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13 votes
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Why we need to fight back against sexy Asian lady robots
21 votes -
Paralyzed man unable to walk after maker of his powered exoskeleton tells him it's now obsolete
44 votes -
AI accuses journalist of escaping psych ward, abusing children and widows
29 votes -
In leak, Facebook partner brags about listening to your phone’s microphone to serve ads for stuff you mention
48 votes -
Trees blamed for air pollution
10 votes -
Microsoft admits that maybe surveiling everything you do on your computer isn’t a brilliant idea
27 votes -
Elon Musk accused of massive insider trading at Tesla in shareholder lawsuit
35 votes -
Meet AdVon, the AI-powered content monster infecting the media industry
33 votes -
Those who read a lot of fiction shown to have improved cognitive abilities
24 votes -
Scientists attempt to explain “magic islands” on Saturn’s largest moon
6 votes -
Sports Illustrated published articles by fake, AI-generated writers
29 votes -
Microsoft patents AI powered backpack, bristling with sensors
7 votes -
Google is directing searchers straight to troves of nonconsensual deep fake porn, raising legal and ethical concerns
18 votes -
The sauce that survived Italy's war on pasta
6 votes -
Mars will have a lot of wicker furniture
8 votes -
Nineteenth-century critiques of technology show how longstanding many current concerns are
4 votes -
What are some good examples of retro sci-fi literature (retrofuturism)?
So I'm reading Asimov's short-story anthology The Complete Robot, which contains stories written between 1939 and 1977, and I'm fascinated by several instances in which Asimov tries to predict the...
So I'm reading Asimov's short-story anthology The Complete Robot, which contains stories written between 1939 and 1977, and I'm fascinated by several instances in which Asimov tries to predict the future of robotics.
When he gets it right is just as interesting as when he gets it wrong, as even when he's wrong, he's wrong in very interesting ways.
For example, it's very interesting how Asimov seems to think that everything must have a positronic brain (which often produces something either identical or very close consciousness), when in reality we now have numerous useful robots that have nothing of the sort.
So this made me thinking, I think I'd like to write a story that was just like that, an exploration of universal themes that is facilitated by simplified technology. A form of retrofuturism. And since I had the idea, obviously someone else had it before. I wanna read it! More recent stories, especially those with old-school robots and artificial intelligence. Any suggestions?
Also open to other medias, but books would be particularly helpful.
15 votes -
Scientists present plan to cool the world through geoengineering whiter clouds
10 votes -
Scientist invents toilet that turns human feces into cryptocurrency
6 votes -
What the 2000s thought today would be: Flying cars
2 votes -
What the 2000s thought today would be: Computers
4 votes -
Welcome to Pollinator Park
6 votes -
Architects unveil a massive plan for Chinese city that’s dedicated to science and tech
10 votes -
Explore Indigenous futurisms with these science fiction and fantasy books by indigenous authors
8 votes -
The fake futurism of Elon Musk
21 votes -
Technology has been promising the dream of a cocooned future, and our pandemic isolation is giving us the rare opportunity to see where this road leads
12 votes -
Full employment
9 votes -
'Man becomes the sex organs of the machine world: Marshall McLuhan’s Understanding Media' (2012)
14 votes -
What do you think is the next big technological breakthrough?
Consumer, environmental, enterprise tech, etc.
37 votes -
NASA wants to grow a Moon base out of mushrooms
13 votes -
CES 2020: Uber and Hyundai created a flying electric taxi
2 votes -
Blade Runner: How well did the film predict 2019's tech?
11 votes -
The city of tomorrow: What decarbonized, climate-resilient, and equitable cities could look like
7 votes -
The myriad drumbeats of Afrofuturism: Afro-Brazilian speculative fiction
9 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 -
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 -
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