March 24, 2008

Yeah, But He Didn’t Predict The iPhone, Did He?

Michael Arrington

37 comments »

“A typical vacation in 2008 is to spend a week at an undersea resort,” wrote James R. Berry in 1968. His article, 40 Years In The Future, had a few things almost right, and a ton of things that probably won’t be reality even a hundred years from now.

Berry guessed right on flat panel displays and computers that do a lot of work for you. But he also thought we’d have robots to do our housework, cars that go 250 mph in heavy traffic, and domed, climate controlled cities.

Sadly, he also guessed that medical care was universal and competent, his biggest mistake: “Medical research has guaranteed that most babies born in the 21st century will live long and healthy lives. Heart disease has virtually been eliminated by drugs and diet. If hearts or other major organs do give trouble, they can be replaced with artificial organs.”

He almost touched on the Internet, too, when he said “The single most important item in 2008 households is the computer,” and “TV-telephone shopping is common.” And he came eerily close here:

Suddenly your TV phone buzzes. A business associate wants a sketch of a new kind of impeller your firm is putting out for sports boats. You reach for your attache case and draw the diagram with a pencil-thin infrared flashlight on what looks like a TV screen lining the back of the case. The diagram is relayed to a similar screen in your associate’s office, 200 mi. away. He jabs a button and a fixed copy of the sketch rolls out of the device. He wishes you good luck at the coming meeting and signs off.

Overall, not a bad job and, frankly, better than most of us could probably do at predicting the future 40 years from today. The entire article is below.

40 Years in the Future

By James R. Berry

IT’S 8 a.m., Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2008, and you are headed for a business appointment 300 mi. away. You slide into your sleek, two-passenger air-cushion car, press a sequence of buttons and the national traffic computer notes your destination, figures out the current traffic situation and signals your car to slide out of the garage. Hands free, you sit back and begin to read the morning paper—which is flashed on a flat TV screen over the car’s dashboard. Tapping a button changes the page.

The car accelerates to 150 mph in the city’s suburbs, then hits 250 mph in less built-up areas, gliding over the smooth plastic road. You whizz past a string of cities, many of them covered by the new domes that keep them evenly climatized year round. Traffic is heavy, typically, but there’s no need to worry. The traffic computer, which feeds and receives signals to and from all cars in transit between cities, keeps vehicles at least 50 yds. apart. There hasn’t been an accident since the system was inaugurated. Suddenly your TV phone buzzes. A business associate wants a sketch of a new kind of impeller your firm is putting out for sports boats. You reach for your attache case and draw the diagram with a pencil-thin infrared flashlight on what looks like a TV screen lining the back of the case. The diagram is relayed to a similar screen in your associate’s office, 200 mi. away. He jabs a button and a fixed copy of the sketch rolls out of the device. He wishes you good luck at the coming meeting and signs off.

Ninety minutes after leaving your home, you slide beneath the dome of your destination city. Your car decelerates and heads for an outer-core office building where you’ll meet your colleagues. After you get out, the vehicle parks itself in a convenient municipal garage to await your return. Private cars are banned inside most city cores. Moving sidewalks and electrams carry the public from one location to another.

With the U.S. population having soared to 350 million, 2008 transportation is among the most important factors keeping the economy running smoothly. Giant transportation hubs called modemixers are located anywhere from 15 to 50 mi. outside all major urban centers. Tube trains, pushed through bores by compressed air, make the trip between modemixer and central city in 10 to 15 minutes.

A major feature of most modemixers is the launching pad from which 200-passenger rockets blast off for other continents. For less well-heeled travelers there are SST and hypersonic planes that carry 200 to 300 passengers at speeds up to 4,000 mph. Short trips— between cities less than 1,000 mi. apart—are handled by slower jumbo jets.

Homes in Mi’s 80th year are practically self-maintaining. Electrostatic precipitators clean the air and climatizers maintain the temperature and humidity at optimum levels. Robots are available to do housework and other simple chores. New materials for siding and interiors are self-cleaning and never peel, chip or crack.

Dwellings for the most part are assembled from prefabricated modules, which can be attached speedily in the configuration that best suits the homeowner. Once the foundation is laid, attaching the modules to make up a two- or three-bedroom house is a job that doesn’t take more than a day. Such modular homes easily can be expanded to accommodate a growing family. A typical wedding present for the 21st century newlyweds is a fully equipped bedroom, kitchen or living room module.

Other conveniences ease kitchenwork. The housewife simply determines in advance her menus for the week, then slips prepackaged meals into the freezer and lets the automatic food utility do the rest. At preset times, each meal slides into the microwave oven and is cooked or thawed. The meal then is served on disposable plastic plates. These plates, as well as knives, forks and spoons of the same material, are so inexpensive they can be discarded after use.

The single most important item in 2008 households is the computer. These electronic brains govern everything from meal preparation and waking up the household to assembling shopping lists and keeping track of the bank balance. Sensors in kitchen appliances, climatizing units, communicators, power supply and other household utilities warn the computer when the item is likely to fail. A repairman will show up even before any obvious breakdown occurs.

Computers also handle travel reservations, relay telephone messages, keep track of birthdays and anniversaries, compute taxes and even figure the monthly bills for electricity, water, telephone and other utilities. Not every family has its private computer. Many families reserve time on a city or regional computer to serve their needs. The machine tallies up its own services and submits a bill, just as it does with other utilities.

Money has all but disappeared. Employers deposit salary checks directly into their employees’ accounts. Credit cards are used for paying all bills. Each time you buy something, the card’s number is fed into the store’s computer station. A master computer then deducts the charge from your bank balance.

Computers not only keep track of money, they make spending it easier. TV-telephone shopping is common. To shop, you simply press the numbered code of a giant shopping center. You press another combination to zero in on the department and the merchandise in which you are interested. When you see what you want, you press a number that signifies “buy,” and the household computer takes over, places the order, notifies the store of the home address and subtracts the purchase price from your bank balance. Much of the family shopping is done this way. Instead of being jostled by crowds, shoppers electronically browse through the merchandise of any number of stores.

People have more time for leisure activities in the year 2008. The average work day is about four hours. But the extra time isn’t totally free. The pace of technological advance is such that a certain amount of a jobholder’s spare time is used in keeping up with the new developments—on the average, about two hours of home study a day.

Most of this study is in the form of programmed TV courses, which can be rented or borrowed from tape _ * libraries. In fact most schooling—from first grade through college—consists of programmed TV courses or lectures via closed circuit. Students visit a campus once or twice a week for personal consultations or for lab work that has to be done on site. Progress of each student is followed by computer, which assigns end term marks on the basis of tests given throughout the term.

Besides school lessons, other educational material is available for TV viewing. You simply press a combination of buttons and the pages flash on your home screen. The world’s information is available to you almost instantaneously.

TV screens cover an entire wall in most homes and show most subjects other than straight text matter in color and three dimensions. In addition to programmed TV and the multiplicity of commercial fare, you can see top Broadway shows, hit movies and current nightclub acts for a nominal charge. Best-selling books are on TV tape and can be borrowed or rented from tape libraries.

A typical vacation in 2008 is to spend a week at an undersea resort, where your hotel room window looks out on a tropical underwater reef, a sunken ship or an ancient, excavated city. Available to guests are two- and three-person submarines in which you can cruise well-marked underwater trails.

Another vacation is a stay < on a hotel satellite. The rocket ride to the satellite and back, plus the vistas of earth and moon, make a memorable vacation jaunt.

While city life in 2008 has changed greatly, the farm has altered even more. Farmers are business executives running operations as automated as factories. TV scanners monitor tractors and other equipment computer programmed to plow, harrow and harvest. Wires imbedded in the ground send control signals to the machines. Computers also keep track of yields-, fertilization, soil composition and other factors influencing crops. At the beginning of each year, a print-out tells the farmer what to plant where, how much to fertilize and how much yield he can expect.

Farming isn't confined to land. Mariculturists have turned areas of the sea into beds of protein-rich seaweed and algae. This raw material is processed into food that looks and tastes like steak and other meats. It also is cheap; families can have steak-like meals twice a day without feeling a budget pinch. Areas in bays or close to shore have been turned into shrimp, lobster, clam and other shellfish ranches, like the cattle spreads of yesteryear.

Medical research has guaranteed that most babies born in the 21st century will live long and healthy lives. Heart disease has virtually been eliminated by drugs and diet. If hearts or other major organs do give trouble, they can be replaced with artificial organs.

Medical examinations are a matter of sitting in a diagnostic chair for a minute or two, then receiving a full health report. Ultrasensitive microphones and electronic sensors in the chair's headrest, back and armrests pick up heartbeat, pulse, breathing rate, galvanic skin response, blood pressure, nerve reflexes and other medical signs. A computer attached to the chair digests these responses, compares them to the normal standard and prints out a full medical report.

No need to worry about failing memory or intelligence either. The intelligence pill is another 21st century commodity. Slow learners or people struck with forgetful-ness are given pills which increase the production of enzymes controlling production of the chemicals known to control learning and memory. Everyone is able to use his full mental potential.

Despite the fact that the year 2008 is only 40 years away—as far ahead as 1928 is in the past—it will be a world as strange to us as our time (1968) would be to the pilgrims.

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  1. Zaid

    Damn. Dude nailed the computer.

    Not having been born for almost two more decades since his prediction, what was the computer back then? May be somewhat like the Internet is now? You know…a lot of people think we’ve seen most of what the web can do–only to be left in embarrassment 50 years from now:)

  2. Zadillo

    Vannevar Bush’s “As We May Think” from July 1945 is also worth a read if you’re interested in future predictions; of note is that this article was found by Douglas C. Engelbert and influenced his thinking on the mouse and windowing systems. Aside from that, Bush’s “Memex” machine description of a system containing all the world’s knowledge and accessible to the user was definitely prescient.

  3. 113.com

    Did he “predict” the Internet… which actually was on the verge of birth by 1968.

  4. Glen

    I’m so grateful that I only have to work four hours per day.

  5. randy

    Thank heavens his prediction about “universal healthcare” was wrong! I am very happy with my own, thank you very much Mr. Berry.

    Ber’s right about rocket-powered intercontinental commercial travel though — the next 60 years will see the rise of rocket-powered flight, mark my words. Solves the problem of self-destructing arabs too — these will blow up by accident monthly so what will be the point?

  6. Annie Heckenberger

    Ok, u win. This post is awesome. Great find.

  7. Jeff the Great

    wow, what a fun read! great find!

    Goboz or go home

  8. Stick to Internet, not Health

    Uh… what rock have you been living under?

    The progress made in treating cardiovascular disease over the last half century is nothing short of *unbelievable*

    http://healthaffairs.org/blog/.....-medicine/

  9. andrew

    he probably could have predicted services such as twitter, but on second thought he’d probably pull a “nah, that’s useless, why would anyone in the future think that was worthwhile?”

  10. Eric Radtke

    AT&T held a presentation that I attended in the early 90s where they predicted (and showed a film with a prototype) that by 2000, landline video phones would be commonplace, and you’d simply dial up grandma from the bedside table for a face to face chat.

    Of course at that time they never imagined cell phones would overtake landlines as most people’s primary phone, or that webcams would become the closest thing to a mainstream videophone.

    Just goes to show how even predictions for the short term (10 years) can easily be misguided. Berry gets credit for having the foresight to predict technologies that most couldn’t even dream about. Interesting read.

  11. Adam

    I think Roomba qualifies as a housework robot.

  12. Mark

    Marshall McLuhan???

  13. Joel Strellner

    I wonder if he was dyslexic? Most of these seem like they will be true by 2080 not 2008.

    In addition to the computer stuff, the credit card thing was spot on too.

  14. Michael Arrington

    #8 - its not the health technology that’s wrong. it’s the idea that people would have access to it, and that health care was about helping people.

    We have a situation today where people without insurance can’t afford doctors at all, and people with insurance are routinely denied the best medical help because of the structure of their HMOs.

  15. pico

    great minds think alike

    the modern mechanix is indeed a very interesting blog. While I tried to aggregate future ideas in http://10yearsfromnow.com

  16. AF

    Whats the deal with videophones? its like the one thing that we seem to really want! every single movie or literature describing the future has to include a videophone. its about time we got it or decided we don’t really want it.

  17. danimal

    Aren’t we jumping the gun a bit here…he’s still got 8 months before the clock runs out…it could happen.

  18. Miiko Mentz

    That was a fun read. Thanks for sharing it. I thoroughly enjoyed reading it.

    @danimal, yeah, a lot can happen in eight months. Who knows what will be introduced over the next eight months. I’d sure like an affordable robot that cleans my house and something far more advanced than the Roomba; but it’s a start in the right direction.

    And to throw in my two-cents on #8, Mike, that’s exactly the problem, its access and denial of services or insurance companies deciding not to pay for services even when you are insured. Not technological advances in medicine. Great work is being done on that front. Universal health care is still a pipe dream in my opinion because there’s far too much greed and profit in the system.

  19. Joel Kehle

    I love this part:

    “The pace of technological advance is such that a certain amount of a jobholder’s spare time is used in keeping up with the new developments—on the average, about two hours of home study a day.”

    If reading newsfeeds, learning new software and playing with new websites counts as “keeping up with the new developments”, two hours a day is a about right for me.

    Michael - how much of your time is spent learning about new things? ;-)

  20. Ben Finkel

    Michael-

    Good stuff. These old-school tech predictions always impress me.

    Spelling patrol: earily ==> eerily.

    Cheers,

    Ben

  21. John Titor

    also check out this 1979 book….
    http://www.pointlessmuseum.com.....eindex.php

  22. TH

    What I find fascinating in these is that the social change is almost always (bar some dystopian scenarios) underestimated while the technical change is overestimated. Here, we have housewives cooking meals at home while the head of the family goes for a business trip… in essence a 1960’s middle-American lifestyle with 21st century gadget upgrade.

    I think the healthcare-prediction demonstrates most clearly how we tend to think of technology (Barry-style optimism; universality and access would naturally follow from technological availability) and how it often turns out to be (those with cash benefit and the rest are left even further behind). While the health-care example reveals a gap even within the US, almost any other field of technology is similarly stratified when we look at rich and poor countries.

    Barry didn’t predict open source movement, but that and similar socio-technological innovations are needed to make those dreams true. By 2028?

  23. Liam Don

    Michael (#14) - That is the situation in the USA.
    Some other countries have managed to do universal health care pretty damn well, so I guess he was half right.

  24. Jeff S.

    Actually, Liam Don, no country “does universal health care well.” Whenever you have something provided at the margin for “free”, then demand is always going to be greater than supply, and thus socialized health care can only create shortages.

    Arrington at #14 is right. And the answer to fixing America’s health care problem is to expose the American Health care system to more market forces. We should eliminate the tax incentives which currently exist to tie health insurance to employers, while offering everyone a tax free medical health savings account that they or their employer can contribute too. Then that should be supplemented with a very high deductible insurance plan as a backup. Then, consumers will have to start caring how much each treatment costs and doctors will have to provide menus of services with prices. The system is so screwy now that patients or doctors rarely have any idea what services cost, which only serves to inflate prices and encourage people to be less-than-frugal with healthcare services.

  25. Gus

    So he described the computer and home shopping: about 99% of the rest of the article is WRONG - from compressed air inter-city tunnels to the bizarre prediction that people would want to spend their holidays in submarines eating seaweed steak. Not impressed. it reads like something from the 50s rather than the late 60s - everything is effortless, painless, issueless, whereas I’d have been impressed if he’d said your kids will weigh 200 pounds, gorge themselves on crap all day, whilst you sit downloading and viewing ‘educational material’ in your locked office.

  26. nursing baby

    about the medical prediction, may be he is right and it is possible but people are making very huge amounts of money from medicine and i dont think they would like to stop. if there are no ill people who will buy pills? whats Pfizer going to do? how will shareholders of these huge pharmacy companies make money? i suspect that may be there is treatment for many diseases but hospitals can not apply them because of pressure from industry.

  27. Michael Arrington

    Jeff S For President!

  28. James

    #24 - I think Universal Health Care is done well in the UK. If you have a problem or are ill you can walk into almost any hospital and get treated for free. There is also the option to have private health care so you get the benefits of the American system too. The NHS is far from perfect but it is a damn site better than not having it!
    James

  29. George

    Interesting article. Edward Bellamy’s Looking Backward is a bit more impressive since he wrote it in 1888 about the year 2000.

  30. Anatoly

    @44 You are wrong!!

    See, I can predict the future as well.

  31. Rob Mowery

    He didn’t predict that the “housewife” would cease to exist. With many woman having a career the food preparation has become a shared task.

    But I do think he hit the idea of microwavable meals - least that is what it sounds like he is talking about.

    From the article:
    “Other conveniences ease kitchenwork. The housewife simply determines in advance her menus for the week, then slips prepackaged meals into the freezer and lets the automatic food utility do the rest.”

  32. Anand

    you copy-pasted the whole thing out from the source. Duplicate content, and Google is going to punish you in its SERPS

  33. Andre Vitorio

    lol Anand…
    I’m not too optimistic about the next 40 years… :/

    Too much people + pollution.

  34. Kamela

    Wow…some of his comments were rubbish of course, but some were pretty amazing. I think it’s funny how he’s so positive about the technological advances, but he still predicts all of the contemporary social roles will be in place (i.e.: the housewife will remain, fulfilling her role, but she’ll just be doing it using more efficient conveniences.)