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Mon
Jul 21 2008 6:45am
Related Subjects: Living in the Future

Elsewhere on tor.com, people have been talking about the experience of living in the future.

This has always been one of my particular fannish traits; I love living in the future. My daughter suggested to me a few weeks ago how excellent it would be if we could travel in time. I explained that I do it all the time. Very, very slowly, to be fair; but from the perspective of middle age I feel like I've travelled a very long way.

My earliest memory of living in the future was when I was about ten years old. My next door neighbour's dad was a businessman, and he had his own photocopier. We got to use it to photocopy our stories, the newspaper of our club, and so on. Now, this was not new technology even then. But it was new to me and it was awesome. Oh, brave new world that has such gadgets in it.

When I learnt in history classes about underground presses, and the historical difficulty of getting the word out, I related viscerally to that in a way that I never did to most of human experience. When I started doing fanzines I had that same delight, and now we live in a world where anyone can get their message out for nothing. How cool is that?

So one thing I might blog about here from time to time is the moments that remind me that I live in the future now. This is obviously a bit different from Big Proper Science, or even Big Proper Science Fiction, so I hope it's a handy niche. I had one of those moments yesterday, when I read Simon Bradshaw's account of visiting the RepRap fab lab.

I had another this morning. I learnt from Hackzine that Hand Andersson had designed a Lego NXT robot that solves Rubik's Cube. Now, of course there are lots of robots that solve Rubik's cube. But this one uses no parts other than those which you get, out of the box, with a Lego toy. There are some caveats to that, it turns out; the software was written in a better programming language than Lego supplies, and the Rubik's Cube has new stickers, all the better to see you with, my dear. And the £180 Lego NXT is an unusually cool toy, and probably only usable by unusually cool children without significant adult help.

But still. We don't live in the future we thought we'd live in when I was a child; the one where we reach out to the stars. But we live in a future where you can make a children's toy that manipulates objects and solves a puzzle more complex than most people can handle. Isn't that neat?

25 comments
Mike F
1. Mike F
My first memory of living in the future was when my dad brought home our first VCR. It was a giant Betamax that could only record 90 minutes of TV, but it was great. Now, my TiVo can record 80 hours of TV without a problem. No, we don't live in the future I expected, but it isn't too bad.
Opal Trelore
2. opaltree
I know exactly what you mean. I published zines from middle school through college; looking back, it was so much work compared to the blogging I do now. I've also been thinking about the research papers I did in middle and high school and how I was always having to go do different libraries for sources. Now, when I assign a research paper to my students, they can generally find most if not all of their resources without leaving my classroom.

Obviously, flying cars and time travel would be great, but the internet is pretty wonderful.
Beth Meacham
3. bam
I have that "living in the future" feeling a lot. The internet! WiFi! iPhones! Gosh, cell phones still seem very futuristic when I look at them right. Credit chips!

Cable "on demand" programming. There were still only three broadcast networks when I was very close to being an adult. When I first lived in NYC, when I was 18, I remember being overwhelmed by the broadcast choices. Ten channels! And nothing on!

I try to keep up with technology, but sometimes I just sit in blank wonder at what I'm doing, and how I'm doing it. Time travel into the future, one day at a time.
Jeffrey Richard
4. neutronjockey
Legos...solving Rubik's Cube...I..I'm speechless.
(That's so freakin' cool!)
Alison Scott
5. AlisonScott
neutronjockey, your response was just like my daughter's; I told her about the Tilted Twister, and showed her the video and she said 'that is *so* cool!" "Yes," I replied, "why do you think I'm blogging it?"
paul wallich
6. paulw
Wow. That Lego bit makes me think I'm living 8 years in the past (which was the last time I remember reading about a rubik-solving lego bot, using the old Mindstorms stuff).

What things make people think they're living in the future? For me it's more about the hardware -- or at least the interaction with the physical world -- than the software or the communications. Reprap and gesture-processing turn me on, text messages less so.

Or maybe that's just geek macho talking, a sense that it only counts as living in the future if you're a pioneer.

(And damnit, where's my jetpack?)
Mike F
7. karen marie
have you seen the video of the building of the future that has rotating floors with wind turbine arms sticking out between each floor -- the wind blows, the turbines and the building floors spin. it is astonishing. i'd love to read a book that included forward-thinking architecture like that in its landscape!

this link has pictures and video: http://www.alternative-energy-news.info/wind-power-rotating-skyscraper/
Beth Meacham
8. bam
Forget the jet-pack. I want my transmat!
Jeffrey Richard
9. neutronjockey
Alison, how can that NOT bring out the kid in you? I admit, I'm pretty much a big kid --- but that? You have to love that! If you don't see the whimsy in that you're just bitter.
Claire Eddy
10. ceddy
I sometimes get the living in the future moments from ancient technology.

Like when I recently found a big old clunky black phone from the 60's (you know the kind, the one with the receiver that you could use as a blunt object) and brought it home. Plugged the thing in and it works. "Great!" thinks I and I proceed to hook it up and have this be the only ringtone in the house (yes, I have a cell phone but like to keep the landline for emergencies). My son wanders into the room and asks what is this object. I say it's a phone. He looks at me and says, "how do you work it?".

I then realize that he has never seen a dial-tone phone in his life. I find myself goggled at having to explain that you put your finger in the hole and turn the wheel. He just looks at me and says, "Oh man, that's too hard", whips out his cell phone and laughs...
Beth Meacham
11. bam
You can still use a rotary dial phone on the NYC phone system? I'm amazed.
paul wallich
12. paulw
The language (at least around here) has changed. We talk about corded phones and wired internet connections, as opposed to the usual kinds.
Claire Eddy
13. ceddy
bam: You can still use a rotary dial phone in NYC but I fear that this may not be the case soon. There is some talk about doing away with this sometime next year. I will be a sad puppy then...
Max Kaehn
14. slothman
I have long described myself as living in the future in the same sense that other people are said to live in the past. I may ponder the past for interesting lessons to be learned in how to steer our course, but my focus is on where we're going rather than where we have been.
Alison Scott
15. AlisonScott
PaulW: there have been lego Mindstorms Rubiks Cube solving robots, with the addition of extra motors and, crucially, hooked up to a PC. The point about this one is that it solves the cube using nothing that doesn't come in the NXT box; this is being done using an off-the-shelf toy, and it manages the processing itself.
Clifton Royston
16. CliftonR
I mentioned this living-in-the-future moment on Making Light a while back, but I'm still croggled by it:

The high school my daughter went to now has students doing gene-splicing of the jellyfish bio-luminescence gene into E. coli as part of their AP Biology class.
Mike F
17. Nesbitt
A great moment of "living in the future" was the purchase of a DVD copy of "Planet of The Apes" at my local supermarket. I've always loved that film and the experience reminded me of how "futuristic" technology has been completely intergrated into my life. If I could have foreseen such luxury when I was 13 I would have been totally awestruck.
Shweta Narayan
18. Shweta-Narayan
As a kid, I moved between times when travelling between India and the US and wherever I lived at the time (Saudi Arabia in the mid-eighties, The Netherlands in the late eighties and early nineties...). In India, I still saw typewriters, sticky black carbon paper, and the special xerox shops where you could also make long-distance calls. In Saudi Arabia I played computer games. In The Netherlands we got our first family CD player.

Between that and reading science fiction, I got pretty confused about where real-world technology was at (for example, brain surgery, gene modification, cryogenics, and sex-change operations were all in the same category -- the "I think they do that now -- do they do that now?" category.)

I'm still a bit confused, honestly. Some of the new cell phones don't quite read as real, but at the same time I'm surprised we're not wearing sunglasses that project information on the screens. (Er. Do we do that now?)
Mike F
19. TinaB
I hear you. When the word processor finally arrived (a year after I graduated from college), my reaction was "Finally! There you are!" I knew I wanted one as soon as I found out what the limitations of a typewriter were, and as an SF reader, I was sure it was coming.

We lived on the moon before the landing -- but we are still waiting for that crater-view apartment.
Alison Scott
20. AlisonScott
Nesbitt, the moment that was most like that for me was when I realised that we could store stuff on things as small as Heinlein's information cubes. (I was specifically thinking of photos on SmartMedia cards, so I guess this was 1996). Because I remembered reading about that as a child, and thinking gosh, I want those, it would be good if the future had those in it. And it does! Whee!
Laurie Mann
21. lauriemann
There was good future and bad future.


The good future was watching John Glenn in space on TV. Yeah, I know he wasn't the first one, but he's the first one I remembered. That was early 1962, about the time I turned 5.


The bad future was hearing about the Cuban Missle Crisis and thinking the world was going to end. In retrospect, maybe I was leaching my mother's stress over the incident, but, still, I remember watching that on TV and thinking we were all in terrible trouble. That was later in 1962.
Benedict Leigh
22. Benedict_Leigh
Shweta-Narayan- we do do that now (see engadget for a $199 version. I still want the version from the Star Fraction tho' (with AI machine gun optional extra)
Arthur D. Hlavaty
23. supergee
When I think that this is not my beautiful 21st Century (where are the robot maids?), it is good to consider all the ways I am living in the future, including a lot of things I did not have enough of a cosmic mind to imagine.
Fragano Ledgister
24. Fledgist
ceddy: I had a similar sort of 'What is this?' experience some months back in the High Museum. I and a guard were looking at some lino cuts with a young man, and discussing them, when the youngster pipes up 'What's linoleum?'

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