Posted on 08/17/2006 1:45:19 PM PDT by PeterPrinciple
July 22, 1961, Weekend Magazine
What sort of life will you be living 39 years from now? Scientists have looked into the future and they can tell you.
It looks as if everything will be so easy that people will probably die from sheer boredom.
You will be whisked around in monorail vehicles at 200 miles an hour and you will think nothing of taking a fortnight's holiday in outer space.
Your house will probably have air walls, and a floating roof, adjustable to the angle of the sun.
Doors will open automatically, and clothing will be put away by remote control. The heating and cooling systems will be built into the furniture and rugs.
You'll have a home control room - an electronics centre, where messages will be recorded when you're away from home. This will play back when you return, and also give you up-to-the minute world news, and transcribe your latest mail.
You'll have wall-to-wall global TV, an indoor swimming pool, TV-telephones and room-to-room TV. Press a button and you can change the décor of a room.
The status symbol of the year 2000 will be the home computer help, which will help mother tend the children, cook the meals and issue reminders of appointments.
Cooking will be in solar ovens with microwave controls. Garbage will be refrigerated, and pressed into fertiliser pellets.
Food won't be very different from 1961, but there will be a few new dishes - instant bread, sugar made from sawdust, foodless foods (minus nutritional properties), juice powders and synthetic tea and cocoa. Energy will come in tablet form.
Mail and newspapers will be reproduced instantly anywhere in the world by facsimile.
There will be machines doing the work of clerks, shorthand writers and translators. Machines will "talk" to each other.
It will be the age of press-button transportation. Rocket belts will increase a man's stride to 30 feet, and bus-type helicopters will travel along crowded air skyways. There will be moving plastic-covered pavements, individual hoppicopters, and 200 m.p.h. monorail trains operating in all large cities.
The family car will be soundless, vibrationless and self-propelled thermostatically. The engine will be smaller than a typewriter. Cars will travel overland on an 18 inch air cushion.
Railways will have one central dispatcher, who will control a whole nation's traffic. Jet trains will be guided by electronic brains.
n commercial transportation, there will be travel at 1000 m.p.h. at a penny a mile. Hypersonic passenger planes, using solid fuels, will reach any part of the world in an hour.
By the year 2020, five per cent of the world's population will have emigrated into space. Many will have visited the moon and beyond.
Our children will learn from TV, recorders and teaching machines. They will get pills to make them learn faster. We shall be healthier, too. There will be no common colds, cancer, tooth decay or mental illness.
Medically induced growth of amputated limbs will be possible. Rejuvenation will be in the middle stages of research, and people will live, healthily, to 85 or 100.
There's a lot more besides to make H.G. Wells and George Orwell sound like they're getting left behind.
And this isn't science fiction. It's science fact - futuristic ideas, conceived by imaginative young men, whose crazy-sounding schemes have got the nod from the scientists.
It's the way they think the world will live in the next century - if there's any world left!
©1999 Pixelmatic
I could use the extra oxygen at work...............
They didn't forsee 4 years of Jimmy Carter and 8 years of the Clintons' co-presidency.
And most importantly be used by the Pajama People to thwart Rat-State sponsored television infotainment.
Air walls?
Where can I get my hoppicopter??
By the year 2020, five per cent of the world's population will have emigrated into space. Many will have visited the moon and beyond.
Anyone mind if I pick the 5 percent? And if the "emigration" resembles ejection?
But seriously, this ain't bad for a 39-year look into the future. Some of it is right on target, and I can imagine that from the author's perspective all of it was equally fantastic.
My great grandmother had some great stories about her childhood. She remembered her first ride in a car and that her mother wouldn't go uphill in the car because they had to back up it. She felt that a horse was the way God intended for people to travel.
"Space" must be a euphemism for Texas and California.
They were thinking Lebanon...
LOL!
and that her mother wouldn't go uphill in the car because they had to back up it.
There were practical reasons for that. First, the gearing was a little better in reverse and second, there were no fuel pumps so you had to keep the gas tank higher than the engine.
Back then the snowbelt of northern Michigan could be deadly. She told me about the time they got caught in a blizzard and her father spent the night breaking pathways in the snow so the horses would keep going so they could get home.
I want my rocket pack!! I have yet to be issued my rocket pack!
Well we got the computer alright but now Mother's gone.
I thought that was rather poignant, myself...
Hah! That's funny, but sad.
Where would we be without anonymous scientists?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.