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We are
probably at least 50 years away from teleporting humans
from one location to another, a concept commonly found
in science-fiction stories like those told in the
"Star Trek" films and TV series. But British
astronomer David Darling writes convincingly in his
2005 book, "Teleportation - The Impossible
Leap," that we are close to being able to teleport
individual atoms and molecules - the first step toward
human movement. Next would come the teleportation of
macromolecules and microbes, which would eventually
lead into the teleportation of humans.
How possible is this? As of 2005,
researchers had successfully teleported beams of light
across a laboratory bench, and the quantum structure of
a trapped calcium ion to a second calcium ion had been
teleported. Networked quantum computers are the key.
They are more complex than today's commonplace,
bit-oriented computers, and will be able to accomplish
more complex tasks. They use quantum mechanical aspects
such as "entanglement" and
"superposition" to perform operations on
data.
"Teleportation is going to
play a major role in all our futures," Darling
writes. "It will be a fundamental process at the
heart of quantum computers, which will themselves
radically change the world." He adds that
replication of inanimate objects will also be developed
through the same scientific developments. He says it is
"a question of simply overcoming technical
challenges," and adds that quantum computing is
the "factor that changes the rules of what is and
isn't possible."
Michio Kaku, a co-founder of
String Field Theory, also predicts this: "The
nation which dominates the world economy may be the one
which masters the nano world of atomic and quantum
computing. Then quantum events … will be the
source of the world's wealth. The Silicon Age is
coming to a close. Welcome to the Quantum Age, where
even button-down bankers will have to learn the
mysteries of the multiverse."
Teleporting a living human would
require a machine that can isolate, classify and track
more than a trillion atoms then send them to another
location for reassembly in perfect order. Darling
predicts robots or humans will be teleported to other
planets or even across interstellar distances.
He projects that, when
nanotechnology is mature, an automated nanoassembly
unit could be teleported to any destination - perhaps a
far-flung planet - and given remote orders to build a
robot explorer from the molecular level to full
functionality. The robot could then evaluate this new
terrain and send the information back to Earth. No
space travel involved. It could also be possible to
build spacecraft in remote locations using local
materials and then use the remote locale as a base from
which to explore in the spacecraft.
By 2015
developments in biotechnology will be improved in
regard to profiling, copying and manipulating the
genetic organization of plants and animals,
facilitating better diagnoses of problems, new
treatments and the tracking of disease movement.
The human genome is made up of 3
billion chemical bases (or letters), strung in a
sequence over 23 pairs of chromosomes. Each human's
individual genome is nearly identical, but there are 10
million points in the sequence at which our individual
codes may vary.
According to a projective study
by experts at the RAND think tank, by 2015 genetic
profiling will be used in new ways in security and law
enforcement. Genetic engineering will be used to modify
more plants, insects and animals in the food chain.
Organisms will be further engineered to produce and/or
deliver therapeutic drugs and organic compounds. Plants
may also be further engineered to optimize their
pollution-fighting properties and help the
environment.
Ethical and health concerns will
probably limit wide-scale cloning of humans in
regulated areas of the world in 2015. Most studies of
the future by think tanks and UN-funded organizations
project that fringe individuals or groups will probably
be cloning humans (for those willing to pay a great
deal for it) in unregulated nations or in illegal
black-market operations.
Cloning in regard to engineered
agricultural products, livestock and research animals
is expected to be much more common and create
significant changes by 2015.
It is expected that
by 2015 a number of models of popular cars and trucks
will be equipped to drive themselves at least part of
the time with the help of on-board computers, GPS
satellite navigation, and sensors, lasers and video
cameras that will detect other objects around them.
However, most experts say that people will generally
want to retain control for some aspects of driving and
manual options will still be included in vehicles. The
concept car pictured here is the winner of a 2005
Peugeot design contest; the car design was proposed by
Andre Costa.
General Motors announced in 2005
that it expects it could have a self-driving car that
could pilot itself in heavy traffic at a speed of up to
60 mph in production by 2008. A team from Stanford
University won a $2 million cash prize in 2005 for
designing a robotic car that maneuvered across a
difficult 132-mile course in the Mojave Desert.
A car on autopilot would allow
the driver to take a nap, read or complete work for his
or her job. There might be a feature for dimming the
windows or altering their look to provide a more
soothing interior environment with few
distractions.
KPMG analyst Bernard Salt says
cars will also be "smaller and tailor-made to the
owner's specifications; they will be micro-designed
and micro-marketed; an electronic fusion of home and
office; a communications center as much as a means of
transportation." He says people may also have the
option of owning cars that have changeable exterior
colors to fit their moods.
Scientists
are working on making materials that have one or more
properties that can be dramatically altered. At left is
a smart fluid developed at the Michigan Institute of
Technology. A new generation of "reactive"
building materials and coatings equipped with sensors,
actuators and computers will allow development of such
things as:
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Aircraft skins that can adapt
their shape to offer the best response to
airflow.
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Prosthetic arms and legs that
allow growth of natural tissue around them.
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Small robots that mimic the
actions of birds or insects and can be used for
exploration, research or spy missions.
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Retro-reflective material that
can make it possible for clothing to make the wearer
invisible - seemingly transparent.
Also, buildings, bridges and
roads may be equipped to sense changes in the weather
and respond, and they may also be made to detect cracks
or other flaws and possibly self-repair them.
Everyone has wondered how long they
should heat something up in the microwave, and
sometimes a wrong guess can lead to an explosion. By
2015 food may come with microchips in the packaging
that communicate with kitchen appliances regarding
complete storage and preparation instructions.
Nutrition scientists also project that developments in
food technology and engineering may enable marketers to
offer convenient healthy snacks that are customized at
the point of sale to meet each individual
consumer's nutritional requirements and personal
preferences.
The following are excerpted from
the British Telecom Technology Timeline (information
was compiled by Ian Neild and Ian Pearson from
worldwide sci-tech reports in 2005):
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Highest-earning celebrity is
synthetic
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Dolls come with a personality
chip and full sensory input
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25 percent of TV celebrities are
synthetic
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Expert systems surpass average
human learning and logic abilities
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Computer agents start being
thought of as colleagues instead of tools
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Autonomous AI sales staff units
become AI stalkers
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First multi-celled organism
assembled from scratch
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Self-aware machine
intelligence
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Computer-enhanced
dreaming
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Thought-recognition used in
sleep enhancement
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High-speed civil transport
supersonic jet, 300 passengers, 1,500 mph
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GPS and engine-management
systems linked to limit speed automatically
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Paper and coins largely replaced
by electronic cash
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Most tickets electronic
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Personal taxation at point of
sale
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Automatic dialing from smart
business cards
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Augmented-reality overlays used
in stores
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Reverse auctions in personal
shopping devices (nearby stores bid to provide items
on shopping list)
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Hotel in orbit
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Scalable AI as major military
threat
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Positive clean ID required for
access to many places
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Terrorist use of genetic
modification to pollute crops and damage
economy
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Most fighters and bombers flown
remotely
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Use of network resonance as
security threat
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Ambient intelligence detection
of minor crimes & anti-social behavior
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Identity theft forces all
transactions to use biometrics
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Domestic augmented-reality used
to give virtual makeovers
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Biometric ID required for every
phone call
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Use of mutant insects for attack
purposes
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Robot dance tutors
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Nanowalkers, nanoworms,
nanofish
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Mechanical intelligence using
MEMS and NEMS
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Supercomputers with speed
exceeding 1 ExaFLOPS
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DNA computer
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Use of bacteria for processing
and storage
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Desktop computer as fast as
human brain
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Use of polymer gels for
information processing
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Kitchen rage caused by
electronic gadgets
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Electronic implant equivalent to
Botox
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Use of virtual-reality scenes in
household rooms as decor
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Replacement of people leads to
anti-technology subculture
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Most electronic toys are
hybrids, with half on internet
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Anti-noise technology built into
homes
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Active wallpaper responds to
inhabitants' moods, etc.
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Neighborhood video-surveillance
networks
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Washing machine aware of
contents and selects cycle
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Augmented-reality offices used
in telework centers
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Palm-top printing puts buttons
on skin
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Glasses-based computer displays
dominate in the office
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Electronic responses can be
automated based on conversational inference
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Windows with coatings to
re-direct sunlight
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Nanotechnology toys
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Paper money replaced by smart
media
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Spread of nomadic information
companies leads to global taxation
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Academic learning is argued to
be unnecessary in the age of smart machines
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Integrated taxation in all
transactions
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Return-to-sender viruses,
corporate counterattacks
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Nano devices roaming within
blood vessels under own power
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Use of humans' own tissues
to grow replacement organs
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Direct electronic pleasure
production
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Context-sensitive
cyber-drugs
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Electronic stimulation of brain
sensations as recreational substitute for
drugs
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Some implants seen as status
symbols
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Gene-gel stimulation of
re-growth of natural teeth on demand
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Retina regeneration using fetal
retinal cell injection
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Emotion logging and
recording
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Emotionally specific
drugs
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Micro-fluidic chips used for
gene sequencing in every GP surgery
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Self-certification for
prescriptions using electronic diagnostics
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Outpatients at home - remote
tele-medical consultations
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Genetic links of 90 percent of
diseases identified
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Individual's genome part of
their medical record
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Synthetic organs created by
printing layers of cells
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Synthetic viruses created
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Sensory augmentation using
sensory implants, nanoparticles, etc.
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Use of stem cells to treat human
brain after strokes or accidents
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Gene therapy generates new hair
cells in humans
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Sensory implants allow direct
sensing of cyberspace entities
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Robotic cleaners in
hospitals
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Biometrics and medical tests
linked to benefits and disability allowance
View predictions for
other time-spans:
<2010-2014>
<2015>
<2016-2025>
<2026-2045>
<2046-2150>
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