Wednesday, October 31, 2007
Leave the Lights On
It's not really true that installing solar panels means that you can leave the lights on. If you are like most people and you install solar panels, during the day, you feed energy into the grid which the power company has to pay you for and at night, you draw from the grid (think non-solar panel energy) and you have to pay for it. Because the sun is such a GIGANTIC form of energy for a lot of people installing solar panels means their power bills virtually disappear.
But let's look at a future where we draw from multiple forms of natural energy, tidal energy, wind energy, solar energy. If we had enough to go around, would it mean that we would no longer have to be energy conscious? If we had solar cars would it mean that we would no longer have to worry about wasting energy by driving? What changes would this mean to our day to day lives? Or would it simply mean that we could make the changes that are so desperately needed at the present time?
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
To Hell With Scratch
The purpose of this desert is to provide indulgence with limitation. Is this an important direction for food products? What is the future of desert?
Monday, October 29, 2007
Sunday Morning Shopping Spree
But I do worry, what are stores will be left in the future? Will everyone eventually move to the Internet or will that siren lure of going store to store still motivate people to get out in the world and shop?
Friday, October 26, 2007
What Channel is That On?
Thursday, October 25, 2007
Yee Shall Not Partake of the P B & J
On the other hand there are interesting new developments on the horizon with peanut powder treatments and allergy-free peanuts.
In the end, which will win out? Treatment or banning? In the Matrix, the bad guy says that humans are like a virus. Is the planet fighting back? Are these allergies like an antibiotic for the planet to fight humans? Are we, just like a virus getting stronger and better to fight off these efforts?
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Sports and Drugs
Does this suggest that instead of only testing athletes at the time of an event, that sports officials should do medical tests and retain blood and/or other 'samples' indefinitely. As drugs change and technology improves should those samples should be retested? Does the fact that so many athletes have been found to be using drugs eliminate the idea of fair competition? What will the life of a pro-althete be like in the future?
Tuesday, October 23, 2007
Body Burden
There's an old movie The Incredible Shrinking Woman where the character is exposed to a combination of everyday chemical products and it causes her to shrink.
Is the new Dawinism surviving the products that we create to protect and extend our lives? What products will eventually be removed from the market as these 'body burden' studies continue? What changes will we see in our everyday life?
Monday, October 22, 2007
Author Outs Character
So will this change anything for anyone? It would be interesting if someone documented the lives of 'super fans' and saw how the events of the Harry Potter industry impacted their lives ten years or twenty years from now. And what about those kids who have already been taught that the teachings of Harry Potter are evil. What will they be like as adults? Is Harry Potter forming a generation? Generation X, Generation Y, and soon... Generation P? Will one day the far extremes of Generation P be arguing across the senate floor? What will they have to say to each other and will we be able to to trace it back to the Harry years?
Friday, October 19, 2007
The Truth is Out There
At one time to research history, a person had to enter the dreaded 'stacks' of the library and flip through dusty old books to find information relating to their area of interest. If you were researching something that happened in the 1940s, it was more than likely that you would be looking at books that might have been written near or around that time in addition to more modern volumes. Today, more and more information is created first in electronic form which means it's far easier to access, but also far easier to change. Are we approaching the day when changing history is a simple search and replace function?
I wonder how the US text books present Columbus Day these days. On Columbus Day this year, there were protests (Columbus Day protest leads to arrests) because for some Columbus day represents the beginning of the end. In Japan there is a lot of controversy over how to present some of the events in World War II in textbooks (Japan’s Textbooks Reflect Revised History) and there's been protests about this too.
Will the children of the future have access to the data of the past and will they bother to access it? Many companies have data retention policies. Will we one day have data retention policies regarding our everyday lives to document who came before and what they did? Or will the future 'define' history? Or for those who believe that time is a dimension that will eventually be conquered, will we have viewers of the past so each generation can do their own research and interpretation of the past.
Thursday, October 18, 2007
Another Kind of Hybrid
On the other side of the tomato world, whenever I got to my local grocer, there, right by the cash register, are the heirloom tomatoes. If you aren't sure what I'm talking about, they are the icky looking tomatoes sold at farmers markets coming in a spectrum of yellows, greens, reds and oranges and ranging from gigantic monsters to little tiny ones. I've only tried them a few times, quite delicious. These are supposed to be the non-hybrid tomatoes.
So what direction will food take in the future? If colonists were sent to another planet, would they take the heirloom tomato seeds or would they take those of the sweeter hybrids?
Wednesday, October 17, 2007
Baby Robots
It doesn't surprise me in the least that someone would want to make a baby robot. With birth rates dropping in developed countries baby robots might be the future. Could it be when robots make robots that the importance of procreating becomes a part of their programming? Would adult robots take care of the baby robots? And if baby robots never grow up, do they have a purpose?
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
What Makes a Successful Robot?
Are we on the cusp of robots invading everyday life? And will those robots look like people? In ten years will the world be a different place? Will robots replace people on some jobs?
Monday, October 15, 2007
Utilitarian? Companion? Both?
Will a robot be more successful if it has a 'companion' aspect to it? Or is it the other way around? Does a robot have to have to be utilitarian first and companion second. Is that why Sony discontinued Aibo, the robotic dog?
What will be the first successful robot?
Friday, October 12, 2007
Children Take Over the World
The whole article brought to mind so many possible futures. Could there be a future where education become so narrowly defined that children have to take pre-taped classes over the Internet so that there can be no possibility of introducing 'un-sanctioned' topics.
Increasing Expectations
Does the whole idea of work need to change? In the future will fifty percent of jobs be reserved for those fifty and older? What trickle down affect would this have?
Wednesday, October 10, 2007
Are We Overstaying Our Welcome?
There's an exception to this rule, us, humans, people...
People can have 2.5-3Billion Heart Beats.
What if the heart beat really were a way to track lifespan? What if everytime your heart beat a little faster, your life got a little shorter? "You just about scared me to death" would take on new meaning. I often think about the complexities of the human machine. People didn't used to have 2.5-3Billion Heart Beats. When average ages were lower, people had fewer heartbeats. It would be interesting to know what the upper range of possible heartbeats is.
Tuesday, October 9, 2007
Nobel Prize for Manipulation
Gene manipulation is an amazing subject. According to the National Institutes of Heath, the human genome has approximately 25,000 genes. It is so complicated with so many possibilities. Many people today have genetic testing done to see if they will develop a disease in the future or if they will pass that disease onto their children.
Michael Crichton's Next ambitiously tries to cover the many possibilities that Gene research may lead to.
Several of Robin Cook's Books have used genetic research as the basis for the stories.
As the knowledge of he human genome grows there will be endless possibilities for science fiction writers.
Monday, October 8, 2007
No Biometrics - No Entry
The US instituted the US-VISIT program on September 30, 2004 (from what I could find) so basically the Japanese are just balancing the scales.
So soon traveling will mean that many countries will have your fingerprint and picture. Will this be a problem for some people? What could happen if that data is compromised? Could identify theft go to a whole different level?
Friday, October 5, 2007
The Ice Cream of the Future
The thing that caught my eye way back when I saw the TV special was that to produce Dippin Dots special sub-zero freezing techniques are used. According to their website the Dippin' Dots would stick together in a home freezer so only places with the proper equipment can sell the dots which explains why you can't get them just anywhere.
The dots were dubbed the ice cream of the future. It seems like they've caught on and even Oprah has given them her thumbs up. Is this really the ice cream of the future? Will freezers of the future have the little dots compartment? Probably not, but what is the ice cream of the future? Does ice cream have a future? Ever noticed that in science fiction there's always a lot of pain taken to explain the alcohol of the future, but not to talk about the ice cream and candy of the future?
Thursday, October 4, 2007
The Language of Foreign Syndication
I remember hearing that Bay Watch was one of the most internationally watched shows. Apparently scantily clad men and women running on a beach is very easy to translate. Many science fiction series are very simplistic in terms of language which may explain why science fiction sells around the world. Some shows use complex new words to give the show an exotic-ness, but those words don't have to be translated.
Do producers of science fiction consider the possibility of foreign syndication in their language choices? What if they did? Would it change what we watch?
The Bionic Woman
I just finished watching the series premiere of The Bionic Woman and it hit me that I couldn't remember a single character's name. I was confused right from the beginning. The show has a kind of overall dreary/gray feeling to it. Katee Sackhoff (Starbuck in Battlestar Galactica) is in the first scene, so I thought Tivo had screwed up and I was watching Battlestar Galactica. Then a little bit later in the show to confuse me even more, Molly Price appears, who I thought was the same Katee character with a slightly different haircut. Sorry producer people. I need a lot more differentiation between characters, particularly if you are going to have the dark look and feel of a video game. Watching the show actually was a lot like watching a video game. In one of the last scenes there's this to-the-death type of fight scene (I say to-the-death because no one actually dies.) I had no idea what they were fighting about. It seemed like they were fighting just to fight. Maybe it's the chip implants. I didn't understand why the Jaime Sommers character didn't just use her nifty bionic legs to run away from crazy blond chick
It will be interesting to see where this show goes. The feel of the show is so much like Battlestar Galactica. I wonder if that will continue. I wonder if Jaime will get regular assignments like in the original. Will there be more character development? Ah... I just made a connection. Miguel Ferre plays some kind of boss guy in the show who insinuates that they'll just 'dispose' of Jaime if this doesn't work out. He played almost the same exact role in the movie Point of No Return (1993) with Bridget Fonda.
Tuesday, October 2, 2007
Future Vacation Spots Part 2
And New Mexico is getting ready to build Spaceport America and cash in on people's fascination with space. Of course it makes sense. People are already taking vacations to go to the UFO festival in New Mexico.
Who will be the first 100 commerical travelers in space?
Monday, October 1, 2007
Future Vacation Spots
I can certainly see where people (even today) would want a more fantasy/science fiction related vacation. Where would you go? Would it involve space flight? Aliens? Nature at it's best? Personally, a vacation to space doesn't interest me. I like fictional worlds where I can fly without the assistance of a space ship. A luck dragon like in the Never Ending Story would be okay, or wings like in When the Wind Blows. Hum, maybe I should be looking into hand gliding or parachuting vacations. But it wouldn't really be the same.


