The Magic 8-Ball's Take on Tech in 2008 52
PCWMike writes "It's that time of year again, when every website makes predictions about the future of technology. PCWorld is no exception, but tried to put a little humor into their prognostication by calling on a neutral third party: the magic 8-ball. '4. Open Software and Open Networks Will Dominate! Magic 8-Ball says: Ask again later. Open-source software meets open wireless networks, fostering an unbridled era of innovation and consumer freedom. Right? Well, maybe one day, but don't bet the bank on it in 2008.'"
go read some good near future science fiction (Score:5, Interesting)
Read Neal Stephenson, go watch Gattaca but whatever you do don't bother reading PC magazine
But which Good science fiction? (Score:2)
It is too hard to find good Science Fiction these days..
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Yes, but unfortunately the market for it isn't what it used to be. (Actually I suspect that in raw numbers it's better than it's ever been, but most publishing houses compare it against the markets for fantasy and SciFi).
Look for stuff by Steven Baxter, Wil McCarthy, Allen Steele, John Stith, perhaps Jerry Oltion, among others.
And me, when I get published
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Greg Bear
James Blish
Stephen Baxter
(much older)
Frederik Pohl
C. M. Kornbluth
if you can find it 'the space merchants' is a really good read
enjoy !
Charles Stross (Score:3, Informative)
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The predictions (Score:5, Informative)
Very doubtful
2. Social Networks Face Security, Financial Woes
It is decidedly so
3. DRM Is Dead, Jim
Don't count on it
4. Open Software and Open Networks Will Dominate
Ask again later
5. Everything's Going Mobile
You may rely on it
6. Green Is the New Black
Outlook good
7. Hackers Get Political
Without a doubt
8. Google Stumbles
Outlook not so good
9. Microsoft Will Buy Yahoo
Signs point to yes
10. Your Next Pet Will Require Batteries
Cannot predict now
8. Google Stumbles... (Score:2, Funny)
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11: Microsoft continues to flog the dead horse (Score:4, Funny)
12: Microsoft continues to promote their 'Surface' technology http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/7174333.stm [bbc.co.uk] as the be-all and end all of input systems
13: Gates resumes daily role in Microsoft, fires Balmer and then starts throwing chairs out of the Window as he struggles to use the latest beta of VS 2010 shouting, "I know how to frigging program
you useless heap of sh1t" as the 'help' system tries to tell him that 'goto' is not allowed.
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(Full disclosure: In some cases we had to shake the ball a few times to achieve the right answer.)
So much for that - these predictions don't have the credibility of true randomness.
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You can count on it
What has eight magic balls and sings badly (Score:3, Interesting)
3. I think you're wrong about the DRM. DRM was stillborn, as every pipe dream (in the case of the RIAA, crack pipe dream) is. DRM is already dead, was dead to begin with. What man can make, man can break. What a team of programmers can create, a million nerds can can shred in an evening.
Once the lock's broken anyone can get in.
She's dead, Jim. She's always been dead. That's not wedding rice, that's maggots.
-mcgrew
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Indeed, Microsoft Outlook is not good at all...
Here's a prediction for you (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Here's a prediction for you (Score:5, Informative)
More or less. The market shows with the whole hype for "beta" that stability is not what people require from software. It doesn't have to work 'always', just 'mostly'.
Remember that each halving the number of remaining bugs costs the same. So going from 94% uptime to 98% uptime costs the same as going from 99.5% to 99.75%. You can produce a program that works in 99.75% cases, or two that work in 94% cases each for about the same price. And with keeping the functionality rich and prices low, people will close an eye on stability.
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And with keeping the functionality rich and prices low, people will close an eye on stability.
I'd just like to point out that if we insisted that software be entirely bug-free, we would have no software. None. No man on the moon. No cell phone. No super-saver shipping from amazon. I think in terms of the benefits of sometimes-buggy software compared with the cost of software defects, we are way in the black.
How many thousands of cancer survivors are there for every one THERAC-25 [wikipedia.org] victim?
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Isn't that happening with some forms of DRM?
I have to admit that I'm holding off on buying stuff because I just don't think it'll work well enough. I'm sick of things almost-working.
The 8-ball's always right (* conditions apply) (Score:5, Interesting)
The magic 8-ball can in fact predict the future. To do that reverse the polarity of the universe (CPT symmetries apply), entangle the entropies of the required universe with the 8-ball and remember to shake the ball outside the universe to avoid recursion.
Seriously, anyone who's read Experts Speak [amazon.com] or paleo-future blog [blogspot.com] will probably be rather critical of such predictions. But like the Dune book says, prescience does modify the future like a fish through water.
So, being hopeful about the future, but wary about it at the same time is the most productive approach to predictions. Check plus on that for this effort.
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Just remember (Score:4, Insightful)
Outlook - good or not ? (Score:5, Funny)
Is it really that tough to pick an email client?
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Anyway
Magic 8 ball said "Outlook Good". Oxymoron.
PCWorld (Score:2, Funny)
Next up in news : How many licks it takes to get to the center of 9-volt battery and tic-tac-toe championship results.
Re:PCWorld (Score:5, Funny)
annual magic 8-ball (Score:2, Funny)
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Magic 8 Ball: "Outlook Not So G - wait a second! You can count on it!"
SCO (Score:3, Funny)
(also why does it have such a problem with Outlook? ok, I'm no MS fan boy but Outlook at least works. sheesh, next thing you know somebody will claim the 8 ball runs Linux.)
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My sources say no
unlametheweaks unsolicited tech predictions (Score:5, Interesting)
1.
Proprietary Operating systems will become either open source or free as in beer as existing OSS operating systems become more sophisticated, user-friendly, and compatible with proprietary systems. (ReactOS and Wine as examples of the compatibility).
2.
DRM will become a none-issue as record labels realize that it is more efficient to phish for users on P2P networks and sue them, rather than to alienate paying customers with DRM issues.
3.
The Internet will break up into smaller proprietary pieces much like the former Yugoslavia. Countries and companies alike will seek to gain control over their own Netizens through proprietary protocols, clients and servers, firewalls, etc. And the Geek crowd will seek there own refuge (from the incessant censorship and control of the available "open" Internet) in private IRC servers and channels, and through services such as Freenet and Onion server based services and Web sites.
4.
There will always be people who read spam and and open virus filled email attachments, because people will always want larger penises, bigger breasts, and more money. Hope will never die.
5.
Small and intelligent home-built "hobby" Robots and self-replicating nano-technology based devices will be the new nuisance of the future.
Bookmark this comment and come back to it in 10 to 20 years and see...
It's all just speculation... but I think there is a strong probability of these things coming true based on current trends.
Well, it's an improvement over Dvorak's ramblings (Score:3, Insightful)
DRM Is Dead Jim (Score:1)
Has the Magic 8 ball been patented?
On a side note, I think they will try and push it for another few years, somewhere they will either run into the "is it worth the hassle" brick wall, or they will have created the only avenue of getting legitimate content by locking out those who don't embrace the technology.
I for one hope for the former...
Microsoft Will Buy Yahoo (Score:1)
This one has been talked about for a while. Didn't Yahoo shoot this idea down [internetnews.com] pretty quickly last year? What has changed to make it any more likely? The only reasons I can think of for this to occur are
Both companies offer very similar services (as