Archive for the ‘futurism’ category: Page 1135
Thomas Frey’s futurist predictions will leave you beyond enlightened. Learn more about the state of jobs in the future by clicking here!
Nov 4, 2015
In This Trippy Short Film, a Man Meets Every Possible Future Version of Himself
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: futurism, time travel
In Therefore I Am, the McCoubrey brothers create a compelling time travel mystery in just six minutes. It leaves you with questions, BUT in a good way.
Therefore I Am tracks a conversation a man has with future versions of himself, each one arriving slightly earlier than the last, each one with slightly different instructions for how to get to that point. You can even trace the loops—each one leads to the next. And yet, not a single one seems to have successfully avoided the event they’re trying to stop.
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Nov 4, 2015
The Future of Work: Less than 10% of People Have Jobs
Posted by Julius Garcia in categories: employment, futurism
In; The Future of Work: Less than 10% of People Have Jobs’ I have shared some articles and interviews where Steve talks about what may be a very real future of work.
Five hundred years from now, says venture capitalist Steve Jurvetson, less than 10 percent of people on the planet will be doing paid work. And next year?
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Nov 3, 2015
The Cubli is a 15 × 15 × 15 cm cube that can jump up and balance on its corner
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: futurism
Reaction wheels mounted on three faces of the cube rotate at high angular velocities and then brake suddenly, causing the Cubli to jump up.
h/t: Institute for Dynamic Systems and Control, ETH Zurich, Switzerland.
Nov 1, 2015
Engineer invent a way without using the signals
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: futurism
Nov 1, 2015
Developing the robot of the future
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: futurism, robotics/AI
UC San Diego is establishing a robotics institute aimed at developing machines that can interpret such things as facial expressions and walking styles and size up people’s thoughts, actions and feelings.
The See-Think-Do technology is largely meant to anticipate and fulfill people’s everyday needs, especially for the growing number of older Americans who want to remain in their own homes instead of moving into an assisted-living facility or nursing home.
Engineers also envision creating robots so good at sizing up people, places and situations that they could help evacuate crowds from dangerous areas and pick through the rubble of an earthquake in search of survivors.