Futurists can provide an exciting and terrible horrible vision for the future machines and sciences that can strengthen or replace nearby and dear activities and products.
Propagation from one location to another by remote delivery should come within our lifecycle / 10 years, but that is not yet possible. The invention of a high-tech VCR has (yet) proved to be challenging for some people: video recorders are outdated before learning how many of us program. Who knows using atoms and molecules to become the future of technology? Of course the Future
The future of predictive technology is a dreamer who wants to innovate better tools and mainstream people who want to benefit from new and improved ones. Many inventions were born in the laboratory and did not enter the consumer market, but the other inventions exceeded the well-defined rules on their use.
Next I will look at some atoms like unpleasant people who might want to set all of these innovations with sounds, small molecule tools, lots of data, and keyboard strokes.
As pointed out by the "economist", "Future factions that are receiving the most attention today are markets, not individuals." Several predictive markets have been in and out of the past few decades, but block chain technology - ideal for predicting the market for its inherent variance and security - has injected this precious model into it. New vitality
Futurists have long anticipated that automation will eliminate the need for labor in many industries and hinder employment opportunities. However, in response to the rapid development of information technology, these predictions are becoming increasingly popular now. Critics as critics as such a futuristic Martin Ford (the emergence of robots: the future of technology and the threat of unemployment), Andy Stern, former trade union leader (author strengthens say: how universal basic income You can update our economy and rebuild the US Technical change really pulls attention of the media insisting that this full employment can be ended)
Several writers are recognized as futuristic. They study trends, especially technology trends, and write their observations, conclusions and forecasts. In the early days, many futurists were at academic institutions. John McHale, author of "The Future of the Future", announced the "Family Roster" and commanded a think tank called the "Comprehensive Research Center" of the university. The futurist consulted the group and earned money as a speaker, like Alvin Toffler, John Naisbitt, Patrick Dixon. Frank Feather is a business speaker who calls himself a practical futurist. Some futurists have something in common with science fiction, and SF writers like Arthur C. Clark are also called future factions. In the introduction of "Dark Left Hand", Ursula K. Le Guin distinguished Futurism from a novelist and wrote that research as a prophet, viewpoint, and futurist. In her words, "Novelist's business is lying".