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12 votes
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Eight ways sci-fi imagines data storage
8 votes -
Would you go to Mars?
I've been thinking a lot recently about space exploration and colonization, and the big question that's been running through my head has been this: would I be willing to leave everything on Earth...
I've been thinking a lot recently about space exploration and colonization, and the big question that's been running through my head has been this: would I be willing to leave everything on Earth behind and go to Mars, even if there was a strong possibility that I would never return home?
Wondering what everyone here on Tildes thinks about that question.
32 votes -
Flying taxis. Seriously?
4 votes -
Thirty-five years ago, Isaac Asimov was asked by the Star to predict the world of 2019. Here is what he wrote.
29 votes -
How we lost our ambitions for the tech-enabled home
16 votes -
Four perfectly reasonable-sounding 2018 technology predictions that failed
8 votes -
Using insects as templates, researchers are buildings robots that are very small, very mobile—and very useful
10 votes -
Revisiting a 1958 map of space mysteries
6 votes -
The forgotten crops that could feed the planet
14 votes -
"Xi's world order - July 2024" (Economics and speculative fiction - a sampling from this week's Economist)
7 votes -
What is synthwave and its related subgenres?
9 votes -
How tech's richest plan to save themselves after the apocalypse
3 votes -
The future of robots from science fiction to present day predictions
3 votes -
Workers of the world unite on distributed platforms: The distributed network has gobbled the hierarchical firm. Only by seizing the platform can workers avoid digital serfdom
3 votes -
New technique could help scientists creat custom genes in twenty-four hours
11 votes -
Will humanity fail to get past the great filter?
19 votes -
Farm to table automation
I think automation is coming quick and fast and think that a landmark event will be when food can be farmed, packaged, shipped and sold without requiring any humans to be involved. I see the...
I think automation is coming quick and fast and think that a landmark event will be when food can be farmed, packaged, shipped and sold without requiring any humans to be involved. I see the foundations in place already with Amazon Go and autonomous vehicles and it doesn't seem like too much longer before this kind of automation could be possible in my mind.
Anybody want to weigh in with thoughts/discussion? What effects might it bring? Will it lead to a sort of monopoly as the food could be sold so much cheaper? When might this scale of automation be plausible? Anything really, just looking to spark some discussion :)
5 votes