “Microsoft will have to jettison 32-bit altogether”.Nevermind what the word “jettison” means, Windows 10 is coming out soon and guess what, it’s going to have a 32bit version. They also tried to predict that in 2025 we will have 128bit OS, which I think is just silly.frankly - Windows 7. Not much of a prediction there. They were aiming at 2010 two year prediction is not that exciting because things are already being set and built.
- Google desktop. Not much of a prediction here either.
- Gesture-Based remote control. I think it’s now safe to call this dream a fail. And the same goes for voice recognition TV, do you know anyone who speaks to his TV and it actually answers?
- Tru2Way TV. FAIL, quoting from Wikipedia: “As of July 2010, Panasonic, the sole device
manufacturer, producing Tru2way compatible televisions, has stated that they will no longer sell Tru2way compatible televisions. Thus, at this point there are no television sets with built-in Tru2Way compatibility being sold.” - No DRM from the big companies… Lol, FAIL
- Use any phone on any wireless network. FAIL. Something much better might happen with 4G.
- Your fingers do even more walking. Or how multi touch screen seemed such a neat technology just 7 years ago. I must give them a PASS on this one. Multi-touch screens are everywhere now, and we kinda’ take them for granted. I think they failed from the other side on this one. They predicted that about 800 million touch-screens would have been sold in 2013, but just with smartphones it came closer to a billion.
- Cell phones are the new paper. Not more than what it was like in 2008. FAIL
- Where you at. I’m not sure what they are trying to describe here. The idea is so vague. It sounds a little like 4square, but it’s not. Anyhow, FAIL.
Recently Gizmodo made a post about how and why we so often fail in predicting future technology. I find their post very relevant to this one, so here is a link: http://gizmodo.com/why-scientific-americans-predictions-from-10-years-ago-1701106456.
Cheers,
Assaf