36:30 "the equivalent of Windows for your home" Pff. My home already has windows!
@orangemanonsteroids85694 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@Paltse4 ай бұрын
As long as the said home is not on third level or upwards of it and the windows don't happen to be Russian or equivalent, alright.
@antonisautos87044 ай бұрын
Nonsense. It doesn't have enough bugs to be windows
@ryanb3984 ай бұрын
@@antonisautos8704 Lots of bugs on windows? Are you talking about my windshield?
@Entity84734 ай бұрын
My home has two types and two versions of windows.
@iriswaters4 ай бұрын
The notion that advancements in financial tech will in any way help consumers not spend money they don't want to is INCREDIBLY optimistic, and goes against all evidence, and every historic trend. Every advance in financial tech has always and only, in practice, resulted in the opposite and I see zero indication of any inclination to do otherwise. It's an arms race between financial tech finding new ways to convince people to give up their money and cultural knowledge building up to act as counters.
@PazLeBon4 ай бұрын
lol one would have to agree
@AnonymousAnarchist24 ай бұрын
Well. Can our ancient monitary systems continue to provide any form service today? We dont think about it often but thousands of years of dedocated thought to manipulating money has been taking place with more and more vunerabilities found. And no I am not promoting Crypto. Thats another vunerability found not an advancement
@iriswaters4 ай бұрын
@@AnonymousAnarchist2 oh. I think I misread you. Rereading, yeah, our system is pretty seriously flawed, and full of a mass of vulnerabilities. And I agree that crypto isn't in any way an improvement, rather it's significantly worse. I don't foresee that problem being solved anytime soon though, since it's those who benefit from the exploits that exist that have all the power over how the system works.
@PazLeBon4 ай бұрын
@@AnonymousAnarchist2 its just a bartering system, if we had trust between people we wouldnt need money
@xBINARYGODx4 ай бұрын
@@PazLeBon sorry, but the reasons for currency go FAR beyond trust (and require trust in the system supplying them, not because you distrust other people) - also, you cannot scale up the economy if you rely solely on barter. It's not even remotely feasible if you want a ton of different objects and services in the market.
@sertorius33194 ай бұрын
My dad said his uncle converted all the vans for his grandfather clock repair business to run on propane to save money during the 1970s oil crisis. He always says he’s surprised that wasn’t more common whenever he tells the story.
@garethernst4 ай бұрын
BOOM!
@toomanymarys73553 ай бұрын
Propane parallels oil prices and costs more. His only advantage would be availability.
@sertorius33193 ай бұрын
@@toomanymarys7355 Makes sense, but when you consider lines and rationing at the gas stations back then, the increased availability was a huge deal.
@ABQSentinel4 ай бұрын
It has not been a good week for me. But the arrival of a new video on Arthurdays always lifts my spirits!
@RiversJ4 ай бұрын
While I'm having an ok week i can certainly emphasize, when I've hard extreme weeks, the weekly Arthur's day is a welcome escape to the respite of futurism and imagination. Hope your next week is better!
@michaeljf64724 ай бұрын
The lesson from history is its not one thing (despite what every new Tech venture capital cycle tryes to convince us). It's many technologies, across any fields, synergising towards a better future.
@PazLeBon4 ай бұрын
and millons a worse future, along with the planet and nature..... typically
@xBINARYGODx4 ай бұрын
"It's many technologies, across any fields..." yes, great post "...synergizing towards a better future." wait, what? wtf are you smoking?
@GrigoriZhukov4 ай бұрын
You are not to speak of the one secret of the planet.
@Ashouaine4 ай бұрын
"better"
@arthurswanson32854 ай бұрын
Lol
@MoonMorningstar4 ай бұрын
I desire for my Toaster to make me poems as the blender sings! TRUE TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS!!!
@michaeljf64724 ай бұрын
Would you like a toast?
@echoecho31554 ай бұрын
"We will make the whole universe a noise in the end. We have already made great strides in this direction as regards the Earth. The melodies and silences of Heaven will be shouted down in the end."
@PoliceTelephoneBox4 ай бұрын
Your Toaster wants to destroy the world though. A toaster is a low power death ray.
@faizanrana29984 ай бұрын
AAAAHHAAAAAAAAA UR TOASYER IS GONNA SPREAD UR ASSCHEECKS
@TotalyRandomUsername4 ай бұрын
In the book "Spares" from Michael Marshall Smith is a future described where absolutly every household item has AI on human intelligence level build in because it became very cheap to do so. Including guns which deside based on the situation and the crime you maximal want to commit if it fires the round or not. So everybody switches the AI for all household items off because it is just annoying when your fridge nags at you for eating to much and everybody sets his accepted gun crime to "murder" so it works like a regular gun. :)
@frostbyte11344 ай бұрын
The slow erosion of privacy definitely needs to be discussed in next months episode
@tomcraver96594 ай бұрын
Financial apps - one obviously needed app today, is one that would have hundreds of people "shop" for the item you want, to see whether the retailer is skewing prices based on who you are, what other activities they know you're engaged in, etc. Even just letting you know how much they're doing that to you would help squelch that practice, as people mysteriously stop buying when the retailer has boosted the price of something.
@shorewall4 ай бұрын
Nice! Yeah, we can't let corpos do all the work. We need white hat inventors and indies to balance the authoritarian direction of our governments.
@freecat12784 ай бұрын
The international space station will probably get a 3D printer after that astronaut let a few million dollars worth of tools float away.
@kaseyboles304 ай бұрын
The ISS already has one. It was used to make the first 3d printed object in space. A needed torque wrench out of ABS filament IIRC.
@timothykieper4 ай бұрын
@@kaseyboles30 Tools may be back on Earth before the astronaughts ??
@faizanrana29984 ай бұрын
What a fking asshole. Jail him now
@dansmith16614 ай бұрын
@@timothykieper RIP. Boeing went woke and the astronauts broke apart in re-entry.
@xBINARYGODx4 ай бұрын
@@dansmith1661 god I hope your a bot and not the sort of piss baby the uses the word "woke" that way - in THIS community.
@seditt51464 ай бұрын
The biggest game changer is going to be Acoustic Lasers. Similar to how Light based Lasers changed everything. They currently exist but like lasers people dont see the potential. I have been studying it for about 2 decades now and am convinced it will without a doubt change everything as Xrays become a thing of the past and the equivalent of a CT or MRI scan can fit in the palm of your hand. This is not even to mention their abilities to levitate objects around ones self. Its a sleeper technology but its going to explode fast and hard like lasers did and totally take over the landscape as I suspect they will have far more uses than even lasers. Hell, they can create plasma dots in the air allowing holograms that many thought lasers would give us.
@MrSemirg074 ай бұрын
Are you trying to sell us on sonic screwdrivers?
@nathanielacton37684 ай бұрын
Use multiple and trianglate. Couplee it with voxel based computer imagery and a half decent manifold wrapper and you could get a colour mri of a whole body, live. Feed that in to an LLM like AI system at internals (like in the shower) and it'll be able to detect changes over time, like the growth of 'dots' and cancer cells will be able to be passively detected while they are still grains. Again, triangulation can focus a hotspot the way computer DRAM memory flips bits. A few 'warn to hot lines' and a burning hot centre point. Way out side idea. I wonder if this is the techused to produce the 'scoop marks' we see prevalent in megalithic structures around the world.
@garethernst4 ай бұрын
interesting
@robomonkey10184 ай бұрын
The phonon is an antigravity particle.
@WmJames-rx8go2 ай бұрын
Sign me up!
@cognisant3074 ай бұрын
Regarding printing and additive manufacturing this is why Aluminum was such a revolutionary material, you can make decently light/strong parts out of it and melt down the chips easily to make more stock material. Selective laser sintering (SLS) has similar advantages and can make some truly wild shapes, but 99% of the time a mill/lathe is going to get the job done faster and will produce a better surface finish. I don't see this dynamic changing until we can grow things out of crystal of biomass.
@VikingTeddy4 ай бұрын
(Haven't watched the whole video yet.) If we look at the whole, It looks like only one revolution imo, starting at the renaissance, really gaining steam (pun intended) with the industrial revolution, and carrying on with a steady advancement. Looking up close, there are several key advancements, like aluminum, that took us further in spurts. But the peaks in the graph smooth out over time, and we see an steadily steepening curve in our tech level. I wonder if it's the new norm. Or will it plateau at some. Can it even slow down?
@kaseyboles304 ай бұрын
The real hidden gem of 3d printing is otherwise impossible to create shapes. There are some things Subtractive mfg cannot do (and some additive cannot do).
@AnonymousAnarchist24 ай бұрын
Well your just looking at heat based additive metal manufacturing. You can also use speed. Slam metal or most ceramics fast enough they will deform and fracture against the part and the atoms wont know where one part of the lattice ends or begins they stick together. Although for some ceramics you do need some heat as well, it uh. Actually can be faster then producung a billet and then machining. Its not faster then either one alone, but together it is. In addition you can use electricity, although this is limited to just metals. Electrodeposition and electromachining are already mature techs that can be easily used for 3d printing, and with the bonus that recyling using electrodeposition usually takes less energy then any heat based manufacturing and you can control the excat crystal growth and shaping, and surface finish control down to nanometers as well as accuracy and precision that so far on hobby units has reached under 100 nanometers.. at the disadvantage of taking longer to produce, often by orders of magnatude longer, but it is a tech that is slowly taking over certian metals recycling. And then there is of course chemical and direct atom manipulation. Chemical uh. Well its part of the electrochemical formula already mentuoned for metals but of course can be used directly as carriers and part of reactions, like in UV resins but also you can just dissolve plastics in a solvent and evaporate the solvent, or nanostructures such as nanotubes, or nanoparticles of metals etc and disolve the solvent for secondsry processing. This has shown promise of mirror finishes and near nanometer accuracy and precision. And direct atomic manipulation. This is actually shockingly mature ... and inexpensive tech. An auto mechanic might actually have everything needed if they work on head gaskets. The Atomic Force Microscope is the bases for it, and it is sometimes used to measure surface roughness. Its a more specialized tool but hobbiest have made the critical companents for as little as five dollars. Then slapped them onto frames and mounts and over engineered vibration damping solutions, and bought way overpowered computers just to read and operate then for 300 dollars. It used to be thought that you needed near absolute zero temps for it to work. Room temps are fine so long as your not working with gasses or room temp liquids. But the important bit is just an acid or electro sharpened needle attached to a pizeo-electric actuator of some kind. You can make an actuator from the speakers used in those annoyingly loud birthday cards, and a lenth of tugnston wire. Tungston so that its a bit more durable then steel being that its a point that measures and caputures individual atoms. And why bring up something that obviously is so slow? Because it works at room temp, and if someone gets clever they can make a gang set up with them to speed things up making more and more of them. Im not that clever; or I am and I havent found the time. And you can use them with chemical depositing as well. Its not atom perfect, but you dont need to be atom perfect in everything. and then use them to make machines that make other nanoscale machines. Atoms are suprisingly forgiving, especially if they dont really want to bond to each other. Its kind of shocking. Nano structires are orders of magnatude more forgiving then macrostructures. Also orders of magnatude harder to inspect. Either way, I am sure someone will come up with a liquid terminator sort of smart material thats.. much dumber then a Terminator and forms much stronger structures then metal ever could be using Atomic Force Microscopes as mold makers. And fairly soon its just a matter of time and spreading the word that its possible and how. And when that happens manufacturing is over. Just done. There is no more manufacturing when you can download anything you want and have it
@PazLeBon4 ай бұрын
carbon was going to change the world... cant say its made much of a dent at all
@PazLeBon4 ай бұрын
@@kaseyboles30 not yet maybe
@mattfitzgerald78364 ай бұрын
43:41 And the first rule of space warfare is...bring a drink and a snack. :)
@timothykieper4 ай бұрын
I see a future where the government will know what web sites you visited, who you make phone calls and emails to, and what your daily travel schedule is. Anyone else see a problem with this ??
@dansmith16614 ай бұрын
That is the past. Government has been monitoring and tutoring people into being Lone Wolves for over a decade.
@whitemagicalhat28444 ай бұрын
Augmented reality contact lenses. Now experience the convenience of A.I.-personalized advertisements everywhere, anytime.
@Roxor1284 ай бұрын
Better idea: Augmented Reality ad-blockers. Anything you can see that's showing an ad gets blacked out, or better still, replaced by the texture of the surrounding wall.
@asandax63 ай бұрын
@@Roxor128 We'll be blind if ads get blacked out.
@mrdragoonproductionpteltd.79462 ай бұрын
That's the point @@asandax6
@shnma54 ай бұрын
35:35 - in Japan, all the medium/large hotels I stayed at with a laundry room had a TV channel showing you status of every machine. Japan has already found a way lol
@dariustiapula4 ай бұрын
We are truly living in the future. Once hologram advertisement is put up everywhere.
@shadowman87874 ай бұрын
Don't you think we need hovercraft also?
@dariustiapula4 ай бұрын
@@shadowman8787 Nuhhh. Compare to hovercraft. Holograms seems to be easier too obtained or visualize.
@kingsilvergrass87514 ай бұрын
@@dariustiapula all we need now is the proper tech and software to make and run holographic devices, a process in the making I hope.
@TheRadischen4 ай бұрын
at that time i'll use adblock glasses to block the hologram ads
@Marcus_Postma4 ай бұрын
The shark still looks fake
@ChinchillaDave4 ай бұрын
I showed up prepared with my drink and a snack
@jovasmav4 ай бұрын
Sink full of dishes here, Isaac gets me through any piles
@lordoflek4 ай бұрын
it's amazing how well your elocution has improved. I can't imagine the amount of work that took. Well done.
@rudihoffman28172 ай бұрын
What a seeet thing to say. I was going to make a snarky thoughtless comment about slightly odd voicing. You’ve made me a better human!
@lordoflek2 ай бұрын
@@rudihoffman2817 dude literally could not pronounce r's when it started.
@zekejanczewski72754 ай бұрын
Another thing 3D printers help with is that we are probably overpaying for a large number of items we buy, because we don't have access to the means to construct a screwdriver ourselves from raw iron and rubber. But by knocking down that barrier, and making the production of thousands of widgets accessible at home,products made by bulk manufacturing possesses would need to either stand out in some way through quality or features, or be much much cheaper.
@3dprintedhardware4 ай бұрын
Check out my company, we offer a whole 3d printable tool set. You could print our 3/4 inch wrench using a carbon fiber reinforced filament for less than $3 in material. A Craftsman 3/4 inch is like $22 at the store.
@greggweber99674 ай бұрын
20:57 Safe voting includes only you knowing how you voted and you knowing that the vote you made was counted in the right pile of votes you wanted it in.
@iriswaters4 ай бұрын
This is _possibly_ doable with a block chain. It's honestly one of the few real uses of block chain tech that had been proposed that don't revolve entirely around the joys of speculative investment. You having a unique personal identifier that only you know means you can check the block chain to see your vote is counted correctly. No one else knowing your identifier means no one else can know what you voted, despite everyone being able to see every vote. The big issue that is non-trivial to confront is making sure there's a one to one correspondence between voters and votes, while preventing a central authority from having a nice handy list of every name and their id.
@dongiovanni43314 ай бұрын
You also want your vote to be anonymous, so people cant threaten you for your vote, or condition things like employment or housing on the way you vote.
@iriswaters4 ай бұрын
@@dongiovanni4331 that was what "only you knowing how you voted" meant
@dongiovanni43314 ай бұрын
@iriswaters the question is how soon a data breach exposed your vote to the public. I honestly don't trust much electronic voting, especially with blockchain.
@dansmith16614 ай бұрын
It's much easier to do when election day was just one day and not weeks of magically finding new boxes of votes.
@cannonfodder43764 ай бұрын
Another great overview of future technologies and their potential civilizational changing impacts. If even a few of these happen later this century... I hope to be around for it. Fantastic work, Isaac.
@TheTrueAdept4 ай бұрын
The thing is, people need to read the Vulnerable World Hypothesis and understand that advanced Biotech is one of the 'fail states' of that hypothesis because it 'democrazies' WMDs. So, unless we want to allow things like law enforcement to have the legal and lawful obligation to carry out mass murder, we'll have to rewrite our understanding of rights and freedoms.
@francoiseeduard3034 ай бұрын
We were supposed to have Immersive FullDive VRMMORPGs with a free, preset series of program packages that can be used for creating Virtual Reality (VR) worlds as well as control the input and output of the five senses of the players, allowing players to FullDive into the created world game and an engine that allows conversion of one account in a VR world to another by now! Where’s my NerveGear!?!?
@Evil_This4 ай бұрын
Right? Just give me some William Gibson style cyberspace already. I've been ready for transhumanism since I was 12.
@sonwig51864 ай бұрын
You know I think a lot of people would genuinely play a game where if you die in the game you die in real life.
@francoiseeduard3034 ай бұрын
@Evil_This I hope you simply mean the technological assumptions of cyberpunk.
@francoiseeduard3034 ай бұрын
@sonwig5186 I would not.
@sonwig51864 ай бұрын
@@francoiseeduard303 Well I wouldn't either, I can get my death thrills already
@FGMagala4 ай бұрын
While time/cost of delivery may be a reason for 3d printing, especially for more extreme situations like orbital infrastructure and early colonization, I believe in the private sector that won't be even show up on a list of positives. Instead, I imagine the single most driving factor would be customization. The ability to get pants in two-toned purple and yellow no matter how much sales reps and market research denies its marketability, to have 3PO breakdancing on a miniature Star Destroyer engraved in the back of your smartphone protector, or to get shoes that perfectly fit your feet while leaving extra space to avoid irritating your ingrown toenail would be the reason for 3d printing to take off in terms of private use. I think people don't care about next day delivery enough in comparison to being able to get it to an exacting specification, especially if it's something esoteric, at an easily affordable price, especially if all you have to do is load some raw materials into your home 3d printer, and tell your the AI what you want made with some reference photos to help it.
@ThomasAndersonbsf4 ай бұрын
something else too that I see tied together that most dont, is the ability to use a 3D printer with the right tech for other printing applications, enabling it to also reclaim or even refine needed resources almost on the fly. (like the half watt laser I used to convert rust back into raw pure iron metal, combined with an oxygen extraction system enabling the same of say titanium dioxide or various aluminum ores to print out solid aluminum, iron, titanium or even alloy mixtures of metal oxides rather than having to refine a giant amount then cut away what we dont want losing a lot of it to oxidation all over again. This process of extraction I have also enables sorting of ablated vaporized material for later use from a pure material source, regardless of how many different materials in the source being refined or recycled.
@Maimkillburn694 ай бұрын
I always thought self driving cars are insanely stupid you want a specially made road that can efficiently move people without them being in danger? They figured that out in 1804 it’s called a train
@B______L3 ай бұрын
Self driving trucks would be incredibly beneficial for the economy. Probably moreso than any other nearby technology.
@MarshallTheArtistАй бұрын
@@B______LSo are trains. Trains can deliver everything, but internal combustion engines make money for the people who sell them.
@douglaswilkinson57004 ай бұрын
Smart Cars: Ford filed a patent that can monitor cars around you then report speeding, etc. to the DMV to issue a citation & fine. An upgrade to this technology will monitor your own driving and report infractions to the DMV.
@xBINARYGODx4 ай бұрын
i doubt it will actually be rolled out - people break the speed limit all the time, and its that usual breaking that causes anything issues - its the excessive speeds or, in fact, driving a lot slower than everyone else.
@Arkantos1174 ай бұрын
There are already cars that report your driving habits to your insurer.
@FloydCotton-hx4jh4 ай бұрын
@@xBINARYGODxif all cars communicate and move at the same speed……this will remedy both the expensive punishment of rule breakers as well as loss of life. Not to mention insurance will be largely unnecessary.
@ClannCholmain4 ай бұрын
I had bariatric surgery a few weeks ago and I see it as life extension.
@DonnieDarko7274 ай бұрын
Willpower is cheaper
@ClannCholmain4 ай бұрын
@@DonnieDarko727not when you have been off work for 5 years from hyperparathyroidism.
@DonnieDarko7274 ай бұрын
@@ClannCholmain sorry to hear that.
@seanhewitt6034 ай бұрын
I wonder how far organ cloning has come, with three d printing being a thing now...
@ClannCholmain4 ай бұрын
@@seanhewitt603 I’ve worked in the pharmaceutical industry in the trials and production of an immunosuppressant used by organ transplant recipients since 1998. The age of genetic editing is in its early gestation, 20 years is the usual time for research and development, with good reasoning. Those new covid vaccines were actually 20 years in the making and were ready coincidentally for the last pandemic. A lot of life saving medications will hopefully become obsolete sooner rather than later.
@SirSpence994 ай бұрын
Heads up, fdm 3d printing is already viable at scale or exceeding injection molding. As is, unless you are making 10 million plus units, the cost is well within 1%. There are some limits on total throughput but that is because there are still few fdm factories, mostly because people still think you can't do the scale. At scales below 10k units, it is way cheaper already. There are also significant steps that should be able to drop the cost by about another 25%. The other fact that makes it even better is that the machines don't need to be hyper-specialized for a single part so the machine can make parts "on demand" at the factory and only need a small stock. Keep in mind injection molding is about building a stock and storing that stock until it sells.
@Verdictus134 ай бұрын
I look forward to the day when I don't have to spend forever and too much money finding shoes that fit my stupidly flat, wide feet.
@spencernorman26264 ай бұрын
I've really been looking forward to this. Thanks a lot for your excellent work, Isaac; it's truly appreciated.
@terricon44 ай бұрын
For additive and 3d printing... I was surprised you didn't touch on some of the best examples of it revolutionizing modern production, especially with the arguably best being one that I figure you'd stay on top of. One of the key advantages is, you aren't limited in attaching individual parts together, or somehow drilling/removing material from inside of something in areas you might not be able to reach. So this allows for new types of designs with major improvements for some types of parts. The best examples arguably being some newer types of rocket engines, like the Raptor engine v3, compared to the old v1. The thing looks naked, incomplete almost, not covered in parts. But it's just got all it's extra pipes, cables, sensors, power, cooling, etc... running inside of it's shell with little holes and stuff running everywhere . This is something you can't really do with older manufacturing methods, those parts would just be bolted/tied onto the outside and run between areas. It all being built inside makes it weigh less, cost less (raw resources, manufacturing they haven't I don't think released confirmed info on this yet but likely is the case here too), able to have higher performance, and be more durable and reliable. Now obviously this wont matter for making a fork, just get a plate, stamp out the forks, and you're good via conventional methods, but for more complex shapes and structures it opens new option we never really had before, or in some cases we could do it before, but for much more expensive methods. And as 3d printing does get better, faster, more reliable, etc... we can expect that the number of these areas it allows improvements in, or becomes the cheaper option for, will increase. Now how far will this go, will this majorly revolutionize modern society with new designs people come out with that rely on this for stuff? Or will it be relegated to ya, mostly some new medical and space stuff? But even if limited to those few fields... the effect they might have could still be huge, event if it just makes for much more cost effective and safe space travel, the knock on effects of that could be massive.
@David-cg1lh4 ай бұрын
Thats super cool I hadn't thought about the inability to access different places inside of a larger item having such an effect on how you design something. I Love how that rocket engine looks
@ScoriacTears4 ай бұрын
0:17 We'd like to see digital paint that forms a screen with just four applications even on irregular surfaces and with one pass of a hand held electron circuit printer between layers.
@ScoriacTears4 ай бұрын
Imagine the graffiti.
@Roguescienceguy4 ай бұрын
I think Philips already developed such a paint a few years ago
@extropiantranshuman26 күн бұрын
been waiting for the big data discussion in a video for the longest. Finally!
@KevinRoboticsEDU4 ай бұрын
I work at a Maker Space as part of their 3D printing team, but we also do robotics, laser cutting, metalworks, smart home automation, and cybersecurity. I've shared this video with our board of directors.
@NPC_Pawnshop4 ай бұрын
Wow. Great content. Over the years I Listened to this channel across 3 continents and 18 airports, lots of taxis. Thanks for the years and many hours of "Rodenberry meets Sagan" content. 👍
@katm98774 ай бұрын
I would vote on wearable technologies being the next game changer, at least when it comes to personal quality of life. I use hearing aids and the amount of progress made in the last 5 years was amazing. Now I am able to listen to someone speaking with a slight speech impediment, in a language which is not my native, and understand most of it, while five years ago I couldn't hold a phone call with anyone not in my closest family circle. However, I would argue that advancement of wearable tech does not bury augmentations and implants. There are use cases where externally worn tech does not cut it or where the power draw is too big (unless someone figures out how to transfer more energy to that wearable). Furthermore external tech can be lost or stolen, or damaged more easily than internal implants.
@MultiNacnud4 ай бұрын
AI police> you were driving at 35.0001mph in a 35mph zone. Hand over your drivers license and insurance " YOU HAVE 20 SECOND TO COMPLY".
@iriswaters4 ай бұрын
Nah, you'll just get a bill in the mail.
@andrasbiro30074 ай бұрын
Jokes on you, my car can't be driven manually, so fine the manufacturer.
@nathanielacton37684 ай бұрын
@@iriswaters Nah, deducted from your government credits account. If the account goes negative it'll be authorised to repo assets, like the car you are driving.
@iriswaters4 ай бұрын
@@nathanielacton3768 yeah, immediately after writing I realized it was silly to use the anachronism of "a bill in the mail".
@shorewall4 ай бұрын
@@andrasbiro3007 This is my biggest gripe with AI driven cars. The corpos who make them will lobby for exemptions for liability, or just run a cost benefit analysis on how many lethal accidents are still profitable.
@jessegilbert86234 ай бұрын
Can you cover the technology we will develop in different gravity? I find it fascinating that every single planet we may visit will likely have foreign forces that we have to engineer around.
@andrasbiro30074 ай бұрын
Not much difference. Cars and planes would be affected mostly. Higher gravity means more traction, and harder flying. Too low gravity makes wheels impractical, but flying easy.
@jessegilbert86234 ай бұрын
@@andrasbiro3007 What about industry on a different planet? Any heavy industry would be completely different in both higher or lower gravity. We would have to change a lot of how we approach everything because just shipping stuff to colonies takes too long and would remain too expensive.
@andrasbiro30074 ай бұрын
@@jessegilbert8623 I don't see how. You need some level of gravity to make things move as we are used to, especially liquids, but the exact number doesn't matter much. Extremely high levels would make a difference, it would make flatter factories ideal, but I don't see other issues. Very low gravity would make a big difference though. That completely changes how liquids behave, and can impacts some chemical reactions and crystal growth too.
@albizu754 ай бұрын
Excellent video. As for me the technology I'm looking forward is life extension! Would like to see what the world is like in the 26th and 31st century.
@Bobboby-v9t4 ай бұрын
I doubt we should still be humans at that point, healthier science and genetic engineering will get us farther but I wouldn't count on being able to live thousands of years within the next century.
@SKy_the_Thunder4 ай бұрын
10:35 You mean like an internet browser, instead of having a dedicated app for every single site? I still don't get why the latter are a thing. Why would I need a whole extra app to open one singular website?
@jensboettiger52864 ай бұрын
because each app serves as spyware for a different data scrounger
@SKy_the_Thunder4 ай бұрын
@@jensboettiger5286 My point exactly.
@dirkbruere4 ай бұрын
At work we 3D print small prototypes when previously we would have sent it to an engineering company to manufacture. The difference is typically between $1 and $30 and a couple of weeks saved
@Arkantos1174 ай бұрын
Dystopia guaranteed is what I'm hearing.
@XxLIVRAxX4 ай бұрын
Ah yeah! The comfiest and most interesting futurism channel on KZbin dropped another banger.
@rayrocher68872 ай бұрын
Thanks Isaac Arthur, great future because of you, glorious effort
@mawkernewek4 ай бұрын
10:20 Congratulations. You have just reinvented the idea of a web browser.
@Eldagusto4 ай бұрын
I was excited about this episode but I did t expect this would be one of my favorite episodes because pound for pound it might be the best as far as things to consider and think about. Would highly recommend this ep for youngsters to watch.
@kkrolik21064 ай бұрын
CNG*(Compressed natural gas) is probably cleanest way to power cars presently, also if use with Free-piston linear generator in hybrid cars you can combine best from both ICE and EV cars.
@andrasbiro30074 ай бұрын
Electricity is cheaper. Especially from your own solar panels. As for hybrids, they are outdated, except for a few niche applications. Batteries are big and cheap enough, and the charging infrastructure is pretty good in most of the world. At least if you drive a Tesla.
@kkrolik21064 ай бұрын
@@andrasbiro3007 I want my car weight bellow 1 tone. Electricity cost now 0,5 Euro per Kwh that make Tesla cost travel 2x higher than my small diesel car that do 3,6 liters per 100km
@Bobboby-v9t4 ай бұрын
However you can't go anywhere long distance without stopping to recharge every couple hours, and then recharging takes several hours
@sebastiangruenfeld1414 ай бұрын
@@kkrolik2106 that sounds more like your governments incompetence in securing their energy needs than an actual argument against EVs
@Roxor1284 ай бұрын
@@Bobboby-v9t It doesn't take several hours. At least, not from a fast-charger, which is what you'd use on a long trip. More like 20 minutes. Perfectly reasonable time. Go to the loo, get a snack and some coffee, and by the time you're done, the car will be charged enough for another couple of hours of driving. It'd be good for road safety, as drivers who get more breaks are less likely to be tired and make mistakes on the road.
@McColty_Makes3 ай бұрын
I have a 3d printing KZbin channel, i focus on home 3d printers and there is so much potential moving forward with the tech, it can't defy the laws of physics but still so much potential.
@TataLinoNetwork3 ай бұрын
No way Graphene didn't get a whole discussion. It will literally be the backbone of changes that will happen in this century.
@ConsciusVeritasVids4 ай бұрын
Having just recently purchased a resin printer I'm excited to watch the opening segment on 3D printing and additive manufacturing 👍
@PazLeBon4 ай бұрын
wasnt that exciting was it?
@TheAIExplorer-o5j3 ай бұрын
The visuals and editing here are amazing
@WildStar20024 ай бұрын
The thing about the future is that once you arrive, it has already passed.
@PunkNPetty4 ай бұрын
I sorta see the phone itself as the “super app” because it kinda does already have everything you described, by adding another app to combine all other apps means just one extra step to do the same process as opening your phone and then looking through your phone for KZbin, messaging but instead you’re having to open the phone then open the app and looking in the app for the specific service you want.
@eclipsenow54313 ай бұрын
When you come here for the shiny future gizmo - and end up yelling "Heck yeah!" as Isaac says "Super-apps!" It's a pet peeve of mine, but because the modern world is so complex - I'd LOVE one (customisable) streaming services APP that automatically talks to the others and can sell me shows I want at 20 cents per episode (or whatever it breaks down to.)
@jayboydakid82994 ай бұрын
Dear Issac Arthur - I’m a big fan of space. I’ve been watching your videos for many years and I love it. Keep them coming. On this technical revolution? I’m still waiting for the virtual reality for call of duty( Rick-Flair voice )-“Whoo”!!!!
@knallpistolen4 ай бұрын
Happy Arthur's Day
@gennoveus4 ай бұрын
This kind of near-future video is my favourite type of yours. Thank you!
@innerstrengthcheck4 ай бұрын
You've always got my back for a good night's sleep on Thursdays! Thanks again Isaac.
@ElGordoElGordito4 ай бұрын
Thank you Isaac 🤝
@David-cg1lh4 ай бұрын
@Isaac Arthur what specifically about soft robotics do you see being good for agriculture? Is maneuvirability something that would be so much better than a classic robot with joints or whatever. I Guess I'm asking why not just a robot with a mechanical hand because I don't know about these things.
@Warchin0074 ай бұрын
Great show ! 👍
@isaacarthurSFIA4 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it :)
@shillyshizzlet50664 ай бұрын
The craziest part is even if some of these pop up, most of the general populous won't be able to afford a smart home with an artificially intelligent companion, let alone various "quality of life" improvements. Kinda surprised the idea of an AI driven market didn't come up in Economics
@AlexHammerofficial3 ай бұрын
Isaac, how did you develop such insight (and also foresight) about so many interesting topics and especially as related to the future??
@wylhias4 ай бұрын
I kinda disagree on the automated fret transport not coming as fast. Sure the driver might not be the main cost but if you can have an ai that doesn't need vacation or breaks and reduces accidents by a significant margin that would probably be incentive enough to get rid of the drivers. And it would also cost less probably.
@andrasbiro30074 ай бұрын
Safety and reliability will likely be important factors. But cost too, no matter how little the driver costs, it's a cutthroat business, every penny counts.
@SavannahShepherd6694 ай бұрын
A glass of water and a slice of lemon made me lol 😂 ty for that and the vid 😊
@alanbear65054 ай бұрын
Speaking of the Retail section, personally I do not have my groceries delivered. I can see a day coming when I will for things like milk, pasta, my brand old cat food or such things where one package is the same as another (at least of the same brand), but I’m always going to want to choose my own meats and fresh produce. Where quality is variable I trust my own judgment.
@lgjm55624 ай бұрын
Supermarket s will fill your delivery bag with items that they are trying to get rid of. The very items you'd reject if you were picking them yourself. I've seen such bags waiting for delivery with things on the verge of spoiling.
@andrasbiro30074 ай бұрын
Electric cars are very far from niche today: - The Tesla Model Y was the best selling car in the world last year. - In China more than half of new cars are electric. And China is by far the largest car market. - In Norway around 90% of new cars are electric. And I think it's like 25% of their entire fleet. - California is also full of Teslas. - Most modern EVs are primary or only cars. - Prices are coming down fast, and range is already enough, charging speed too.
@dansmith16614 ай бұрын
Not the Tesla cars. Those are expensive and deadly junk. China leads so far with such cheap and safe cars that the US government keeps protection Musk from losing everything.
@dschledermann4 ай бұрын
Agreed. The switch to EVs is a done deal. This is only a matter of time before this transitions is done. It would be, for me at least, a world view altering event if some other energy technology than battery electric were to suddenly overtake the market for personal cars.
@dansmith16614 ай бұрын
@@dschledermann EVs are inferior cars. If it was so good, governments wouldn't be doing so much to prop up companies, besides the fact that making the battery utterly destroys the environment to get the materials to make it.
@dschledermann4 ай бұрын
@@dansmith1661 nonsense. EVs are superior in most aspects. And no, batteries do bon"utterly destroy the environment". Just ease down with the coolaid. Some level of government support is needed because fuel burning vehicles are a very entrenched technology, and there's absolutely nothing wrong with that.
@danielv69064 ай бұрын
Well, regarding heat, I have a heat exchanger which is using the heat in the ground from the garden. That's not new. However, getting the heat energy necessary for electricity generation with turbines require very deep holes in most locations. The new method of drilling at large depths using microwaves is promising but I suspect we need a new material for piping in those cases, as mentioned in the video. But if we can solve that - the rest is cheap and "simple".
@norddorian57914 ай бұрын
Yes ive been waiting for a video about this
@justinsellers94024 ай бұрын
Health tech: we convinced government to stop the food corporations and their big tobacco owners poisoning us.
@MarkTuchinsky4 ай бұрын
For the safety angle in the autonomous vehicles section. Breathalyzers can be mandated to be installed in vehicles by a court order already, I've seen it.
@bluekoi4554 ай бұрын
Great stuff! Soothes my brain and gets me thinking about my surroundings
@tastyfrzz14 ай бұрын
Check out the papers on HBC, Human Body Communication. Some guy has figured out that the human body acts like a monopole antenmae at 50 MHz and with a high permeability core around the ankle , it can work like a transmitter/receiver.
@toddzircher61684 ай бұрын
Internet of Things is one of the greatest threats to security and privacy that we now face.
@angelstrong7922 ай бұрын
Excellent!
@sormiliha4 ай бұрын
In body augmentations will still probably require a lot of development in energy efficiency because i would not want a 90 degrees celsius processor in my brain. Let alone multiple all around my body. I am already sweaty enough as is.
@noxthemc77174 ай бұрын
Think how many calories it would burn tho... Just install some improved cooling fans lol
@AnonymousAnarchist24 ай бұрын
I agree fully. Plus the human body is only operating on about 100 watts. My computer uses a more to do a lot less. But we have a lot of room for improving efficency.
@andrasbiro30074 ай бұрын
Look up Neuralink. They already implanted a chip in someone's brain, and planning to ramp up as fast as the FDA allows.
@OldCurmudgeon3DPАй бұрын
My printer has (so far) saved me more than it's buy-in cost. Printing things that either didn't exist or would have cost many times the filament it took to make the item (when speed of making isn't critical).
@darianhobo88384 ай бұрын
We are working hard on that NSS report on space solar power - it’s fusion that works.
@asandax63 ай бұрын
Breathalyzer in cars is a bad idea. Imagine being in a situatiin where you need to use your vehicle to get away from a threat but your vehicle refuses to start up because you just had a single glass of scotch.
@tastyfrzz14 ай бұрын
Artificial friends might become big. Perhaps everyone will wear the same jumper but how we perceive it might be different as augmented reality allows us to transmit what we are wearing to those around us. We also could change the color or style on the fly. There will need to be some way to influence people to have children.
@Eric_Malbos4 ай бұрын
A nice overview. Multipurpose humanoid robots, adaptive giant telescope like the ELT, life extension and cryopreservation would seem relevant. As a MD, I am going to Berlin to Tomorrow biostasis to get trained for example.
@richardkohlhof4 ай бұрын
I really love listening to you and watching your shows truly thank you
@thingonathinginathing4 ай бұрын
Mr. Arthur, are you finally catching on to the emrging New Paradigm that's come before us in the face of UAP Disclosure, because it behooves you too.
@darkbozo114 ай бұрын
can someone explain the benefit of 3d printing on food (especially on spacetravel).. It seems that the paste that would be used would already be edible and would already have the nutricional benifits.. getting it in a certain shape or in a certian mix wouldnt really ad much practical benefits right? What am i missing here people?
@ոakedsquirtle4 ай бұрын
fiber and morale
@seanhewitt6034 ай бұрын
The war on "all work and no play makes Johnny a little edgy"..., so, ya, morale work...
@projectarduino22954 ай бұрын
Not quite smart cities and smart homes, but the way we house people I feel is a big area for revolution. Some kind of low mass modularity, or expanding housing zones or changes to standards are things that specifically impact our day to day life. Do we stack homes like shipping containers? Are high rise apartments the way to go? What revolutions can be made in the construction of homes sector? Whether we live in pods of mass produced mansions is a question for the future.
@MartinCHorowitz4 ай бұрын
Additive manufacturing generates lots of waste for prints that require scaffolding, the scaffold is waste,for some materials it might be recyclable. Also printers may need to waste materials during purge and cleaning cycles.
@AnonymousAnarchist24 ай бұрын
Thats true for FDM and some forms of SLA, the popular print forms because they where the simplest to build at home useing commonly avalible parts from other common household devices like paper printers. But those are really just first generation tech. It has gotten good but thats like compalining that cars have disadvanteges because the steam engines require water in the 1900's. It is true but theres also better tech already here
@blackterminal4 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video.
@rayrocher68872 ай бұрын
Good report Arthur
@Roxor1284 ай бұрын
Little point about additive manufacturing: it doesn't eliminate waste. If you 3D print something, very often it requires you print support structures that have to be removed once complete. It'll certainly cut down on waste for some designs, but for others it won't be any improvement over a subtractive approach, and might even be worse. What might be a revolution would be a machine that can do both and switch between them on the fly. It would, of course, require software to figure out which parts of the design are best handled by which approach, but once you've got that, you could have a manufacturing system that would be more efficient in terms of waste than either alone.
@ScienceD90004 ай бұрын
That is because 3D printers are generic, they can make a wide range of things. A more specialized machine could include the support structures in the actual machine, not print them out each time it makes a thing.
@Roxor1284 ай бұрын
@@ScienceD9000 Support structures in the machine? I suppose you could have a print bed of extendable rods to provide support without waste. Would probably be an engineering nightmare to actually make, though.
@djj9494 ай бұрын
This was a good one, many things I never thought of!
@tibiamademedoit64864 ай бұрын
Such a great channel
@kaseyboles304 ай бұрын
3D printers are great for limited run (
@andrasbiro30074 ай бұрын
There are already higher volume 3D printed parts. Not in the millions, but thousands to tens of thousands.
@dansmith16614 ай бұрын
Cottage industries existed centuries ago. Just don't let the government know you are producing stuff.
@greggweber99674 ай бұрын
23:15 The enemy of hydroelectric is silt and shortsightedness lack of maintenance.
@seabeepirate4 ай бұрын
I wonder how much fuel will be used to move those printing machines around in space. Or maybe they could be attached and operated in symmetry to minimize the course deviations.
@robertostman20753 ай бұрын
the next tech revolution may be in dental procedures and prostesis, imagine growing new molars and theeth to substitute the lost ones, imagine geting rid of cavity producing bacteria, and or regrowing the afected are where a cavity was taken out, imagine regeneration of nerves where the dentist or a accident created a lesion, finally imagine free dental care world wide
@greggweber99674 ай бұрын
12:45 There's are lines between not enough data, sufficient data, realistic, and data overload.
@pita34512 ай бұрын
solid stuff as always
@MrTao-iy2nf4 ай бұрын
Isaac, one Imagine you get ad when your trying to sleep, then suddenly "want a breakfrom all the ads"? But seriesly I think you could do video on sattilite lazers and its practicality
@maxpayne25744 ай бұрын
How could people being monitored by 24 7 by "first responders" possibly go wrong.