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The Future Is Now? Pretty Soon, at Least (6/3/08) |
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June 03, 2008 |
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Before we get to Ray Kurzweil’s plan for upgrading the
“suboptimal software” in your brain, let me pass on some of the cheery news he
brought to the World Science Festival last week in New York.
Do you have trouble sticking to a diet? Have patience.
Within 10 years, Dr. Kurzweil explained, there will be a drug that lets you eat
whatever you want without gaining weight.
Worried about greenhouse gas emissions? Have faith. Solar
power may look terribly uneconomical at the moment, but with the exponential
progress being made in nanoengineering, Dr. Kurzweil calculates that it’ll be
cost-competitive with fossil fuels in just five years, and that within 20 years
all our energy will come from clean sources.
Are you depressed by the prospect of dying? Well, if you can
hang on another 15 years, your life expectancy will keep rising every year
faster than you’re aging. And then, before the century is even half over, you
can be around for the Singularity, that revolutionary transition when humans
and/or machines start evolving into immortal beings with ever-improving
software.
At least that’s Dr. Kurzweil’s calculation. It may sound too
good to be true, but even his critics acknowledge he’s not your ordinary sci-fi
fantasist. He is a futurist with a track record and enough credibility for the
National Academy of Engineering to publish his sunny forecast for solar energy.
Read the full article here.
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Last Updated ( June 09, 2008 )
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