Arguably, the 20 year period that saw the fastest rate of technological & scientific change was 1880-1900, when much of the Western world transitioned from pre-industrial to industrial. We went from no skyscrapers to 300+m towers & 100+m buildings, from 0 cars to thousands, etc.
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I'm really curious how the entire student population going remote for a term will effect higher education on whole
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Perfect machine translation between languages, level 5 automobiles . . . immense game changers in tech. but subtract these two and I don’t see 2020-2040 changing more than 2000-2020, which IMV as a Mac (& Palm) user didn’t change as much as 1980-2000.
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There's another bias at play: people viscerally experience the changes of the time we live in, so of course the changes of our time feel both more real and more urgent (and thus more "changey") than the ones that we learn about second hand.
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"Betting against human ingenuity seems like a losing strategy." - Stuart Russell
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1. Across Globe in Hour Rocket Transportation 2. 700 MPH Interstate Transportation in all weather underground tunnels 3. 200 MPH transportation in under-city tunnels 4. Personalized genomics based medicines,computerized health diagnosis&monitoring 5. Colonization of Mars? 6. etc.
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6. FSD (Full Self Driving) cars
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1980-2000: Computers and the internet entered lives of everybody. 2000-2020: smartphones (PCs and the internet got to your hand, although we already had laptops) So, I think there is no doubt the leap in 1980-2000 was far greater.
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