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6 votes
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Supercharging the band-aid: Five futuristic bandages that could take wound healing to the next level
3 votes -
“NEOM” may be our future
7 votes -
Puerto Rico harnesses the power of the sun for a renewable energy future
4 votes -
Insects are 'food of the future'
7 votes -
The shape of things to come
7 votes -
How will the movies (as we know them) survive the next ten years? Twenty-four major Hollywood figures peer into the future
7 votes -
Survival of the richest. The wealthy are plotting to leave us behind.
16 votes -
Apple's audacity, and what yesterday's WWDC announcements demonstrate about their future plans
12 votes -
How do meteorologists work out the weather forecast? And how far into the future can they go?
7 votes -
Op-eds from the future: It’s 2059, and the rich kids are still winning
9 votes -
Walmart unveils an AI-powered store of the future, now open to the public
6 votes -
The future is non-binary, and teens are leading the way
21 votes -
Hindsight 2070: We asked fifteen experts, “What do we do now that will be considered unthinkable in fifty years?” Here’s what they told us
12 votes -
Battery reality: There’s nothing better than lithium-ion coming soon
12 votes -
Where disease-carrying mosquitoes will go in the future
5 votes -
Traveling the Green River to understand the future of water in the West
6 votes -
The rise of robot authors: Is the writing on the wall for human novelists?
4 votes -
As more electric cars arrive, what's the future for gas-powered engines?
19 votes -
Farmworker vs Robot: Agricultural workers of the future may soon be made of tech and steel. Can a robot pick a strawberry better, faster, and cheaper than a seasonal farmworker?
5 votes -
Where will the materials for our clean energy future come from?
7 votes -
Childhood's end — The digital revolution isn’t over but has turned into something else
8 votes -
New years resolutions?
I know this is a relatively stereotypical new years post, but I'm interested in seeing what everyone here on Tildes wants to do to improve themselves for this coming year. Personally, I want to...
I know this is a relatively stereotypical new years post, but I'm interested in seeing what everyone here on Tildes wants to do to improve themselves for this coming year. Personally, I want to devote more time into language learning, which would include spending more time watching foreign TV, studying vocab, etc.
21 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 -
What are some common skills that will become extinct in the next couple of decades?
Today I got into a conversation with my coworkers about how cursive is all but dead with our students. We adults all grew up learning it and were often forced to use it even when we didn't want...
Today I got into a conversation with my coworkers about how cursive is all but dead with our students. We adults all grew up learning it and were often forced to use it even when we didn't want to, but it has been out of vogue in American schools for a while now, so most of our students legitimately don't know how to read or write it. Opinions as to whether or not this was a bad thing were split. Some people considered the skill unnecessary and were happy to see it go the way of the dinosaur. Life moves on, they said--and the skill was inessential anyway because students could simply print instead. Some even took things a step further and argued that print was also going to become outdated with the prevalence of computers and phones. Nevertheless, others argued that cursive was important and valuable for kids to learn, particularly if they wanted to be able to sign their names or read documents written in script (e.g. old letters from family members, historical documents, etc.)
The discussion then continued to analog clocks. Being able to read them is still technically in the curriculum standards for many states, but it's the kind of thing that often gets briefly touched on and then discarded. Because digital clocks are so prevalent now, many students never practice reading analog clocks outside of those specific lessons, and thus they never truly master it. While more of our students can read analog clocks than can write in cursive, it too seems to be headed down the path to extinction. Opinions about whether this was bad were much stronger, with nearly everyone agreeing that it's a worthwhile skill rather than something inessential.
The conversation made me curious to hear what everyone here thinks--not just about these but about dying skills in general. What are some skills that you believe will fall out of widespread use in the coming years? Is their departure a good/bad thing?
27 votes -
Ghost Data - Magical Metamorphosis (2017)
3 votes -
Is science stagnant? Despite vast increases in the time and money spent on research, scientific progress is barely keeping pace with the past
12 votes -
What Isaac Asimov taught us about predicting the future
14 votes -
Neuralink and the brain’s magical future
5 votes -
Alec Empire – Hypermodern Jazz 2000.5 (1996)
5 votes -
What's next after Liberal Democracy
5 votes -
Laszlo - Closer EP (2015)
6 votes -
Yuval Noah Harari on what the year 2050 has in store for humankind
5 votes -
What is the future of English in the US?
8 votes -
Moe Shop - Pastel feat. Snail's House (2017)
8 votes -
Migration of sub-tags/communities
Was asked to post here about this: Is there a plan for migrating sub-tags (or top-level groups too)? The scenario I'm thinking of is that things may either fork, or change their name unanimously....
Was asked to post here about this:
Is there a plan for migrating sub-tags (or top-level groups too)? The scenario I'm thinking of is that things may either fork, or change their name unanimously.
Let's say a tech product changes its official name from XX to be YY, Would there be a way to migrate
~tech.XX.stuff to ~tech.YY.stuff?I can't say that this will be a common occurrence, but may affect historical usefulness of the tagging system, as people looking for things in the past won't be able to easily - plus it may divide communities once existing (do they keep posting in the old tag or the new one?).
For now, this isn't too important as @Deimos (from what it seems?) is in charge of creating new topics and presumably modify them too, but for the future (according to this) we may start having user created groups pop-up.
Cheers,
3 votes -
Ten years left to redesign lithium-ion batteries
9 votes -
In about twenty years, half the population will live in eight US states
14 votes -
Survival of the richest - The wealthy are plotting to leave us behind
28 votes -
America’s millennials are waking up to a grim financial future
23 votes -
Will biodegradable polymers alleviate plastic’s environmental impact?
4 votes -
What do we think of an app? (iOS and Android)
I was wanting to look into how to make one for this website because I'd like to browse on my phone. We got a lot of tech people here. What do you think? Edit: I know it's not likely now, but I...
I was wanting to look into how to make one for this website because I'd like to browse on my phone. We got a lot of tech people here. What do you think?
Edit: I know it's not likely now, but I mean in the future. Is this something we could do when this turns open-source?
21 votes -
Two months post graduation, I am lost, confused and don't know how to go where I want to be.
I feel so cheated- I went into college with no clue what my interests are and got a degree in something irrelevant that doesn't interest me ( BBA in digital marketing). I was too young when I made...
I feel so cheated- I went into college with no clue what my interests are and got a degree in something irrelevant that doesn't interest me ( BBA in digital marketing).
I was too young when I made the decision to get this degree and in the years since, I have discovered my passions are art and the environment- I can't see myself feeling fulfilled working in any other field.
But now I don't have the qualifications or skills to get into either, and it seems like a bit of a stretch to go back to college and do another four years!I just don't know where to go from here, I feel demotivated and I wish that college was something that happened to us later in life. I would do things so differently!
I'm taking some time off to figure out what to do next, but honestly...I don't have a clue.
12 votes -
What do you see the world as in 50 years?
Just random discussion out of boredom. What do you see the world as in 50 years? Possibly war with different countries, economics, technology advancements(of course), space exploration, etc. What...
Just random discussion out of boredom. What do you see the world as in 50 years? Possibly war with different countries, economics, technology advancements(of course), space exploration, etc. What does everyone think?
18 votes -
Blockchain is not only crappy technology but a bad vision for the future
6 votes