Broken link (however you cut&pasted it replaced part of it with '...')
sorry,
http://www.theawl.com/2012/08/a-timeline-of-future-events
This one works.
Make the years realistic, at least. "Artificial stars" should probably wait until a few thousand years in the future, don't you think?
I agree that the more 'fantastic' or uncertain the idea, the farther it should be pushed into the potential future to keep up with their plausibility and likely-hood of happening.
I am a big fan of keeping the near future, as realistic as probable, for as long as it makes sense. Not only to keep up realism, but also to keep with all likely scientific speculations and near-future science fiction.
About stars, yeah , I agree that artificial stars should probably pushed well into the galactic era, however
You do know that science does occasionally surprise us by accomplishing the improbable.
Here is something about the possible reality of making stars in the near future:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencet...-superlab-scientists-creating-star-Earth.html
http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/technol...atter-lab-could-possibly-wrong-210340799.html
http://www.gizmodo.com.au/2012/01/scientists-create-star-matter-in-california/
I am looking for the article that I read this week about their actual accomplishment - I have it bookmarked somewhere.
not to mention the Star Trek IV prediction of Transparent Aluminum.
Science, You So Crazy:
Transparent Aluminum Made in Lab
http://gajitz.com/science-you-so-crazy-transparent-aluminum-made-in-lab/
Scientists Invent Particles That Will Let You Live Without Breathing
http://gizmodo.com/5921868/scientists-invent-particles-that-will-let-you-live-without-breathing
100-Year Starship Project Forges Ahead With First Round of Funding
http://www.popsci.com/technology/ar...-starship-effort-launches-first-round-funding
Spray-On Batteries Could Turn Graffiti Into Power
http://gizmodo.com/5922196/spray+on-batteries-could-make-future-gadgets-super-thin
Salamander-inspired therapy may aid injured vets - Article on actual regrown fingertip
http://www.cnn.com/2008/HEALTH/05/26/regrowing.body.parts/index.html
British boy who had first windpipe transplant is thriving two years on
http://news360.com/#article/61847140
Actual printing of A human kidney
http://www.ted.com/talks/anthony_atala_printing_a_human_kidney.html
The reality of human organs being created in the near future
Quantum Locking - If you haven't seen it.
http://io9.com/5850729/quantum-locking-will-blow-your-mind--but-how-does-it-work
Who knows what impossible things of today could be turned on their heads?
(not to say I like implausible ideas)
and what could have happened in the past?
The USA Could Have Had A Tank To Fight The Revolutionary War
http://jalopnik.com/5923086/the-usa-could-have-had-a-tank-to-fight-the-revolutionary-war
Charles Babbage could have built the first computer in the early 1800's
The Difference Engine
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Babbage
and my favorite
The Antikythera Mechanism
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antikythera_mechanism
'The Antikythera mechanism' is an ancient analog computer designed to calculate astronomical positions. It was recovered in 1900–1901 from the Antikythera wreck, but its significance and complexity were not understood until a century later. The construction has been dated to the early 1st century BC. Technological artifacts approaching its complexity and workmanship did not appear again until the 14th century A.D.'
This is a proven fact and there is much documentation on it. What if it had been developed further?
Here is also a new article on:
5 projects that NASA is considering
http://mashable.com/2012/08/09/future-nasa-projects/
Water Walls
Exploration of Under-Ice Regions With Ocean Profiling Agents (EUROPA)
Venus Land Sailing Rover
The V2 Suit
The Fusion Propelled Rocket
Wikipedia's List of emerging technologies
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_emerging_technologies
nice long list - too many to list here.
and in case I didn't mention it.
TED 2012: 10 innovations that could help shape a better world
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2012/mar/04/ted-2012-10-innovations
1. LIQUID METAL BATTERIES MAY SAVE THE WORLD
2. BE HUMBLE… AND CARRY A LIST: In medicine, it's not possible for an individual to know everything.
Gawande looked to other industries, such as aviation, and came up with his "checklist" – a 19-point plan that included introducing surgical teams by name to each other at the start of the day. Introduced in eight hospitals, results were astonishing: post-surgical complications dropped 30%, the death rate by 47%.
3. The devices in our pockets have the effect of removing us from our own lives, she believes, and are changing who we are.
"Technology gives us the illusion of companionship without the means of friendship," she says. The solution? Now we need to relearn how to be alone.
4. TEACH ROBOTS HOW TO THINK
5. BE VULNERABLE, NOT WEAK: the message that vulnerability is a sign of courage, not weakness – and that empathy is the antidote to shame.
6. TEACH NEUROSCIENCE TO KIDS
7. BEAR WITNESS:The greatest inequality in society arises because of lack of "proximity", says Bryan Stevenson. And until we pay attention to other people's suffering, we cannot be fully human.
8. BE NICE TO NERDS: To learn how to succeed, though, she said, you have to be ready for failure – because "there's no way to learn to fly at Mach 20" if you're not prepared to leave the ground in the first place. Oh, and hummingbird robots.
9. CITIES MAKE US SMARTER
10. DABBLE IN NUCLEAR FUSION - At 14, TAYLOR WILSON, having been enrolled in a gifted students' program and offered safe facilities at the University of Nevada in Reno, he became the youngest person in the world – and one of only a few dozen of any age – to create a working nuclear fusion reactor.
Also
17-year-old girl builds artificial ‘brain’ to detect breast cancer
http://www.futureoftech.msnbc.msn.c...-artificial-brain-detect-breast-cancer-908308
oh and it works (99.1% effective), way better than any existing technology.
Please ask them both what is likely impossible.
Every one of these ideas, is worth discussing
at some length here, and changes the way we look at the world, and the future, (and possibly C2C).
The question is when, and probably not if.
Neil Armstrong himself says the space program could have easily gone the other way.
http://phys.org/news/2011-09-neil-armstrong-space.html
Many technologies (and their impact) cannot be anticipated,
History is littered with people who said things were not possible.
http://www.quora.com/Quotations/What-are-some-famous-quotes-that-proved-to-be-wrong-with-time
Why “utility fogs” could be the technology that changes the world
http://io9.com/5932880/how-utility-fogs-could-become-the-technology-that-changes-the-world
Remember, at one time, Most Everybody thought the Earth was the center of the universe, it was flat, you would fall off the edge if you sailed too far across the oceans, and that it was it wasn't possible to leave it to fly to the Moon (especially in 1969!!!). I wonder what will be next.
I prefer playing a plausible future, I also prefer realism, this does not prevent me from sometimes wanting to play some ideas from popular science fiction, or many of the possible alternate futures, some of which may be proven true.
I hope the ModTeam will strike a balance of realism, and possibility in C2C.
I think some technologies may happen sooner or later than expected, until we live it, the future is wide open. It could be a dystopia, a utopia, or something in between.
We could invent interstellar travel soon, or it could take centuries. We could contact aliens soon, or never. I hope C2C becomes filled with possibilities and ideas and leaves the timing of certain ones flexible, while making the more implausible ones optional. I would love to play many different futures in C2C.
I hope that C2C can encompass all good ideas about the future.