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We are living in an amazing time in history
I don't really think about some of the incredible breakthoughs that have come in my lifetime. This one made me see that. (no pun intended)
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Strange how so many technologies have come so far in a relatively short period of time, yet after over 100 years we're still burning good ol gasoline to run our vehicles.
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fat bastard
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it is simply amazing, you know they fixed a severed spinal cord on a mouse with stem cells. its only a matter of time before we are living extremely longer lives with a higher quality....
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I agree with you. I can´t wait to see what future will bring on.
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If someone had a better answer, we would be using it. There are probably even some really good alternatives, but the problem is that it's more than just inventing a better mousetrap, it's getting everyone to use it. Even if there is better technology, it takes the efforts of the people that use it to convert, which costs money because the infrastructure is already built around those energies. |
One of the top inventions in my mind was the ink jet printer. Though I guess one needs to think outside of the box to see what it has done and is capable of.
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Thats really amazing indeed...
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As far as discoveries - I remember being totally amazed when the first color tv and the first microwaves rolled out :) |
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Be nice if they could fix hearing loss as well. I'd pay big bucks for that.
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longer lives
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I think were at the begining of an amazing era. This new eye wont allow people to recognise faces yet, thats a goal thats 7-10 years away according to that article.
Were lucky that we get to see it begin. people in a hundred years time will look back at this decade as the time when the real advances started. |
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http://www.startrekdb.se/multimedia/.../laforge-3.jpg :winkwink: :winkwink: |
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http://img251.imageshack.us/img251/7684/dogpicwf6.jpg This is roughly what the person with the implant would see: http://img294.imageshack.us/img294/7573/dogpic2vy6.jpg We're a long ways off from "seeing faces" but at least we've made the first steps toward helping the blind see. :thumbsup |
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It's not a matter of people changing their ways or making different decisions. There have been plenty of great alternatives invented over the past 30+ years in the area of ground transportation, but the giant of the industry, the auto companies and oil companies always seem to find ways of buying out the technology or quashing it in some way. I'm actually surprised that the latest hybrid technology is allowed to thrive and exist, but that's likely because it isn't about cars running on water or batteries or solar power. :1orglaugh Seriously, go ahead and invent a car that runs on any resource other than at least some gasoline... and then try to sell the idea to the big auto makers who control the industry. None have ever decided to run with such advancements in the past, I wonder why? But my point in my earlier post was more about comparing this to other technological advancements. Look at computers for example... today's average home computer is more advanced and has a higher memory capacity than the one from back in the 50's and 60's that they used to run NASA. The leaps in that industry in even the past 10 years is staggering, yet here we are after 100 years of driving cars STILL chugging away polluting the atmosphere with gas. It rather astounds me is all. And now it astounds me that it doesn't astound you. :upsidedow |
In mice we now have ways to cure baldness, HIV, Blidness and cancers, now all we need is to figure out how to turn a human into a mouse temporarily and we got it all solved
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Exciting news..on the brink to some major breakthoughs..hopefully I wont be dead to see them
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The coolest stuff will actually take place 5000 years from now.
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damn right it is
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Here is one application being discussed. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16156314/ Other applications that are currently in either production and or patent modes are industrial sized inkjet printers that will print out actual buildings and houses, wires and everything included. There is much much more of course. |
wow,interesting article.unlike many other inventions this will be very useful.thanks for the heads up !
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It is amazing....its moving fast...
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Now if we could just have a cure for cancer...
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Get the shit out of here!
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Much as is innovative, one cannot help but wonder how more innovative we might be. For example, I have read that there are many health issues which likely have relatively simple solutions, but because they only affect small numbers of people, are often left unresearched.
I once visited Volkswagen's Wolfsburg factory where they have an amazing research facility. They were completely honest that marketing considerations dictate whether and when an innovation or improvement may appear in production. We could already have much safer cars, cars which last longer, require less maintenance, or which are dramatically more fuel efficient. Instead, the industry resists any change which might raise the cost of a car even a few cents, for fear of damaging sales. Nor is all innovation a step forward. Despite "Cheddar" being the most popular cheese in the world, there is now only one farm still making it the traditional way. Cauliflowers, tomatoes, apples, etc., are all grown for appearance and uniformity these days, and not for flavor. Wine and beer are "helped along" with chemicals and technology. The irony is that future generations will never experience the taste, texture, color, which made a particular cheese or whatever, popular in the first place. We also live in a world in which publishers can get rich reproducing the works of centuries-old authors for schools and colleges. Yet if there is a modern-day Shakespeare out there, he is probably struggling to find anyone willing to read his manuscripts. The music industry still uses A&R men, but for the past 30 years many producers have found it easier simply to create bands and singers in whatever mould is currently marketable. Drifting away from the original direction of this thread? Possibly. And yet the style and fundamental quality of our lives is not driven only by overtly technological change. Perhaps not even mainly by such change. Social change, although it tends be noted in history books more than in media headlines, has a much more profound effect. Consider just the many consequences over the past 50 years, as working mothers have become the norm, instead of the exception. Think too about the potential of further change. Living barely a mile from each other in the rich and poor parts of Washington DC, the US capital city, are males with average life expectancies 20 years apart. It took the whole of the 20th century for life expectancy to be extended 30 years, courtesy of medical advances. And most of that change came about before 1950, due to reductions in infant mortality and better treatments for childhood diseases. The right social/political change could have almost as dramatic an effect on some parts of our population. |
How come we don't have a huge network of pneumatic tubes all over America delivering our mail yet? :Oh crap They had a working system 200 years ago... I want all my fucking mail delivered via pneumatic tubing! :mad:
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My favorite quote is by Yogi Berra:
"The future ain't what it used to be." |
still feel like we live in the stone ages, don't know how they survived 200 years ago
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