The Future in Gear 55
devmanager writes "A PC Magazine column takes a quick look at some technologies that are ready to change the world. Ranging from practical improvements on existing concepts (a 100 GB removable disc) to brand new (a DNA detector), these devices are all at least at prototype status. There's also a nod to the standbys: a robot and VR glove are both included. The article is interesting mainly from the standpoint that it shows items that really are getting close to production."
Yes, but where are the flying cars? (Score:3, Funny)
I want my flying car.
Re:Yes, but where are the flying cars? (Score:1)
Re:Yes, but where are the flying cars? (Score:2)
Re:Yes, but where are the flying cars? (Score:2)
Affordable Broadband (Score:1)
"Waiting for the first Table PCs...?" (Score:1)
Just because MS is releasing *their* first tablet pc doesn't mean that's it's *the* first tablet pc
one general rule (Score:2, Interesting)
If I had to put on and off gloves and glasses 8 times just in the above sequence, they would soon evolve into dust magnets...
Blame science fiction. (Score:2, Funny)
We've been promised so many things by science fiction and very few of them have become a reality. Where are our flying cars, our jetpacks, our teleporters, matter synthesizers, travel to other planets and video telephones? I curse the fact that I have to drive to work every day, sit in traffic, that my dentist still uses a drill, that I can't have my meal from a tube and that holographic 3d tv doesn't exist yet.
Science fiction spoiled us. It's time we accepted that we won't see the things I mentionned above in our lifetime, and got on with our lives using current technology.
Re:Blame science fiction. (Score:3, Funny)
Solar power rebates for home PV systems (Score:2, Interesting)
This website lists rebate options for installed systems per each state.
http://www.dsireusa.org/
Pennsylvania will rebate up to $8,000 for a system in PECO territory. Flying car is next on my list....
I'm dissapointed (Score:2, Funny)
* Bottomless coffee cups
* A video card that will hug me back.
* A cigarette that's healthy and takes the place of food and sunlight (and leaves me smelling like a new car).
Until they're available on thinkgeek.com, I'll continue living with the pain.
Re:I'm dissapointed (Score:2)
Ah, well, takes all kinds doesn't it?
I guess you put the "force" in Ge-Force
Re:I'm dissapointed (Score:1)
Water that taste like Cola, but is still free
Liquour that makes you drunk, but doesn't kill brain cells and doesn't give hangovers
Pepperoni pizza with ananas and extra cheese that just gives you the nutrients of cooked cod with potatoes and broccoli
ZIP/gzip for real life objects
Re:I'm dissapointed (Score:1)
Water costs the same as Cola in most bars...
If Only (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:If Only (Score:2)
Re:If Only (Score:1)
Re:If Only (Score:2)
Oh those damn EVIL Companies!
After sinking hundreds of Millions into R&D that might or might not produce a viable product, they actually expect a return on the investment!
Do you really think they would spend one cent on R&D if they couldn't recover the costs?
Do you think some inventer in a garage will somehow come up with millions to spend on R&D?
Re:If Only (Score:1)
Re:If Only (Score:1)
Fo example, one could say that if someone owns a patent, and neither does use if for a certain time, nor does license it to others to use it, then the patent is automatically voided after some time. Either the patent is useless - then nobody is harmed by voiding it - or it is used in an progress-hindering way, which is quite the opposite of the intention of the patent system.
After all, one has to see that basically, patents are anti-competitive. They are accepted due to the assumption that the good they do (protect the inventors, and therefore stimulate invention) is better than the damage they cause. Therefore if in certain situations the damage they cause is larger than the good, the only logical thing is to void that patent in those situations.
Once a certain rule is abused too much, the rule must be changed to disallow that abuse.
Re:If Only (Score:1)
Re:If Only (Score:1)
I'd be less surprised if it was a large oil company that bought it, if the aim was to keep it under wraps.
That and the fact that this technique requires more energy than you get out of it, unless you believe thos cold fusion experiments a few years ago were true. You don't think it's strange that water is an end product of combustion engines.
Re:If Only (Score:1)
Drain your gas tank, fuel line, and carburetor. Fill the carb or valve with acetone (a volatile, water-soluble chemical used in making plastics and explosives). The explosive vapors given off when it's dissolved will run the engine for a few blocks. Of course, after that the engine is a total write-off, but you don't let the mark drive it that long.
The genius of the plan is that it really does run on water! You can let the mark examine the engine, fuel, even try it out on their own vehicle. You have to be fast though, to get out of town with their money before they check out what's left of their engine after the demonstration.
The old "the oil companies are trying to shut me down" is the most common excuse used for why the mark hasn't heard of it before, and why you have to conduct the deal quickly, in secret. Though I did hear of it being used in the 1940s where it was supposed to be a government secret to prevent the Nazis, who had limited petroleum reserves, from getting hold of it.
It hasn't been used much since the advent of modern engines; though there must be some way of doctoring a fuel injector.
Re:If Only (Score:2)
Re:If Only (Score:1)
It's not like they copyrighted them (that would be a disaster).
expectations (Score:2)
I am thinking of the classicc example of HDTV, for example.
doubtless there are many that will just be implemented, but those that need wide spread consumer purchase to succeed might not meet expectations.
Ease of prediction depends on product (Score:2)
Others, say the robots, are not direct replacements of existing technology, and it's predicting their success or failure is not just a matter of their technical success.
At least, that's my understanding.
The future is now (Score:1)
Go figure...
Vapor or not? (Score:1)
At the business level, the question is whether the inventions save money, make money, or enable new strategies. Fuel-cell laptops would make a lot of sense, because users can work a lot longer without being plugged in to AC power. Selling pre-packaged fuel-cells for cellphones would be a major moneymaker (think inkjet cartridges)! Visual text-to-speech could eliminate a lot of Tier 1 phone workers (the receptionists and script readers). The DNA probe would be hard to justify at a physician level in overly-litigious areas.
Finally there's the military level, where you have to ask yourself if the technology is useful at any price. The DNA probe would definitely be suitable for troops in the field, and the humanoid robot might be useful for information gathering in dangerous and difficult terrain. (Then again, non-humanoid robots seem to do that job well enough.)
OTOH, there are things that seem destined to remain vaporware. I've heard about 3D/holographic storage, humanoid robots, and smart homes for years now, but they don't seem any closer despite new research. Maybe this time the creators will find a market?
Rounding up the eyeballs again (Score:2, Interesting)
Is Philips behind the curve? (Score:1)
I sure hope cool technology like this doesn't get held up in a struggle over who owns the patent.
michael, did you not mean: (Score:1)
Fluff (Score:4, Funny)
Not only is it fluff, but Im getting really sick of the format:
"Imagine.. you are--- bla bla bla bla---... all thanks to your hickymadoodle, your DIGITAL hickymadoodle!
Juke Boxes (Score:2)
There are a lot of industries where vast quantities of data can be collected and archived. Think financial, think scientific, think engineering.
Vaporware report (Score:2)
You can categorize vaporware:
Stuff in this category can be prototyped, but expensively, and needs some huge breakthrough in production technology to be economically useful. In this category we have eInk, and polymer photocells.
Here we have the house with every lightbulb on the Internet, stereoscopic displays, and the pocket sign translator.
Or, in this case, fuel cells. Little fuel cells have been Real Soon Now for a while. Disposable prototypes have been made, but there are production problems. Fuel cells that make commercial sense will probably appear first in larger sizes, where pumps can be used, like the Ballard units. The fact that fuel cells haven't even taken over the electric forklift market yet indicates where we are now. Incidentally, when you see battery capacity specs for disposable fuel cells, remember to compare them with disposable batteries, which have higher capacities than rechargables.
Every time somebody has a halfway decent idea in AI, it seems to get hyped into Strong AI Is Right Around the Corner. Talking to a synthesized face with the smarts of Eliza is not tech support via AI. It's more like Ask Jeeves, or "Claire, your virtual customer representative" used by some cell phone companies.
None of these are the Next Big Thing. This is unfortunate, because we in Silicon Valley need a Next Big Thing.
Re:Vaporware report (Score:1)
Stuff in this category can be prototyped, but expensively, and needs some huge breakthrough in production technology to be economically useful. In this category we have eInk, and polymer photocells.
Well, these polymer photocells appear to be cheap already, but not efficient enough. This time it's the other wa around..
Cheers, Ulli
The Future of Security? (Score:1)
ISS's RealSecure platform will evolve to use software agents that apply patches automatically to both servers and clients as new vulnerabilities appear. Today, administrators need to apply patches manually. ISS plans to manage the platform centrally, drawing on the terabyte of attack data that it gathers every month. It will behave in much the same way as the human immune system: When an attack is sensed, "antibodies" will deploy to meet the threat. Perhaps this cue from nature will work as effectively on network data.
lets see here....applys patches automatically, located on a central server. Hmm...sounds *Real*Secure. All you'd have to do is hack the central server, and have it apply your patch to 1000's of servers. Duh!
Solar Cells on the ROOF, not in the desert (Score:1)
I love this sort of gee-whiz Popular Science stuff, but this typical comment about solar [pcmag.com] always irks me:
If solar cells get cheap, you won't stick them in the middle of the desert, you'll stick them on the roof! Presumably if the sun is beating down enough to power the solar cells, it's frying your building, so you run the air conditioner harder to cool the place, consuming even more electricity, generating even more heat. So turn some of that energy into electricity instead of heat. It's not like there's anything useful on the roof.
I've heard the USA needs 75 square miles of PV cells for its energy needs. Does anyone know how many square miles of roofs there are on top of Walmarts, Costcos, hospitals, prisons, and other huge flat structures in the USA in the Sun belt?
I don't have air conditioning and when it's really hot I dream of erecting an external screen or window blind covered in solar cells to kill two birds with one stone.
Re:Solar Cells on the ROOF, not in the desert (Score:1)
But, look into a research company named Borealis, they had those Cool Chips mentioned a while back. They are also working on something called a Photon Chip, which promises to be a more efficeint converter of light to power.