My future predictions (2024 iteration)

If it’s January, it means it’s time for me to update my big list of future predictions! I used the 2023 version of this document as a template, and made edits to it as needed. For the sake of transparency, I’ve indicated recently added content by bolding it, and have indicated deleted or moved content with strikethrough.

Like any futurist worth his salt, I’m going to put my credibility on the line by publishing a list of my future predictions. I won’t modify or delete this particular blog entry once it is published, and if my thinking about anything on the list changes, I’ll instead create a new, revised blog entry. Furthermore, as the deadlines for my predictions pass, I’ll reexamine them.

I’ve broken down my predictions by the decade. Any prediction listed under a specific decade will happen by the end of that decade, unless I specify some other date (e.g. – “X will happen early in this decade.”).

2020s

  • Better, cheaper solar panels and batteries (for grid power storage and cars) will make clean energy as cheap and as reliable as fossil fuel power for entire regions of the world, including some temperate zones. As cost “tipping points” are reached, it will make financial sense for tens of millions of private homeowners and electricity utility companies to install solar panels on their rooftops and on ground arrays, respectively. This will be the case even after government clean energy subsidies are inevitably retracted. However, a 100% transition to clean energy won’t finish in rich countries until the middle of the century, and poor countries will use dirty energy well into the second half of the century.
  • Fracking and the exploitation of tar sands in the U.S. and Canada will together ensure growth in global oil production until around 2030, at which time the installed base of clean energy and batteries will be big enough to take up the slack. There will be no global energy crisis.
  • This will be a bad decade for Russia as its overall population shrinks, its dependency ratio rises, and as low fossil fuel prices and sanctions keep hurting its economy. Russia will fall farther behind the U.S., China, and other leading countries in terms of economic, military, and technological might.
  • China’s GDP will surpass America’s, India’s population will surpass China’s, and China will never claim the glorious title of being both the richest and most populous country.
  • Improvements to smartphone cameras, mirrorless cameras, and perhaps light-field cameras will make D-SLRs obsolete. 
  • Augmented reality (AR) glasses that are much cheaper and better than the original Google Glass will make their market debuts and will find success in niche applications. Some will grant wearers superhuman visual abilities in the forms of zoom-in and night vision.
  • Virtual reality (VR) gaming will go mainstream as the devices get better and cheaper. It will stop being the sole domain of hardcore gamers willing to spend over $1,000 on hardware.
  • Vastly improved VR goggles with better graphics and no need to be plugged into desktop PCs will hit the market. They won’t display perfectly lifelike footage, but they will be much better than what we have today, and portable. 
  • “Full-immersion” audiovisual VR will be commercially available by the end of the decade. These VR devices will be capable of displaying video that is visually indistinguishable from real reality: They will have display resolutions (at least 60 pixels per degree of field of view), refresh rates, head tracking sensitivities, and wide fields of view (210 degrees wide by 150 degrees high) that together deliver a visual experience that matches or exceeds the limits of human vision. These high-end goggles won’t be truly “portable” devices because their high processing and energy requirements will probably make them bulky, give them only a few hours of battery life (or maybe none at all), or even require them to be plugged into another computer. Moreover, the tactile, olfactory, and physical movement/interaction aspects of the experience will remain underdeveloped.
  • “Deepfake” pornography will reach new levels of sophistication and perversion as it becomes possible to seamlessly graft the heads of real people onto still photos and videos of nude bodies that closely match the physiques of the actual people. New technology for doing this will let amateurs make high-quality deepfakes, meaning any person could be targeted. It will even become possible to wear AR glasses that interpolate nude, virtual bodies over the bodies real people in the wearer’s field of view to provide a sort of fake “X-ray-vision.” The AR glasses could also be used to apply other types of visual filters that degraded real people within the field of view.
  • “Smart home”/”Wired home” technology will become mature and widespread in developed countries.
  • Video gaming will dispense with physical media, and games will be completely streamed from the internet or digitally downloaded. Business that exist just to sell game discs (Gamestop) will shut down.
  • Instead of a typical home entertainment system having a whole bunch of media discs, different media players and cable boxes, there will be one small, multipurpose box that, among other things, boosts WiFi to ensure the TV and all nearby devices can get signals at multi-Gb/s speeds.
  • Movie subtitles and the very notion of there being “foreign language films” will become obsolete. Computers will be able to perfectly translate any human language into another, to create perfect digital imitations of any human voice, and to automatically apply CGI so that the mouth movements of people in video footage matches the translated words they’re speaking. The machines will also be able to reproduce detailed aspects of an actor’s speech, such as cadence, rhythm, tone and timbre, emotion, and accent, and to convey them accurately in another language.
  • Self-driving vehicles will start hitting the roads in large numbers in rich countries. The vehicles won’t drive as efficiently as humans (a lot of hesitation and slowing down for little or no reason), but they’ll be as safe as human drivers. Long-haul trucks that ply simple highway routes will be the first category of vehicles to be fully automated. The transition will be heralded by a big company like Wal-Mart buying 5,000 self-driving tractor trailers to move goods between its distribution centers and stores. Last-mile delivery–involving weaving through side streets, cities and neighborhoods, and physically carrying packages to peoples’ doors–won’t be automated until after this decade. Self-driving, privately owned passenger cars will stay few in number and will be owned by technophiles, rich people, and taxi cab companies.
  • Thanks to improvements in battery energy density and cost, and in fast-charging technology, electric cars will become cost-competitive with gas-powered cars this decade without government subsidies, leading to their rapid adoption. Electric cars are mechanically simpler and more reliable than gas-powered ones, which will hurt the car repair industry. Many gas stations will also go bankrupt or convert to fast charging stations.
  • Quality of life for people living and working in cities and near highways will improve as more drivers switch to quieter, emissionless electric vehicles. The noise reduction will be greatest in cities and suburbs where traffic moves slowly: https://cleantechnica.com/2016/06/05/will-electric-cars-make-traffic-quieter-yes-no/
  • Most new power equipment will be battery-powered, so machines like lawn mowers, leaf blowers, and chainsaws will be much quieter and less polluting than they are today. Batteries will be energy-dense enough to compete with gasoline in these use cases, and differences in overall equipment weight and running time will be insignificant. The notion of a neighbor shattering your sense of peace and quiet with loud yard work will get increasingly alien. 
  • A machine will pass the Turing Test by the end of this decade. The milestone will attract enormous amounts of attention and will lead to several retests, some of which the machine will fail, proving that it lacks the full range of human intelligence. It will lead to debate over the Turing Test’s validity as a measure of true intelligence (Ray Kurzweil actually talked about this phenomenon of “moving the goalposts” whenever we think about how smart computers are), and many AI experts will point out the existence of decades-long skepticism in the Turing Test in their community.
  • The best AIs circa 2029 won’t be able to understand and upgrade their own source codes. They will still be narrow AIs, albeit an order of magnitude better than the ones we have today.
  • Machines will become better than humans at the vast majority of computer, card, and board games. The only exceptions will be very obscure games or recently created games that no one has bothered to program an AI to play yet. But even for those games, there will be AIs with general intelligence and learning abilities that will be “good enough” to play as well as average humans by reading the instruction manuals and teaching themselves through simulated self-play.
  • The cost of getting your genome sequenced and expertly interpreted will drop below $1,000, and enough about the human genome will have been deciphered to make the cost worth the benefit for everyone. By the end of the decade, it will be common for newborns in rich countries to have their genomes sequenced.
  • Better technology will also let pregnant women noninvasively obtain their fetuses’ DNA, at affordable cost.
  • Cheap DNA tests that can measure a person’s innate IQ and core personality traits with high accuracy will become widely available. There is the potential for this to cause social problems. 
  • At-home medical testing kits and diagnostic devices like swallowable camera-pills will become vastly better and more common.
  • Space tourism will become routine thanks to privately owned spacecraft. 
  • Marijuana will be effectively decriminalized in the U.S. Either the federal government will overturn its marijuana prohibitions, or some patchwork of state and federal bans will remain but be so weakened and lightly enforced that there will be no real government barriers to obtaining and using marijuana. 
  • By the end of this decade, photos of almost every living person will be available online (mostly on social media). Apps will exist that can scan through trillions of photos to find your doppelgangers. 
  • In 2029, the youngest Baby Boomer and the oldest Gen Xer will turn 65. 
  • Drones will be used in an attempted or successful assassination of at least one major world leader (Note: Venezuela’s Nicholas Maduro wasn’t high profile enough).

2030s

  • VR and AR goggles will become refined technologies and probably merge into a single type of lightweight device. Like smartphones today, anyone who wants the glasses in 2030 will have them. Even poor people in Africa will be able to buy them. A set of the glasses will last a day on a single charge under normal use.  
  • Augmented reality contact lenses will enter mass production and become widely available, though they won’t be as good as AR glasses and they might need remotely linked, body-worn hardware to provide them with power and data. https://www.inverse.com/article/31034-augmented-reality-contact-lenses
  • The bulky VR goggles of the 2020s will transform into lightweight, portable V.R. glasses thanks to improved technology. The glasses will display lifelike footage. However, the best VR goggles will still need to be plugged into other devices, like routers or PCs.
  • Wall-sized, thin, 8K or even 16K TVs will become common in homes in rich countries, and the TVs will be able to display 3D picture without the use of glasses, though the 3D effect will only be visible to people sitting directly in front of the screen. A sort of virtual reality chamber could be created at moderate cost by installing those TVs on all the walls of a room to create a single, wraparound screen.
  • It will be common for celebrities of all kinds to make money by “hanging out” with paying customers in virtual reality. For some lower-tier celebrities, this will be their sole source of income. 
  • Functional CRT TVs and computer monitors will only exist in museums and in the hands of antique collectors. This will also be true for DLP TVs. 
  • The video game industry will be bigger than ever and considered high art.
  • It will be standard practice for AIs to be doing hyperrealistic video game renderings, and for NPCs to behave very intelligently thanks to better AI. 
  • Books and computer tablets will merge into a single type of device that could be thought of as a “digital book.” It will be a book with several hundred pages made of thin, flexible digital displays (perhaps using ultra-energy efficient e-ink) instead of paper. At the tap of a button, the text on all of the pages will instantly change to display whichever book the user wanted to read at that moment. They could also be used as notebooks in which the user could hand write or draw things with a stylus, which would be saved as image or text files. The devices will fuse the tactile appeal of old-fashioned books with the content flexibility of tablet computers.
  • Loose-leaf sheets of “digital paper” will also exist thanks to the same technology.
  • Commercially available, head-worn, brain-computer-interface devices (BCIs) linked to augmented reality eyewear will gift humans with crude forms of telepathy and telekinesis. For example, a person wearing the devices could compose a short sentence merely by thinking about it, see the text projected across his augmented field of view, use his thoughts to make any needed edits, and then transmit the sentence to another person or machine, merely by thinking a “Send” command. The human recipient of the message with the same BCI/eyewear setup would see the text projected across his field of view and could compose a response through the same process the first person used. BCIs will also let humans send commands to a machines, like printers. For almost all use cases, this type of communication will be less efficient than traditional alternatives, like manually typing a text message or clicking the “Print” button at the top of a word processing application, but it will be an important proof of concept demonstration that will point to what is to come later in the century.
  • Loneliness, social isolation, and other problems caused by overuse of technology and the atomized structure of modern life will be, ironically, cured to a large extent by technology. Chatbots that can hold friendly (and even funny and amusing) conversations with humans for extended periods, diagnose and treat mental illnesses as well as human therapists, and customize themselves to meet the needs of humans will become ubiquitous. The AIs will become adept at analyzing human personalities and matching lonely people with friends and lovers, at matching them with social gatherings (including some created by machines), and at recommending daily activities that will satisfy them, hour-by-hour. Machines will come to understand that constant technology use is antithetical to human nature, so in order to promote human wellness, they find ways to impel humans to get out of their houses, interact with other humans, and be in nature. Autonomous taxis will also be widespread and will have low fares, making it easier for people who are isolated due to low income or poor health (such as many elderly people) to go out.
  • Chatbots will steadily improve their “humanness” over the decade. The instances when AIs say or do something nonsensical will get less and less frequent. Dumber people, children, and people with some types of mental illness will be the first ones to start insisting their AIs are intelligent like humans. Later, average people will start claiming the same. By the end of the decade, a personal assistant AI like “Samantha” from the movie Her will be commercially available. AI personal assistants will have convincing, simulated personalities that seem to have the same depth as humans. Users will be able to pick from among personality profiles or to build their own.  
  • Chatbots will be able to have intelligent conversations with humans about politics and culture, to identify factually wrong beliefs, biases, and cognitive blind spots in individuals, and to effectively challenge them through verbal discussion and debate. The potential will exist for technology to significantly enlighten the human population and to reduce sociopolitical polarization. However, it’s unclear how many people will choose to use this technology. 
  • Turing-Test-capable chatbots will also supercharge the problem of online harassment, character assassination, and deliberate disinformation by spamming the internet with negative reviews, bullying messages, emails to bosses, and humiliating “deepfake” photos and videos of targeted people. Today’s “troll farms” where humans sit at computer terminals following instructions to write bad reviews for specific people or businesses will be replaced by AI trolls that can pump out orders of magnitude more content per day. And just as people today can “buy likes” for their social media accounts or business webpages, people in the future will be able, at low cost, to buy harassment campaigns against other people and organizations they dislike. Discerning between machine-generated and human-generated internet content will be harder and more important than ever.
  • House robots will start becoming common in rich countries. They will be slower at doing household tasks than humans, but will still save people hours of labor per week. They may or may not be humanoid. For the sake of safety and minimizing annoyance, most robots will do their work when humans aren’t around. As in, you would come home from work every day and find the floors vacuumed, the lawn mowed, and your laundered clothes in your dresser, with nary a robot in sight since it will have gone back into its closet to recharge. You would never hear the commotion of a clothes washing machine, a vacuum cleaner or a lawnmower. All the work would get done when you were away, as if by magic.
  • People will start having genuine personal relationships with AIs and robots. For example, people will resist upgrading to new personal assistant AIs because they will have emotional attachments to their old ones. The destruction of a helper robot or AI might be as emotionally traumatic to some people as the death of a human relative.
  • Farm robots that are better than humans at fine motor tasks like picking strawberries humans will start becoming widespread.  
  • Self-driving cars will become cheap enough and practical enough for average income people to buy, and their driving behavior will become as efficient as an average human. Over the course of this decade, there will be rapid adoption of self-driving cars in rich countries. Freed from driving, people will switch to doing things like watching movies/TV and eating. Car interiors will change accordingly. Road fatalities, and the concomitant demands for traffic police, paramedics, E.R. doctors, car mechanics, and lawyers will sharply decrease. The car insurance industry will shrivel, forcing consolidation. (Humans in those occupations will also face increasing levels of direct job competition from machines over the course of the decade.)
  • Private owners of autonomous cars will start renting them out while not in use as taxis and package delivery vehicles. Your personal, autonomous car will drive you to work, then spend eight hours making money for you doing side jobs, and will be waiting for you outside your building at the end of the day.
  • The “big box” business model will start taking over the transportation and car repair industry thanks to the rise of electric, self-driving vehicles and autonomous taxis in place of personal car ownership. The multitudes of small, scattered car repair shops will be replaced by large, centralized car repair facilities that themselves resemble factory assembly lines. Self-driving vehicles will drive to them to have their problems diagnosed and fixed, sparing their human owners from having to waste their time sitting in waiting rooms.
  • The same kinds of facilities will make inroads into the junk yard industry, as they would have all the right tooling to cheaply and rapidly disassemble old vehicles, test the parts for functionality, and shunt them to disposal or individual resale. (The days of hunting through junkyards by yourself for a car part you need will eventually end–it will all be on eBay. )
  • Car ownership won’t die out because it will still be a status symbol, and having a car ready in your driveway will always be more convenient than having to wait even just two minutes for an Uber cab to arrive at the curb. People are lazy.
  • The ad hoc car rental model exemplified by autonomous Uber cabs and private people renting out their autonomous cars when not in use faces a challenge since daily demand for cars peaks during morning rush hour and afternoon rush hour. In other words, everyone needs a car at the same time each day, so the ratio of cars : people can’t deviate much from, say, 1:2. Of course, if more people telecommuted (almost certain in the future thanks to better VR, faster broadband, and tech-savvy Millennials reaching middle age and taking over the workplace), and if flexible schedules became more widespread (also likely, but within certain limits since most offices can’t function efficiently unless they have “all hands on deck” for at least a few hours each day), the ratio could go even lower. However, there’s still a bottom limit to how few cars a country will need to provide adequate daily transportation for its people.
  • Private delivery services will get cheaper and faster thanks to autonomous vehicles.
  • Automation will start having a major impact on the global economy. Machines will compensate for the shrinkage of the working-age human population in the developed world. Countries with “graying” populations like Japan and Germany will experience a new wave of economic growth. Demand for immigrant laborers will decrease across the world because of machines.
  • There will be a worldwide increase in the structural unemployment rate thanks to better and cheaper narrow AIs and robots. A plausible scenario would be for the U.S. unemployment rate to be 10%–which was last the case at the nadir of the Great Recession–but for every other economic indicator to be strong. The clear message would be that human labor is becoming decoupled from the economy.
  • Combining all the best AI and robotics technologies, it will be possible to create general-purpose androids that could function better in the real world (e.g. – perform in the workplace, learn new things, interact with humans, navigate public spaces, manage personal affairs) than the bottom 10% of humans (e.g. – elderly people, the disabled, criminals, the mentally ill, people with poor language abilities or low IQs), and in some narrow domains, the androids will be superhuman (e.g. – physical strength, memory, math abilities). Note that businesses will still find it better to employ task-specific, non-human-looking robots instead of general purpose androids. The androids will be very few in number by the end of 2039, and will be technology demonstrators and prototypes that get a lot of media coverage at carefully controlled tech company demo events. They won’t be available for any person to purchase, won’t roam around public spaces, and won’t have important jobs. At a minimum, each one will cost hundreds of thousands of dollars.
  • By the end of this decade, only poor people, lazy people, and conspiracy theorists (like anti-vaxxers) won’t have their genomes sequenced. It will be trivially cheap, and in fact free for many people (some socialized health care systems will fully subsidize it), and enough will be known about the human genome to make it worthwhile to have the information.
  • Computers will be able to accurately deduce a human’s outward appearance based on only a DNA sample. This will aid police detectives, and will have other interesting uses, such as allowing parents to see what their unborn children will look like as adults, or allowing anyone to see what they’d look like if they were of the opposite sex (one sex chromosome replaced). 
  • Trivially cheap gene sequencing and vastly improved knowledge of the human genome will give rise to a “human genome black market,” in which people secretly obtain DNA samples from others, sequence them, and use the data for their own ends. For example, a politician could be blackmailed by an enemy who threatened to publish a list of his genetic defects or the identities of his illegitimate children. Stalkers (of celebrities and ordinary people) would also be interested in obtaining the genetic information of the people they were obsessed with. It is practically impossible to prevent the release of one’s DNA since every discarded cup, bottle, or utensil has a sample. 
  • Markets will become brutally competitive and efficient thanks to AIs. Companies will sharply grasp consumer demand through real-time surveillance, and will use dynamic pricing much more widely and for everyday goods and services, and consumers will be alerted to bargains by their personal AIs and devices (e.g. – your AR glasses will visually highlight good deals as you walk through the aisles of a store). Your personal assistant AIs and robots will look out for your self-interest by countering the efforts of other AIs to sway your spending habits in ways that benefit companies and not you.
  • “Digital immortality” will become possible for average people. Personal assistant AIs, robot servants, and other monitoring devices will be able, through observation alone, to create highly accurate personality profiles of individual humans, and to anticipate their behavior with high fidelity. Voices, mannerisms and other biometrics will be digitally reproducible without any hint of error. Digital simulacra of individual humans will be further refined by having them take voluntary personality tests, and by uploading their genomes, brain scans and other body scans. Even if all of the genetic and biological data couldn’t be made sense of at the moment it was uploaded to an individual’s digital profile, there will be value in saving it since it might be decipherable in the future. (Note that “digital immortality” is not the same as “mind uploading.”)
  • Life expectancy will have increased by a few years thanks to pills and therapies that slightly extend human lifespan. Like, you take a $20 pill each day starting at age 20 and you end up dying at age 87 instead of age 84.
  • Global oil consumption will peak as people continue switching to other power sources.
  • Earliest possible date for the first manned Mars mission.
  • Machines will become as good as professional humans at language translation.
  • Movie subtitles and the very notion of there being “foreign language films” will become obsolete. Computers will be able to perfectly translate any human language into another, to create perfect digital imitations of any human voice, and to automatically apply CGI so that the mouth movements of people in video footage matches the translated words they’re speaking. The machines will also be able to reproduce detailed aspects of an actor’s speech, such as cadence, rhythm, tone and timbre, emotion, and accent, and to convey them accurately in another language. [Moved to the 2020s due to more rapid advances in this technology in 2022 and 2023]
  • Computers will also be able to automatically enhance and upscale old films by accurately colorizing them, removing defects like scratches, and sharpening or focusing footage (one technique will involve interpolating high-res still photos of long-dead actors onto the faces of those same actors in low-res moving footage). Computer enhancement will be so good that we’ll be able to watch films from the early 20th century with near-perfect image and audio clarity.
  • CGI will get so refined than moviegoers with 20/20 vision won’t be able to see the difference between footage of unaltered human actors and footage of 100% CGI actors.
  • Lifelike CGI and “performance capture” will enable “digital resurrections” of dead actors. Computers will be able to scan through every scrap of footage with, say, John Wayne in it, and to produce a perfect CGI simulacrum of him that even speaks with his natural voice, and it will be seamlessly inserted into future movies. Elderly actors might also license movie studios to create and use digital simulacra of their younger selves in new movies. The results will be very fascinating, but might also worsen Hollywood’s problem with making formulaic content.
  • Machines will be able to imitate the voices of specific humans so accurately that most human listeners won’t be able to tell the difference. Those that can reliably detect any difference will find it very faint.
  • Smartphone apps will be able to remotely monitor a person’s vital statistics and to quickly derive a wealth of data about things like their emotional state, health, age, and truthfulness from factors like their heart rate, breathing pattern, body movements, microexpressions, and speech patterns.
  • Tiny cameras that can capture and transmit high resolution footage will be available for a few dollars apiece. A device the size of a sugar cube that has enough memory and battery life to record video footage for several hours would fit the bill.
  • China’s military will get strong enough to defeat U.S. forces in the western Pacific. This means that, in a conventional war for control of the Spratly Islands and/or Taiwan, China would have >50% odds of winning. This shift in the local balance of power does not mean China will start a conflict. 
  • The quality and sophistication of China’s best military technology will surpass Russia’s best technology in all or almost all categories. However, it will still lag the U.S. 

2040s

  • The world and peoples’ outlooks and priorities will be very different than they were in 2019. Cheap renewable energy will have become widespread and totally negated any worries about an “energy crisis” ever happening, except in exotic, hypothetical scenarios about the distant future. There will be little need for immigration thanks to machine labor and cross-border telecommuting (VR, telepresence, and remote-controlled robots will be so advanced that even blue-collar jobs involving manual labor will be outsourced to workers living across borders). Moreover, there will be a strong sense in most Western countries that they’re already “diverse enough,” and that there are no further cultural benefits to letting in more foreigners since large communities of most foreign ethnic groups will already exist within their borders. There will be more need than ever for strong social safety nets and entitlement programs thanks to technological unemployment. AI will be a central political and social issue. It won’t be the borderline sci-fi, fringe issue it was in 2019.
  • Automation, mass unemployment, wealth inequalities between the owners of capital and everyone else, and differential access to expensive human augmentation technologies (like genetic engineering) will produce overwhelming political pressure for some kind of wealth redistribution and social safety net expansion. Countries that have diligently made small, additive reforms as necessary over the preceding decades will be untroubled. However, countries that failed to adapt their political and economic systems will face upheaval.
  • 2045 will pass without the Technological Singularity happening. Ray Kurzweil will either celebrate his 97th birthday in a wheelchair, or as a popsicle frozen at the Alcor Foundation.
  • Supercomputers that match or surpass upper-level estimates of the human brain’s computational capabilities will cost a few hundred thousand to a few million dollars apiece, meaning tech companies and universities will be able to afford large numbers of them for AI R&D projects, accelerating progress in the field. Hardware will no longer be the limiting factor to building AGI. If it hasn’t been built yet, it will be due to failure to figure out how to arrange the hardware in the right way to support intelligent thought, and/or to a failure to develop the necessary software. 
  • With robots running the economy, it will be common for businesses to operate 24/7: restaurants will never close, online orders made at 3:00 am will be packed in boxes by 3:10 am, and autonomous delivery trucks will only stop to refuel, exchange cargo, or get preventative maintenance.
  • Advanced energy technology, robot servants, 3D printers, telepresence, and other technologies will allow people to live largely “off-grid” if they choose, while still enjoying a level of comfort that 2019 people would envy.
  • Robot servants will be common in upper-income and middle-class households across the developed world. Some will be function-specific, like autonomous lawn mowers, while others will be multifunctional, like robot butlers. They will work more slowly than humans and will make mistakes more often, but nevertheless, they will save their human owners many hours of work each week. A high-quality multifunction robot servant will cost $5,000 – $20,000 in today’s money. In other words, cheaper than a new car, but still a significant investment of money.
  • Androids will be significantly better than they were in the 2030s, and aspects of their physiques, intelligence, and capabilities will overlap even more with humans, but they still won’t be able to pass as one of us in normal situations. If you could examine one at very close distance, you would see that its skin and other external features were less detailed than those of real humans. Their body movements will be clumsier and more limited than the average human’s, probably leaving them with the same overall reflexes, nimbleness, balance, and speed as an elderly human. They will also lack the battery life to function for a whole work day in physically demanding occupations.
  • Recycling will become much more efficient and practical thanks to house robots properly cleaning, sorting, and crushing/compacting waste before disposing of it. Automated sorting machines at recycling centers will also be much better than they are today. Today, recycling programs are hobbled because even well-meaning humans struggle to remember which of their trash items are recyclable and which aren’t since the acceptable items vary from one municipality to the next, and as a result, recycling centers get large amounts of unusable material, which they must filter out at great cost. House robots would remember it perfectly.
  • Thanks to this diligence, house robots will also increase backyard composting, easing the burden on municipal trash services. 
  • Genetic engineering of offspring becomes about as common among richer people as IVF is among them in 2023. The engineered offspring aren’t “superhumans”–they’re slightly better than they would have been without technological intervention.
  • It will be common for cities, towns and states to heavily restrict or ban human-driven vehicles within their boundaries. A sea change in thinking will happen as autonomous cars become accepted as “the norm,” and human-driven cars start being thought of as unusual and dangerous.
  • There will be something that could be called a “self-driving RV vacation industry” wherein a person would rent a self-driving RV that would be programmed to take them on a multi-day tour of some area, hitting all the important sights. At each one, a virtual tour guide that the person could see, hear and interact with through smart glasses would lead them around on foot.
  • Over 90% of new car sales in developed countries will be for electric vehicles. Just as the invention of the automobile transformed horses into status goods used for leisure, the rise of electric vehicles will transform internal combustion vehicles into a niche market for richer people. 
  • A global “family tree” showing how all humans are related will be built using written genealogical records and genomic data from the billions of people who have had their DNA sequenced. It will become impossible to hide illegitimate children, and it will also become possible for people to find “genetic doppelgangers”–other people they have no familial relationship to, but with whom, by some coincidence, they share a very large number of genes. 
  • Improved knowledge of human genetics and its relevance to personality traits and interests will strengthen AI’s ability to match humans with friends, lovers, and careers. Rising technological unemployment will create a need for machines to match human workers with the remaining jobs in as efficient a manner as possible.
  • People with distinctive personalities (particularly vibrant, funny, or sexy) will routinely sell “digital copies” of themselves for other people to download and use as AI personal assistants. This will be analogous to today’s ability to select different voices for personal GPS devices. Additionally, users will be able to tweak “base versions” of downloaded personalities to suit their unique preferences. 
  • The digital personalities of fictitious people, like movie and cartoon characters, and of long-dead people, will also be downloadable. 
  • Realistic robot sex bots that can move and talk will exist. They won’t perfectly mimic humans, but will be “good enough” for most users. Using them will be considered weird and “for losers” at first, but in coming decades it will go mainstream, following the same pattern as Internet dating. [If we think of sex as a type of task, and if we agree that machines will someday be able to do all tasks better than humans, then it follows that robots will be better than humans at sex.]  
  • Augmented reality contact lenses will give people superhuman vision.
  • 3D TVs will improve. Among other things, multiple viewers watching the same TV from different viewing angles will experience the 3D visual effect. 
  • Any person will be able to use his personal technologies to create a highly immersive audiovisual experience almost anywhere. For example, a person’s computer glasses could simulate the experience of being in an IMAX movie theater. Alternatively, the person could use his smartphone or another device to beam video images against a wall, creating an ad hoc theater for real. Major improvements to the price-performance and energy efficiency of LEDs and lasers will let small personal devices to have inbuilt light projectors that match the quality of professional-quality projectors that cost thousands of dollars today.
  • Obesity rates in rich and middle income countries peak and start declining, mostly thanks to the weight loss drugs invented in the 2020s becoming open to generic manufacture. 
  • The richest person alive will achieve a $1 trillion net worth.
  • There will be drones that can use facial recognition and other forms of recognition to autonomously track down specific people and kill them. The simplest versions of those weapons will be small kamikaze drones that crash into their targets and blow up on impact.
  • At least one major military will be using some type of combat robot (whether it is airborne, seaborne, or terrestrial) that is empowered to fire on human enemies autonomously. 

2050s

  • This is the earliest possible time that AGI/SAI will be invented. It will not be able to instantly change everything in the world or to initiate a Singularity, but it will rapidly grow in intelligence, wealth, and power. It will probably be preceded by successful computer simulations of the brains of progressively more complex model organisms, such as flatworms, fruit flies, and lab rats. Also, there won’t be a discrete moment in time when machines “become intelligent”–instead, there will be a multi-year period of time where machines surpass humans in an ever-growing number of areas. Looking back, it won’t be possible to say at which moment the first machine became intelligent. Using different definitions and tests of “intelligence,” it will be possible to argue that AGI/SAI was achieved by different computers at different points in the multi-year period of time. (Likewise, biologists can’t agree on the exact moment or even the exact millennium when our hominid ancestors became “intelligent.”)
  • Humans will be heavily dependent upon their machines for almost everything (e.g. – friendship, planning the day, random questions to be answered, career advice, legal counseling, medical checkups, driving cars), and the dependency will be so ingrained that humans will reflexively assume that “The Machines are always right.” Consciously and unconsciously, people will yield more and more of their decision-making and opinion-forming to machines, and find that they and the world writ large are better off for it. This will be akin to having an angel on your shoulder watching your surroundings and watching you, and giving you constructive advice all the time. 
  • In the developed world, less than 50% of people between age 22 and 65 will have gainful full-time jobs. However, if unprofitable full-time jobs that only persist thanks to government subsidies (such as someone running a small coffee shop and paying the bills with their monthly UBI check) and full-time volunteer “jobs” (such as picking up trash in the neighborhood) are counted, most people in that age cohort will be “doing stuff” on a full-time basis.  
  • The doomsaying about Global Warming will start to quiet down as the world’s transition to clean energy hits full stride and predictions about catastrophes from people like Al Gore fail to pan out by their deadlines. Sadly, people will just switch to worrying about and arguing about some new set of doomsday prophecies about something else.
  • By almost all measures, standards of living will be better in 2050 than today. People will commonly have all types of wonderful consumer devices and appliances that we can’t even fathom. However, some narrow aspects of daily life are likely to worsen, such as overcrowding and further erosion of the human character. Just as people today have short memories and take too many things for granted, so shall people in the 2050s fail to appreciate how much the standard of living has risen since today, and they will ignore all the steady triumphs humanity has made over its problems, and by default, people will still believe the world is constantly on the verge of collapsing and that things are always getting worse.
  • Cheap desalination will provide humanity with unlimited amounts of drinking water and end the prospect of “water wars.” 
  • Mass surveillance and ubiquitous technology will have minimized violent crime and property crime in developed countries: It will be almost impossible to commit such crimes without a surveillance camera or some other type of sensor detecting the act, or without some device recording the criminal’s presence in the area at the time of the act. House robots will contribute by effectively standing guard over your property at night while you sleep. 
  • It will be common for people to have health monitoring devices on and inside of their bodies that continuously track things like their heart rate, blood pressure, respiration rate, and gene expression. If a person has a health emergency or appears likely to have one, his or her devices will send out a distress signal alerting EMS and nearby random citizens. If you walked up to such a person while wearing AR glasses, you would see their vital statistics and would receive instructions on how to assist them (i.e. – How to do CPR). Robots will also be able to render medical aid. 
  • Cities and their suburbs across the world will have experienced massive growth since 2019. Telepresence, relatively easy off-grid living, and technological unemployment will not, on balance, have driven more people out of metro areas than have migrated into them. Farming areas full of flat, boring land will have been depopulated, and many farms will be 100% automated. The people who choose to leave the metro areas for the “wilderness” will concentrate in rural areas (including national parks) where the climate is good, the natural scenery is nice, and there are opportunities for outdoor recreation. Real estate prices will, in inflation-adjusted terms, be much higher in most metro areas and places with natural beauty than they were in 2020 because the “supply” of those prime locations is almost fixed, whereas the demand for them is elastic and will rise thanks to population growth, rising incomes, and the aforementioned technology advancements.
  • Therapeutic cloning and stem cell therapies will become useful and will effectively extend human lifespan. For example, a 70-year-old with a failing heart will be able to have a new one grown in a lab using his own DNA, and then implanted into his chest to replace the failing original organ. The new heart will be equivalent to what he had when at age 18 years, so it will last another 52 years before it too fails. In a sense, this will represent age reversal to one part of his body. In a sense, this will represent age reversal to one part of his body.
  • As a result of the above technologies, it will be much rarer for people in rich countries to die waiting for organ transplants than it is now, in 2022.
  • The first healthy clone of an adult human will be born.
  • The cloning of cats and dogs will get cheap enough for middle income people to afford it. 
  • Many factories, farms, and supply chains will be 100% automated, and it will be common for goods to not be touched by a human being’s hands until they reach their buyers. Robots will deliver Amazon packages to your doorstep and even carry them into your house. Items ordered off the internet will appear inside your house a few hours later, as if by magic. 
  • Smaller versions of the robots used on automated farms will be available at low cost to average people, letting them effortlessly create backyard gardens. This will boost global food production and let people have greater control over where their food comes from and what it contains. 
  • The last of America’s Cold War-era weapon platforms (e.g. – the B-52 bomber, F-15 fighter, M1 Abrams tank, Nimitz aircraft carrier) will finally be retired from service. There will be instances where four generations of people from the same military family served on the same type of plane or ship. 
  • Cheap guided bullets, which can make midair course changes and be fired out of conventional man-portable rifles, will become common in advanced armies. 
  • Personal “cloaking devices” made of clothes studded with pinhole cameras and thin, flexible sheets of LEDs, colored e-ink, or some metamaterial with similar abilities will be commercially available. The cameras will monitor the appearance of the person’s surroundings and tell the display pixels to change their colors to match.
  • The “cloaking” outfits will also have benign applications related to fashion and everyday utility. People wearing them could use them to display morphing patterns and colors of their choice. It would even be possible to become a “walking TV.” The pixels could also be made to glow bright white, allowing the wearer to turn any part of his body into a flashlight. Ski masks made of the same material would let wearers change their facial features, fooling most face recognition cameras and certainly fooling the unaided eyes of humans, at least at a distance.
  • Powered exoskeletons will become practical for a wide range of applications, mainly due to improvements in batteries. For example, a disabled person could use a lightweight exoskeleton with a battery the size of a purse to walk around for a whole day on a single charge, and a soldier in a heavy-duty exoskeleton with a large backpack battery could do a day of marching on a single charge. (Note: Even though it will be technologically possible to equip infantrymen with combat exoskeletons, armies might reject the idea due to other impracticalities.)
  • There will be no technological or financial barrier to building powered combat exoskeletons that have cloaking devices. 
  • The richest person alive will achieve a $1 trillion net worth. [Moved to the 2040s due to shifting trends in inflation and net worth growth among the richest people.]
  • It will be technologically and financially feasible for small aircraft to produce zero net carbon emissions. The aircraft might use conventional engines powered by carbon-neutral synthetic fossil fuels that cost no more than normal fossil fuels, or they might have electric engines and very energy-dense batteries or fuel cells.
  • Cheap guided bullets, capable of midair course changes to hit targets and of being fired out of conventional rifles, will become common in advanced armies. (One or two degrees of course change per 100 meters of bullet travel is realistic. ) Practical, affordable rifles capable of limited self-aiming will also exist (similar to the “Smartgun” from the movie Aliens). Thanks to these technologies, an ordinary rifleman of the 2050s will be like the snipers of today.

2060s

  • Machines will be better at satisfyingly matching humans with fields of study, jobs, friends, romantic partners, hobbies, and daily activities than most humans can do for themselves. Machines themselves will make better friends, confidants, advisers, and even lovers than humans. Additionally, machines will be smarter and more skilled at humans in most areas of knowledge and types of work. A cultural sea change will happen, in which most humans come to trust, rely upon, defend, and love machines.
  • House robots and human-sized worker robots will be as strong, agile, and dexterous as most humans, and their batteries will be energy-dense enough to power them for most of the day. A typical American family might have multiple robot servants that physically follow around the humans each day to help with tasks. The family members will also be continuously monitored and “followed” by A.I.s embedded in their portable personal computing devices and possibly in their bodies. 
  • Cheap home delivery of groceries, robot chefs, and a vast trove of free online recipes will enable people in average households to eat restaurant-quality meals at home every day, at low cost. Predictive algorithms that can appropriately choose new meals for humans based on their known taste preferences and other factors will determine the menu, and many people will face a culinary “satisfaction paradox.”
  • Average people will have access to high-quality meals that only rich people can have today at fancy restaurants.
  • Machines will understand humans individually and at the species level better than humans understand themselves. They will have highly accurate personality models of most humans along with a comprehensive grasp of human sociology, human decision-making, human psychology, human cognitive biases, and human nature, and will pool the information to accurately predict human behavior. A nascent version of a 1:1 computer simulation of the Earth–with the human population modeled in great detail–will be created. An important application will be economic modeling and forecasting. 
  • Machines will be better teachers than most trained humans. The former will have much sharper grasps of their pupils’ individual strengths, weaknesses, interests, and learning styles, and will be able to create and grade tests in a much fairer and less biased manner than humans. Every person will have his own tutor. 
  • There will be a small, permanent human presence on the Moon.
  • If a manned Mars mission hasn’t happened yet, then there will be intense pressure to do so by the centennial of the first Moon landing (1969).
  • The worldwide number of supercentenarians–people who are at least 110 years old–will be sharply higher than it was in 2019: Their population size could be 10 times bigger or more. 
  • Advances in a variety of technologies will make it possible to cryonically freeze humans in a manner that doesn’t pulverize their tissue. However, the technology needed to safely thaw them out won’t be invented for decades. 
  • China will effectively close the technological, military, and standard of living gaps with other developed countries. Aside from the unpleasantness of being a more crowded place, life in China won’t be worse overall than life in Japan or the average European country. Importantly, China’s pollution levels will be much lower than they are today thanks to a variety of factors.
  • Small drones (mostly aerial) will have revolutionized warfare, terrorism, assassinations, and crime and will be mature technologies. An average person will be able to get a drone of some kind that can follow his orders to find and kill other people or to destroy things.
  • Countermeasures against those small drones will also have evolved, and might include defensive drones and mass surveillance networks to detect drone attacks early on. The networks would warn people via their body-worn devices of incoming drone attacks or of sightings of potentially hostile drones. The body-worn devices, such as smartphones and AR glasses, might even have their own abilities to automatically detect drones by sight and sound and to alert their wearers.
  • At least one large, manned spaceship that is designed to stay in space will exist, probably in the form of a reusable ferry that moves people between Earth and Mars.

2070s

  • There has been at least one incident where an AI, either deliberately or inadvertently, took an action that killed thousands of humans and caused billions of dollars in damage. However, the problem was contained by humans–who still control most of the world’s infrastructure and resources–and by AIs that stayed friendly to us. Our first experience with a hostile AGI or nonaligned AGI will not be cataclysmic, as it is in most sci-fi films about the topic. This success doesn’t mean our luck will last forever. 
  • 100 years after the U.S. “declared war” on cancer, there still will not be a “cure” for most types of cancer, but vaccination, early detection, treatment, and management of cancer will be vastly better, and in countries with modern healthcare systems, most cancer diagnoses will not reduce a person’s life expectancy. Consider that diabetes and AIDS were once considered “death sentences” that would invariably kill people within a few years of diagnosis, until medicines were developed that transformed them into treatable, chronic health conditions. 
  • Hospital-acquired infections will be far less of a problem than they are in 2020 thanks to better sterilization practices, mostly made possible by robots.
  • It will be technologically and financially feasible for large commercial aircraft to produce zero net carbon emissions. The aircraft might use conventional engines powered by synthetic fossil fuels, or they might have electric engines and very energy-dense batteries or fuel cells. 
  • Digital or robotic companions that seem (or actually are) intelligent, funny, and loving will be easier for humans to associate with than other humans.
  • Technology will enable the creation of absolute surveillance states, where all human behavior is either constantly monitored or is inferred with high accuracy based on available information. Even a person’s innermost thoughts will be knowable thanks to technologies that monitor him or her for the slightest things like microexpressions, twitches, changes in voice tone, and eye gazes. When combined with other data regarding how the person spends their time and money, it will be possible to read their minds. The Thought Police will be a reality in some countries.  
  • Thanks to mass surveillance, and the gathering and sharing of biometric data, you’ll never be a stranger to an intelligent machine or to a human with access to the right software and devices. For example, if you go on a vacation to a new country on the other side of the world, the android waiter at a restaurant will know your name and preferences after glancing at your face.
  • Thanks to advanced lab synthesis of foods, new spices, hybrid fruits and vegetables, and meats with entirely new taste profiles will be brought into existence. Swaths of the “landscape of all possible flavors” that are currently unexplored will be.
  • Many heavily automated farms (including indoor farms and gardens on suburban plots of land) will produce food that is noticeably tastier and measurably more nutritious that most of today’s food because the advanced farms won’t need to use pesticides or to favor crop varieties that are hardy enough to endure transport over long supply chains. At low cost and for little effort, communities and individuals with small amounts of land will be able to meet their own food needs locally. People who value “natural” lifestyles might, ironically, find it most beneficial to rely on robots to make their food for them.
  • Glasses-free 3D TVs will be almost fully developed technologies with few performance limitations. 
  • A slew of weapons technologies, including self-aiming guns, highly advanced scopes, and guided bullets, will give infantrymen incredible levels of battlefield potency. Common feats will include the doubling the maximum lethal range against human targets, sniper-like accuracy from rapid fire, the ability to shoot down low-flying aircraft, to cripple vehicles from long distances with bullets through their vital components like tires and gas tanks, and the disabling of tanks by destroying their fragile external sensors or sending bullets directly down the barrels of their main guns to hit the shells loaded in them.

2100

  • Humans probably won’t be the dominant intelligent life forms on Earth.
  • Latest possible time that AGI/SAI will be invented. By this point, computer hardware will so powerful that we could do 1:1 digital simulations of human brains. If our AI still falls far short of human-like general intelligence and creativity, then it might be that only organic substrates have the necessary properties to support them.
  • The worst case scenario is that AGI/Strong AI will have not been invented yet, but thousands of different types of highly efficient, task-specific Narrow AIs will have (often coupled to robot bodies), and they will fill almost every labor niche better than human workers ever could (“Death by a Thousand Cuts” job automation scenario). Humans grow up in a world where no one has to work, and the notion of drudge work, suffering through a daily commute, and involuntarily waking up at 6:00 am five days a week is unfathomable. Every human will have machines that constantly monitor them or follow them around, and meet practically all their needs.
  • Telepresence technology will also be very advanced, allowing humans to do nearly any task remotely, from any other place in the world, in safety and comfort. This will include cognitive tasks and hands-on tasks. If any humans still have jobs, they’ll be able to work from anywhere.
  • Sophisticated narrow AI will be integrated into the telepresence technology, providing human workers with real-time assistance with tasks. An illustrative scenario would have a human in Nigeria using a VR rig to remotely control a robot that is fixing an air conditioner in England. Software programs monitoring the live video feed would recognize all of the objects in the robot’s field of view and would also understand what the human worker was trying to accomplish, and the programs would help him by visually highlighting tools or air conditioner components, or by giving him verbal advice on what to do. 
  • The use of robotic surrogate bodies for remote work will also erase any employment gaps caused by physical strength and endurance differences between the sexes and between the elderly and the young. Small men, old people, and women of average stature will be just as good at performing hard manual labor as big men. The easing of physical strain associated with work will also allow people to work past today’s retirement age. However, most serious physical work will be best left to autonomous machines.
  • The world could in many ways resemble Ray Kurzweil’s predicted Post-Singularity world. However, the improvements and changes will have accrued thanks to decades of AGI/Strong AI steady effort. Everything will not instantly change on DD/MM/2045 as Kurzweil suggests it will.
  • At least one, non-aligned AGI has done serious damage to humans, comparable in terms of deaths and economic losses to a major natural disaster or small war. 
  • The global population of autonomous robots will be within an order of magnitude of the human population. It will be very common to see robots in homes, workplaces, public spaces, and even in wilderness areas.
  • The global population of AIs and digital uploads of dead humans is also within an order of magnitude of the human population.
  • Hundreds of millions, and possibly billions, of “digitally immortal avatars” of dead humans will exist, and you will be able to interact with them through a variety of means (in FIVR, through devices like earpieces and TV screens, in the real world if the avatar takes over an android body resembling the human it was based on). 
  • A weak sort of immortality will be available thanks to self-cloning, immortal digital avatars, and perhaps mind uploading. You could clone yourself and instruct your digital avatar–which would be a machine programmed with your personality and memories–to raise the clone and ensure it developed to resemble you. Your digital avatar might have an android body or could exist in a disembodied state. 
  • It will be possible to make clones of humans using only their digital format genomic data. In other words, if you had a .txt file containing a person’s full genetic code, you could use that by itself to make a living, breathing clone. Having samples of their cells would not be necessary. 
  • The “DNA black market” that arose in the 2030s will pose an even bigger threat since it will be now possible to use DNA samples alone or their corresponding .txt files to clone a person or to produce a sperm or egg cell and, in turn, a child. Potential abuses include random people cloning or having the children of celebrities they are obsessed with, or cloning billionaires in the hopes of milking the clones for money. Important people who might be targets of such thefts will go to pains to prevent their DNA from being known. Since dead people have no rights, third parties might be able to get away with cloning or making gametes of the deceased.
  • Life expectancy escape velocity and perhaps medical immortality will be achieved. It will come not from magical, all-purpose nanomachines that fix all your body’s cells and DNA, but from a combination of technologies, including therapeutic cloning of human organs, cybernetic replacements for organs and limbs, and stem cell therapies that regenerate ageing tissues and organs inside the patient’s body. The treatments will be affordable in large part thanks to robot doctors and surgeons who work almost for free, and to medical patents expiring.
  • All other aspects of medicine and healthcare will have radically advanced. There will be vaccines and cures for almost all contagious diseases. We will be masters of human genetic engineering and know exactly how to produce people that today represent the top 1% of the human race (holistically combining IQ, genetic health, physical attractiveness, and likable/prosocial personality traits). However, the value of even a genius-IQ human will be questionable since intelligent machines will be so much smarter.
  • Augmentative cybernetics (including direct brain-to-computer links) will exist and be in common use.
  • While the traditional, “pure” races of humans will all still exist, notions of “race” and racial identity will be scrambled by the large numbers of mixed-race people who will be alive, and by widespread genetic engineering that will give people combinations of physical traits that were almost unachievable through normal human breeding. Examples might include black people with naturally blue eyes, or East Asians with naturally blonde hair. (Voluntary genetic engineering will also ensure that redheads don’t ever die out.) Some people will even have totally new genes, either synthesized in labs or borrowed from animals, that give them physical traits not found in any preexisting human race, like red eyes or purple hair.
  • Full-immersion virtual reality (FIVR) will exist wherein AI game masters constantly tailor environments, NPCs and events to suit each player’s needs and to keep them entertained. Every human will have his own virtual game universe where he’s #1. With no jobs in the real world to occupy them, it’s quite possible that a large fraction of the human race will willingly choose to live in FIVR. (Related to the satisfaction paradox) Elements of these virtual environments could be pornographic and sexual, allowing people to gratify any type of sexual fetish or urge with computer-generated scenarios and partners. 
  • More generally, AIs and humans whose creativity is turbocharged by machines will create enjoyable, consumable content (e.g. – films, TV shows, songs, artwork, jokes, new types of meals) faster than non-augmented humans can consume it. As a simple example of what this will be like, assume you have 15 hours of free time per day, that you love spending it listening to music, and each day, your favorite bands produce 16 hours worth of new songs that you really like.
  • TVs will be capable of true holography, with no visual distortions or flaws. 
  • The vast majority of unaugmented human beings will no longer be assets that can invent things and do useful work: they will be liabilities that do (almost) everything worse than intelligent machines and augmented humans. Ergo, the size of a nation’s human population will subtract from its economic and military power, and radical shifts in geopolitics are possible. Geographically large but sparsely populated countries like Russia, Australia and Canada might become very strong.
  • The transition to green energy sources will be complete, and humans will no longer be net emitters of greenhouse gases. The means will exist to start reducing global temperatures to restore the Earth to its pre-industrial state, but people will resist because they will have gotten used to the warmer climate. People living in Canada and Russia won’t want their countries to get cold again.
  • Synthetic meat will taste no different from animal meat, and will be at least as cheap to make. The raising and/or killing of animals for food will be be illegal in many countries, and trends will clearly show the practice heading for worldwide ban. 
  • Meats that are expensive and/or rare today, like Kobe beef steaks, snakes, bats, or even human flesh, will be cheap and widely available thanks to meat synthesis technology. 
  • Cheap, synthetic chicken eggs will also exist and will taste no different from natural eggs. 
  • The means to radical alter human bodies, alter memories, and alter brain structures will be available. The fundamental bases of human existence and human social dynamics will change unpredictably once differences in appearance/attractiveness, intelligence, and personality traits can be eliminated at will. Individuals won’t be defined by fixed attributes anymore. 
  • The ability to delete bad memories and to control brain activity will cure many mental illnesses. 
  • Brain implants will make “telepathy” possible between humans, machines and animals. Computers, sensors and displays will be embedded everywhere in the built environment and in nature, allowing humans with brain implants to interface with and control things around them through thought alone. This doesn’t mean traditional ways of communicating and doing things (like speaking and physically pushing buttons or turning doorknobs) will die out. 
  • Brain implants and brain surgeries will also be used to enhance IQ, change personality traits, and strengthen many types of skills. 
  • Using brain-computer interfaces, people will be able to make sophisticated songs and pieces of artwork with their thoughts alone. 
  • For aesthetic and safety reasons, the overwhelming majority of humans who have brain or body implants will only have internal implants that are invisible to other people. “Borg-like” implants that protrude from a person’s skin will be rare.
  • Technologically augmented humans and androids will have many abilities and qualities that ancient people considered “Godlike,” such as medical immortality, the ability to control objects by thought, telepathy, perfect memories, and superhuman senses.
  • Flying cars designed to carry humans could be common, but they will be flown by machines, not humans. Ground vehicles will retain many important advantages (fuel efficiency, cargo capacity, safety, noise level, and more) and won’t become obsolete. Instead of flying cars, it’s more likely that there will be millions of small, autonomous helicopters and VTOL aircraft that will cheaply ferry people through dense, national networks of helipads and airstrips. Autonomous land vehicles would take take passengers to and from the landing sites. (https://www.militantfuturist.com/why-flying-cars-never-took-off-and-probably-never-will/
  • The notion of vehicles (e.g. – cars, planes, and boats) polluting the air will be an alien concept. 
  • Advanced nanomachines could exist.
  • Vastly improved materials and routine use of very advanced computer design simulations (including simulations done in quantum computers) will mean that manufactured objects of all types will be optimally engineered in every respect, and might seem to have “magical” properties. For example, a car will be made of hundreds of different types of alloys, plastics, and glass, each optimized for a different part of the vehicle, and car recalls will never happen since the vehicles will undergo vast amounts of simulated testing in every conceivable driving condition in 1:1 virtual simulations of the real world. 
  • Design optimization and the rise of AGI consumption will virtually eliminate planned obsolescence. Products that were deliberately engineered to fail after needlessly short periods, and “new” product lines that were no better than what they replaced, but had non-interchangeable part sizes would be exposed for what they were, and AGI consumers would refuse to buy them. Production will become much more efficient and far fewer things will be thrown out. 
  • Relatively cheap interplanetary travel (probably just to Mars and to space stations and moons that are about as far as Mars) will exist.
  • Androids that are outwardly indistinguishable from humans will exist, and humans will hold no advantages over them (e.g. – physical dexterity, fine motor control, appropriateness of facial expressions, capacity for creative thought). Some androids will also be indistinguishable to the touch, meaning they will seem to be made of supple flesh and will be the same temperature as human bodies. However, their body parts will not be organic.
  • Sex robots will be indistinguishable from humans.
  • Android assassins like the T-800s from the Terminator films will exist. They will look identical to humans, will be able to blend into human populations, track down targets, and kill or abduct them. As in the films, these androids will be stronger, more durable, and more skilled with weapons than we are.
  • Some robots will carry drones meant to detach from them to autonomously perform specific tasks and then return. Some will also be able to detach their body parts (like a hand) to do the same. 
  • Robots that are outwardly identical to sci-fi and fantasy characters and extinct animals, like grey aliens, elves, fairies, giant house cats, and dinosaurs, will exist and will occasionally be seen in public. Some weird person will want their robot butler to look like bigfoot, and at least one hobbyist will build a life-sized robotic dragon that can fly and spit fire.
    https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/503967/could-game-throness-dragons-really-fly-we-asked-some-experts 
  • Humans interested in extreme body modifications will be able to surgically alter themselves to look like many of those creatures.
  • Machines that are outwardly indistinguishable from animals will also exist, and they will have surveillance and military applications. 
  • Drones, miniaturized smart weapons, and AIs will dominate warfare, from the top level of national strategy down to the simplest act of combat. The world’s strongest military could, with conventional weapons alone, destroy most of the world’s human population in a short period of time. 
  • It will be possible for one country to build an army of killer robots that equals the size of the whole human population. 
  • The construction and daily operation of prisons will have been fully automated, lowering the monetary costs of incarceration. As such, state prosecutors and judges will no longer feel pressure to let accused criminals have plea deals or to give them shorter prison sentences to ease the burdens of prison overcrowding and high overhead costs. 
  • The term “millionaire” will fall out of use in the U.S. and other Western countries since inflation will have rendered $1 million USD only as valuable as $90,000 USD was in 2019 (assuming a constant inflation rate of 3.0%).
  • There will still be major wealth and income inequality across the human race. However, wealth redistribution, better government services, advances in industrial productivity, and better technologies will ensure that even people in the bottom 1% have all their basic and intermediate life needs meet. In many ways, the poor people of 2100 will have better lives than the rich people of 2020.

2101 – 2200 AD

  • Humans will definitely stop being the dominant intelligent life forms on Earth. 
  • Many “humans” will be heavily augmented through genetic engineering, other forms of bioengineering, and cybernetics. People who outwardly look like the normal humans of today might actually have extensive internal modifications that give them superhuman abilities. Non-augmented, entirely “natural” humans like people in 2019 will be looked down upon in the same way you might today look at a very low IQ person with sensory impairments. Being forced by your biology to incapacitate yourself for 1/3 of each day to sleep will be tantamount to having a medical disability. 
  • Due to a reduced or nonexistent need for sleep among intelligent machines and augmented humans and to the increased interconnectedness of the planet, global time zones will become much less relevant. It will be common for machines, humans, businesses, and groups to use the same clock–probably Coordinated Universal Time (UTC)–and for activity to proceed on a 24/7 basis, with little regard of Earth’s day/night cycle. 
  • Physical disabilities and defects of appearance that cause untold anguish to people in 2019 will be easily and cheaply fixable. For example, male-pattern baldness and obesity will be completely ameliorated with minor medical interventions like pills or outpatient surgery. Missing or deformed limbs will be easily replaced, all types of plastic surgery (including sex reassignment) will be vastly better and cheaper than today, and spinal cord damage will be totally repairable. The global “obesity epidemic” will disappear. Transsexual people will be able to seamlessly alter their bodies to conform with their preferred genders, or to alter their brains so their gender identities conform with the bodies they were born with. 
  • These advanced body modification abilities will partly be thanks to medical micro- and nanomachines that will be able to travel through a person’s bloodstream and flesh, and to precisely kill small groups of cells (including bone) or stimulate cell proliferation. Over the course of a few sessions, a person could finely sculpt their nose, cheeks or private parts to match whatever they wanted. Genetic engineering for beauty will probably become less important as a result. 
  • All sleep disorders will be curable thanks to cybernetics that can use electrical pulses to quickly initiate sleep states in human brains. The same kinds of technologies will also reduce or eliminate the need for humans to sleep, and for people to control their dreams. 
  • Brain-computer interfaces will let people control, pre-program, and, to a limited extent, record their dreams. 
  • Through electrical signaling and chemical releases, the brain implants will be able to induce any type of mental or emotional state. This will include altered states of consciousness, like lucid dreaming, meditation, or intoxication (as a result, mind-altering drugs could become obsolete). A person might have to go through a “calibration period” where the implants would monitor and record their brain activity while they experienced different things, and then, the user would experiment with the implant to see how well it could induce the recorded brain states. Through a process of guided trial and error, they would become masters of their own minds. This ability would make human life richer and more productive, as people could have valuable experiences during portions of the day when they would otherwise be bored or “switched off,” and to even do useful problem-solving tasks in their sleep. Alternatively, the ability to induce feelings of blinding pleasure could lead to a major addiction problem among humans, and widen the productivity/usefulness gap between our species and intelligent machines.
  • Direct brain-to-computer interfaces and other advanced technologies will let humans enter virtual reality worlds that seem no different from the real world (the “Matrix scenario”), and to remotely control robot bodies located anywhere in the real world, with fully lifelike levels of sensory richness and fusion. Able to control perfect robot bodies of any design in the real world, and to take on any form in virtual worlds, some humans will have no use for real, fixed-form bodies, and will dispense with them, instead existing as “brains in jars.”  
  • Some “humans” will lack fixed, corporeal forms; they will be able to extensively modify their original bodies or to switch bodies at will. A person could take the form of something nonhuman, like a terrestrial squid. They exist as disembodied, cybernetically enhanced brains in life support containers that can assume control over any physical bodies they want, either by remotely controlling them through the internet, or by physically inserting their life support containers into matching slots in the bodies.
  • The line between “biological” and “synthetic” will blur as artificial objects take on some of the properties of organic matter and as they are integrated into originally biological life forms. Examples include humans who have artificial limbs and organs that are soft, supple, and interface with their nervous systems as well as natural limbs and organs; humans whose bodies contain special lines of cells meant to save and store non-genomic data as DNA; cybernetic implants that are soft and capable of growing inside a person’s body; machines that can heal their own bodies; and microscopic, self-reproducing machines that can thrive indefinitely in human bodies, in wild animals, or in other life forms and even be transferred between individuals, like benign diseases.
  • Brain implants will let humans merge minds with each other, AIs and animals. 
  • People will “download” memories and sensory experiences for pleasure and self-betterment. Some of the content will be recordings of actual experiences, while other content will be fully synthetic. 
  • Significant numbers of people will know what death is like, either because they died and were resuscitated with advanced medical technology, because they were revived from cryostasis, or because they downloaded a memory of someone else dying.
  • Almost all of today’s diseases will be cured.
  • The means to halt and reverse human aging will be created. The human population will come to be dominated by people who are eternally young and beautiful. 
  • Augmented females will have the natural ability to suspend and control their monthly fertility cycles.
  • Humans and machines will be immortal. Intelligent beings will find it terrifying and tragic to contemplate what it was like for humans in the past, who lived their lives knowing they were doomed to deteriorate and die. Today’s humans will be seen as deeply flawed and limited creatures, at the mercy of their instincts and small brains, and condemned to deal with random genetic flaws and chronic health problems they were randomly given at birth. 
  • Extreme longevity, better reproductive technologies that eliminate the need for a human partner to have children, and robots that do domestic work and provide companionship (including sex) will weaken the institution of marriage more than any time in human history. An indefinite lifetime of monogamy will be impossible for most people to commit to. 
  • At reasonable cost, it will be possible for women to create healthy, genetically related children at any point in their lives, and without using the 2019-era, pre-menopausal egg freezing technique. For example, a 90-year-old, menopausal woman will be able to use reproductive technologies to make a baby that shares 50% of her DNA. 
  • Opposite-sex human clones will exist. Such a clone would share 22-1/2 of their 23 chromosome pairs with their “original.” Only the final sex chromosome, which would be either a “Y” or a second “X”, would differ.  
  • Immortality, the automation of work, and widespread material abundance will completely transform lifestyles. With eternity to look forward to, people won’t feel pressured to get as rich as possible as quickly as possible. As stated, marriage will no longer be viewed as a lifetime commitment, and serial monogamy will probably become the norm. Relationships between parents and offspring will change as longevity erases the disparities in generational outlook and maturity that traditionally characterize parent-child interpersonal dynamics (e.g. – 300-year-old dad doesn’t know any better than his 270-year-old son). The “factory model” of public education–defined by conformity, rote memorization, frequent intelligence testing, and curricula structured to serve the needs of the job market–will disappear. The process of education will be custom-tailored to each person in terms of content, pacing, and style of instruction. Students will be much freer to explore subjects that interest them and to pursue those that best match their talents and interests. 
  • Radically extended human lifespans mean it will become much more common to have great-grandparents around. A cure for aging will also lead to families where members separated in age by many decades look the same age and have the same health. Additionally, older family members won’t be burdensome since they will be healthy.
  • The human population might start growing again thanks to medical immortality, to advanced fertility technologies including artificial wombs and cloning, and to robots that help raise children, reducing the workload for human parents. The human race won’t die out thanks to persistently low birthrates.
  • Thanks to radical genetic engineering, there will be “human-looking,” biological people among us that don’t belong to our species, Homo sapiens. Examples could include engineered people who have 48 chromosomes instead of 46, people whose genomes have been shortened thanks to the deletion of junk DNA, or people who look outwardly human but who have radically different genes within their 46 chromosomes, so they have different numbers or arrangements of internal organs (like two hearts), or even new types of internal organs, such as bird-like lung . Such people wouldn’t be able to naturally breed with Homo sapiens, and would belong to new hominid species. 
  • Extinct species for which we have DNA samples (ex – from passenger pigeons on display in a museum) will be “resurrected” using genetic technology.
  • The global mass surveillance network will encompass unpopulated areas and wilderness areas, protecting animals from poaching. Extinctions of large, wild animals will stop.
  • Large animal attacks on humans will become incredibly rare thanks to technologies like the global mass surveillance network foreseeing and preventing hostile encounters. Entire populations of large animal species could also have permanent tracking devices.
  • The technology for safely thawing humans out of cryostasis and returning them to good health will be created. 
  • Suspended animation will become a viable alternative to suicide. Miserable people could “put themselves under,” with instructions to not be revived until the ill circumstances that tormented them had disappeared or until cures for their mental and medical problems were found. 
  • A sort of “time travel” will become possible thanks to technology. Suspended animation will let people turn off their consciousnesses until any arbitrary date in the future. From their perspective, no time will have elapsed between being frozen and being thawed out, even if hundreds of years actually passed between those two events, meaning the suspended animation machine will subjectively be no different from a time machine to them. FIVR paired with data from the global surveillance networks will let people enter highly accurate computer simulations of the past. The data will come from sources like old maps, photos, videos, and the digital avatars of people, living and dead. The computers simulations of past eras will get less accurate as the dates get more distant and the data scarcer.
  • It will be possible to upload human minds to computers. The uploads will not share the same consciousness as their human progenitors, and will be thought of as “copies.” Mind uploads will be much more sophisticated than the digitally immortal avatars that will come into existence in the 2030s.
  • Different types of AGIs with fundamentally different mental architectures will exist. For example, some AGIs will be computer simulations of real human brains, while others will have totally alien inner workings. Just as a jetpack and a helicopter enable flight through totally different approaches, so will different types of AGIs be capable of intelligent thought. 
  • Gold, silver, and many other “precious metals” will be worth far less than today, adjusting for inflation, because better ways of extracting (including from seawater) them will have been developed. Space mining might also massively boost supplies of the metals, depressing prices. Diamonds will be nearly worthless thanks to better techniques for making them artificially. 
  • The first non-token quantities of minerals derived from asteroid mining will be delivered to the Earth’s surface. (Finding an asteroid that contains valuable minerals, altering its orbit to bring it closer to Earth, and then waiting for it to get here will take decades. No one will become a trillionaire from asteroid mining until well into the 22nd century.)
  • Synthetic life forms will colonize parts of the world uninhabitable to humans, like mountaintops, oceans (both on the surface and under it), and maybe even underground regions. Intelligent and semi-intelligent machines will be common sights, even in remote areas.
  • Intelligent life from Earth will colonize the entire Solar System, all dangerous space objects in our System will be found, the means to deflect or destroy them will be created, and intelligent machines will redesign themselves to be immune to the effects of radiation, solar flares, gamma rays, and EMP. As such, natural phenomena (including global warming) will no longer threaten the existence of civilization.  Intelligent beings will find it terrifying and tragic to contemplate what it was like for humans in the past, who were confined to Earth and at the mercy of planet-killing disasters. 
  • “End of the World” prophecies will become far less relevant since civilization will have spread beyond Earth and could be indefinitely self-sustaining even if Earth were destroyed. Some conspiracy theorists and religious people would deal with this by moving on to belief in “End of the Solar System” prophecies, but these will be based on extremely tenuous reasoning. 
  • The vast majority of intelligent life forms outside of Earth will be nonhuman. 
  • A self-sustaining, off-world industrial base will be created.
  • It will be possible to safely smoke cigarettes in more advanced types of space ships. 
  • Spy satellites with lenses big enough to read license plates and discern facial features will be in Earth orbit. 
  • Space probes made in our Solar System and traveling at sub-light speeds will reach nearby stars.
  • All of the useful knowledge and great works of art that our civilization has produced or discovered could fit into an advanced memory storage device the size of a thumb drive. It will be possible to pair this with something like a self-replicating Von Neumann Probe, creating small, long-lived machines that would know how to rebuild something exactly like our civilization from scratch. Among other data, they would have files on how to build intelligent machines and cloning labs, and files containing the genomes and mind uploads of billions of unique humans and non-human organisms. Copies of existing beings and of long-dead beings could be “manufactured” anywhere, and loaded with the personality traits and memories of their predecessors. Such machines could be distributed throughout our Solar System as an “insurance policy” against our extinction, or sent to other star systems to seed them with life. Some of the probes could also be hidden in remote, protected locations on Earth.
  • We will find out whether alien life exists on Mars and the other celestial bodies in our Solar System. 
  • Intelligent machines will get strong enough to destroy the human race, though it’s impossible to assign odds to whether they’ll choose to do so.
  • If the “Zoo Hypothesis” is right, and if intelligent aliens have decided not to talk to humans until we’ve reached a high level of intellect, ethics, and culture, then the machine-dominated civilization that will exist on Earth this century might be advanced enough to meet their standards. Uncontrollable emotions and impulses, illogical thinking, tribalism, self-destructive behavior, and fear of the unknown will no longer govern individual and group behavior. Aliens could reveal their existence knowing it wouldn’t cause pandemonium. 
  • The government will no longer be synonymous with slowness and incompetence since all bureaucrats will be replaced by machines.
  • Technology will be seamlessly fused with humans, other biological organisms, and the environment itself.  
  • It will be cheaper and more energy-efficient to grow or synthesize almost all types of food in labs or factories than to grow and harvest it in traditional, open-air farms. Shielded from the weather and pests and not dependent on soil quality, the amounts and prices of foods will be highly consistent over time, and worries about farmland muscling out or polluting natural ecosystems will vanish. Animals will no longer be raised for food. Not only will this benefit animals, but it will benefit humans since it will eliminate a a major source of communicable disease (e.g. – new influenza strains originate in farm animals and, thanks to close contact with human farmers, evolve to infect people thanks to a process called “zoonosis”).
  • Additionally, the means will exist to cheaply and artificially produce non-edible organic products, like wool and wood, in industrial quantities. This means anyone will be able to buy animal products that are very expensive today, like snakeskin boots or bear rugs. Unlimited quantities of perfectly simulated animal products that have useful properties, like pillow feathers (softness) or high-grade wool (heat insulation), will be available, and no animals will need to be harmed to make them. This will greatly help endangered species that are poached for their parts, like elephants killed for their ivory tusks. Lab-synthesized wood that is superior to “old-growth” timber will also exist.
  • The ability to cheaply make large quantities of organic products will lead to the creation of bizarre objects that no one conceived of before, like vehicle frames made of single pieces of bone.
  • A global network of sensors and drones will identify and track every non-microscopic species on the planet. Cryptids like “bigfoot” and the “Loch Ness Monster” will be definitively proven to not exist. The monitoring network will also make it possible to get highly accurate, real-time counts of entire species populations. Mass gathering of DNA samples–either taken directly from organisms or from biological residue they leave behind–will also allow the full genetic diversity of all non-microscopic species to be known. 
  • That same network of sensors and machines will let us monitor the health of all the planet’s ecosystems and to intervene to protect any species. Interventions could include mass, painless sterilizations of species that are throwing the local ecology out of balance, mass vaccinations of species suffering through disease epidemics, reintroductions of extinct species, or widescale genetic engineering of a species. 
  • The technology and means to implement David Pearce’s global “benign stewardship” of nonhuman organic life will become available.  (https://youtu.be/KDZ3MtC5Et8) After millennia of inflicting damage and pain to the environment and other species, humanity will have a chance to inaugurate an era free of suffering.
  • The means will exist to harmlessly control animal populations, predation, and to greatly ease animal suffering. 
  • The same medical treatments that radically extend human lifespans will also be used on pets. Fifty-year-old dogs and cloned cats that are the sixth in their lineage will exist. 
  • The mass surveillance network will also look skyward and see all anomalous atmospheric phenomena and UFOs.
  • Robots will clean up all of the garbage created in human history. 
  • Every significant archaeological site will be excavated and every shipwreck found. There will be no work left for people in the antiquities. 
  • Dynamic traffic lane reversal will become the default for all major roadways, sharply increasing road capacity without compromising safety. Autonomous cars that can instantly adapt to changes in traffic direction and that can easily avoid hitting each other even at high speeds will enable the transformation.
  • The Imperial system of weights and measures will fall out of use worldwide. Intelligent machines and posthumans will be able to switch to Metric without a problem. The same nimbleness of mind might also let them break from the ingrained traditions created by past humans and adopt other new standards, like new alphabets, numerals, and languages. 

Interesting articles, December 2023

North Korea has sold hundreds of thousands of artillery shells to Russia, and it has been making a difference in the Ukraine War. However, North Korea will probably exhaust its stockpiles of surplus shells next year, after which point its transfers to Russia will slow to a trickle.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/ghost-ships-reawakened-north-korea-210000233.html

Last March, the E.U. promised to give Ukraine 1 million artillery shells over the next year. It’s been eight months, and the actual number transferred is 300,000. The E.U. admits it will fall short of the 1 million goal by March 2024.
https://www.politico.eu/article/arms-makers-cant-drop-exports-to-meet-ukraine-ammo-target-says-defense-agency-chief/

Ukraine’s amphibious attacks across the Dnipro River have been expensive failures.
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/ukraine-situation-report-troops-question-dnipro-river-assault

A Ukrainian cruise missile attack sank a Russian warship that was docked. Dozens of sailors died.
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/full-devastation-from-cruise-missile-attack-on-russian-ship-coming-into-view

The identities of 40,599 Russians who died fighting in Ukraine have been confirmed by third parties. The list of names is not exhaustive, and the true death count is probably around 50,000. That means Russia is on track to lose as many men in Ukraine in two years as America lost in Vietnam in 10 years.
https://en.zona.media/article/2022/05/20/casualties_eng

Israeli troops accidentally shot three of their countrymen dead in Gaza while they were fleeing from their Hamas captors, leading to protests on the home front and accusations that Israeli soldiers often kill Palestinian civilians in the same manner.
https://apnews.com/article/israel-hostages-gaza-hamas-war-52fa9628e6284cdad6d7f7db6cc30742

Israel’s warplanes have dropped several 2,000 lbs bombs on the Gaza Strip, probably leading to excess deaths considering how crowded it is there.
https://www.cnn.com/gaza-israel-big-bombs/index.html

New evidence shows that Hamas didn’t abduct Noa Argamani–a woman made infamous by footage of her being literally dragged into Gaza by a gang of men–a random group of Gazan men did. After hearing that Israel’s defenses were down on October 7, impromptu gangs of AVERAGE CITIZENS took advantage of the situation by going across the border to kill and kidnap people from Israel.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/noa-argamani-israel-hamas-hostages-nova-music-festival-rcna129792

At the highest levels, the U.S. government is turning against Israel’s invasion of Gaza.
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/12/12/biden-says-netanyahu-has-to-change-00131399

153 out of 186 countries in the U.N. voted in favor of an immediate cease-fire between Israel and Gaza. The U.S. voted against because the language of the resolution didn’t also denounce Hamas’ violence against Israelis on October 7.
https://www.npr.org/2023/12/12/1218927939/un-general-assembly-gaza-israel-resolution-cease-fire-us

A majority of Venezuelans voted in favor of annexing the oil-rich western half of their neighbor, Guyana. However, Venezuela’s military is probably too weak to take it over. If it tried anyway, the diplomatic blowback and possible counterattack from the U.S. would cause too much damage to make it worth it.
https://youtu.be/mWSE9dPEx6Y?si=99L48-b1tNxCaFks

Italy has left China’s Belt and Road Initiative.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/12/6/italy-leaving-chinas-belt-and-road-initiative-reports

The Turks committed mass murders of Armenians even before the 1915 Genocide.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamidian_massacres

Twelve years after the fall of Qaddafi, Libya is still a mess. The populated, northwestern chunk is led by the “Government of National Accord,” most of the east and middle is controlled by General Haftar and a puppet government he created, and the far south is controlled by local tribes.
https://www.gisreportsonline.com/r/europe-mistakes-libya/

The threat of Trump withdrawing the U.S. from NATO if he wins reelection is real. Though the Constitution requires a 2/3 affirmative vote in the Senate for the U.S. to join an international treaty, it has no rules for leaving a treaty. In practice, the President can unilaterally do it.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/09/us/politics/trump-2025-nato.html

The U.S. and Finland signed a defense treaty that gives U.S. troops extensive access to Finnish territory.
https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202312/19/WS6580f130a31040ac301a862e.html

A man was almost killed when an RPG-7 he was firing as a YouTube stunt malfunctioned. The rocket exploded right in front of his face.
https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/25087438/horror-moment-youtuber-rocket-launcher-explode/

This video of a .50 caliber rifle bullet hitting a fake human torso shows the round’s devastating terminal ballistics. However, I’m actually surprised it isn’t worse.
https://youtu.be/fUOh7a0cdUw?si=vqMNW960m9Pciok0

The rise of social media has busted so many myths, including those about guns. The AR-15 got a reputation for unreliability in the Vietnam War, and is still considered to be less reliable than the AK-47 by average people. In fact, all of the former rifle’s problems were fixed decades ago, and it’s an excellent weapon and is better than the AK-47. Militaries of countries allied with the U.S. should just switch to using our rifle, without any modifications. To that end, in this video, a cheap ($399) AR-15 fires flawlessly in spite of being dunked in mud.

The new myth that needs to be busted is the existence of anything but a weak correlation between the price of a gun and its quality. For example, an $800 AR-15 is not twice as accurate, twice as durable, or half as heavy as the $399 AR-15 shown in this video. Past a certain price point, you’re purely wasting your money. A lot of gun nuts who like bragging about their boutique weapons will be disturbed to discover how low that price cutoff is.
https://youtu.be/27R5bKu5Myo?si=0RVvEUUA4P0fgO9Q

The inventor of the Glock handgun died at 94. Replacing metal with plastic for the major parts of guns was the last, big innovation in firearms technology.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12906249/Glock-handguns-reclusive-inventor-Gaston-Glock-94-dies-Billionaire-knocked-professional-wrestler-assassin-sent-kill-aged-70-revolutionised-world-small-arms.html

In WWI, the different sides had different kinds of artillery pieces with their own strengths and weaknesses.
https://youtu.be/aPfZ84RB2AA?si=wIc-u6WWBFIr-z14

The video game Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 has a multiplayer combat mode called “Swarm Killstreak,” in which players fight with a swarm of air-dropped mini-drones. It depicts something I envisioned years ago, and which takes a page from the WWII “Bat Bomb” concept.
https://youtu.be/_Fl1XJhmf0k?si=lf7PDh9aZ9LEnDXW

The 2011 game Crysis 2 was set in 2023.

‘The player assumes the control of a Force Recon Marine named “Alcatraz”, who gains ownership of the Nanosuit 2.0 from Army Delta Force officer Laurence “Prophet” Barnes, who returns from the original Crysis. CryNet Systems has been hunting Prophet to retrieve the suit, inadvertently pursuing Alcatraz, believing he is Prophet. The aliens seen in the original game have undergone a major redesigning, abandoning the ancient, tentacled exosuits seen in the first game for high-tech humanoid armored war machines that stalk Alcatraz through the ravaged New York City.’
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crysis_2

The 2000 game Perfect Dark was also set in 2023.

‘Perfect Dark is set in an alternate 2023 against the backdrop of an interstellar war between two alien races:[18] the Maians, who resemble the archetypal Grey alien, and the Skedar, reptile-like creatures who use a cloaking device to appear human. On Earth, there is an ongoing rivalry between two companies: The Carrington Institute, a research centre founded by Daniel Carrington that secretly operates an espionage group in league with the Maians; and dataDyne, a defence contractor corporation headed by Cassandra de Vries. In exchange for creating an AI with code-breaking abilities to access an ancient alien spacecraft at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean, the Skedar agree to supply dataDyne with enough alien technology to become the biggest corporation on Earth.’
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perfect_Dark

100 years ago, a British book series called To-day and To-morrow made a large number of predictions about the future, some of which were very accurate.
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20231212-to-day-and-to-morrow-the-100-year-old-series-that-predicted-a-wild-and-wonderful-future

Here’s a roundup of the worst political predictions of 2023.
https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2023/12/29/2023-worst-political-predictions-00132568

In November 2022, Bank of America Global Research predicted that the S&P 500 would not rise beyond 4,000 by the end of 2023. At the time, it was 3,963.94.

In reality, the S&P 500 is now 4,773.50, so if you’d done the opposite of what “the experts” had said, you would have increased your money by almost 20% in just a year.
https://news.yahoo.com/bank-of-america-us-equity-outlook-stock-market-165556408.html

Now, Bank of America Global Research predicts the S&P 500 will reach 5,000 by the end of 2024, and that an economic “soft landing” will be achieved, meaning no recession.
https://newsroom.bankofamerica.com/content/newsroom/press-releases/2023/11/bofa-global-research-calls-2024–the-year-of-the-landing–.html

UBS, which is no less credible than Bank of America, predicts the U.S. will fall into a recession by mid-2024.
https://www.businessinsider.com/stock-market-outlook-2024-recession-fed-interest-rate-cuts-ubs-2023-11

In reality, the experts probably have no clue how the economy will perform in 2024.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/23/business/wall-st-loves-to-guess-but-nobody-knows-what-the-market-will-do-in-2024.html

There are industrial scale clothes washers that are like a huge Archimedes’ Screw divided into smaller internal compartments.
https://youtu.be/_amWLDj9H6o?si=-1ZQjHaiMJDUVoiz

This series of animations shows how the first steam engines evolved from even simpler designs.
https://rootsofprogress.org/steam-engine-origins

‘Electrified vehicles – either fully electric models, plug-in hybrids or full hybrids – accounted for over 47.6% of all new passenger car registrations in the EU as of November, up from 43% in the same period last year, the European Automobile Manufacturers Association (ACEA) said.’
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/nearly-half-passenger-cars-eu-070341617.html

“Hyperloop One,” which sought to revolutionize transit by building vacuum tubes wide enough to fit car-sized vehicles, is shutting down. Elon Musk and Richard Branson were directly involved with the concept.
https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-67801235

The Xprize has been mostly successful spurring innovation.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xprize_Foundation

The U.S. is now producing more oil than any country in history.
https://www.cnn.com/2023/12/19/business/us-production-oil-reserves-crude/index.html

It might be possible to defuse volcanoes to prevent them from erupting.
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20231221-volcano-geoengineering-eruption-lava-iceland-reykjanes

Because the Earth spins on its axis, it isn’t a perfect sphere: the equatorial belt bulges out. This imperfection in turn means that the distance between two neighboring parallels of latitude increases as you travel from the equator towards either pole.
https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-distance-between-the-parallels-of-latitude

From 2014. “Automated hypothesis generation” has been around for awhile, and was allegedly useful even nine years ago.
https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2014/10/04/computer-says-try-this

“Nudify” apps that can “digitally undress” people in photos are becoming widespread. It won’t be long before deep learning algorithms can deduce with high accuracy what a person’s nude body looks like based on photos of them with clothes on. The more photos you upload, the more accurate the simulation will get. And if you could get a DNA sample from a napkin they threw away or something, it would be super accurate.
https://time.com/6344068/nudify-apps-undress-photos-women-artificial-intelligence/

During a live press conference open to members of the public, a deepfake version of Putin asked the real Putin a question.
https://youtu.be/bhyKblF2NB4?si=RS8Yw24FzrqBKyaA

Pakistan’s former prime minister is using an AI voice clone to campaign from prison
https://www.theverge.com/2023/12/18/24006968/imran-khan-ai-pakistan-prime-minister-voice-clone-elevenlabs

This video’s prediction that there will be “artificial actors” who are composites of traits from human actors, optimized for specific character roles, is intriguing. Imagine those invented AI characters being so appealing that we eventually transplant them into android bodies so they can walk among us. And at a more basic level, since machines are already super strong and it’s widely accepted they will also be super smart someday, why not also assume they will be superior in the domains of personality? Super noble, super empathetic, super courageous, super funny? They’ll be more interesting and desirable than fellow humans, and if we put their minds in android bodies, those will be more appealing that average human bodies as well.
https://youtu.be/V2b5ScHpmKo?si=juAyBuWUuCvlDVQL

Google unveiled its “Gemini” narrow AI, though some wind was taken out of their sails when it was revealed that the very impressive demo video was largely faked.
https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2023/12/google-admits-it-fudged-a-gemini-ai-demo-video-which-critics-say-misled-viewers/

ALL of today’s advanced chatbots have a left-leaning bias except for Mistral.
https://trackingai.org/

The CEO of Anthropic, Dario Amodei, seems to believe that the Turing Test will be passed in 2 – 3 years.
https://youtu.be/Nlkk3glap_U?si=GKVpaA1mf4rCS_Kz&t=1671

Meta’s Chief AI Scientist Yann LeCun talks about the future of artificial intelligence
https://youtu.be/Ah6nR8YAYF4?si=FrZ_LUEKDWXJT-Mr

The Midjourney image generator was first released in February 2022. Its outputs were coarse at first, but have rapidly improved thanks to upgrades to its programming and training data. The latest version of it can create nearly lifelike, accurate images.

From 10 years ago: “Mars One wants to land the first group (two men and two women, ideally from four different continents, says CEO Bas Lansdorp) on the red planet in 2023, with the other groups following one at a time, every two years. Applications close August 31, 2013.”
https://www.popsci.com/science/article/2013-04/apply-now-one-way-trip-mars/

Jokes aside, I think the 2040s is an achievable timeframe for landing the first humans on Mars. It’s been made possible by Elon Musk bringing down the cost of space flight so much, and his development of the Starship rocket, which could transport a space ship with room for several astronauts to Mars.

The best way to colonize Venus might be to build floating cloud cities.
https://youtu.be/Y7Q2lCrZY6Q?si=VgSyidJNkFCOIGRz

Sabine Hossenfelder thinks faster-than-light travel could be possible.
https://youtu.be/9-jIplX6Wjw?si=j_INh_pduzlTVzr3

The famous “Gimbal” UFO video shows an object with anomalous flight characteristics.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1uoORs8rVfOGUYHTAOWn32A5bLA0jckuU/view?

The UFO sighted by U.S. Navy ships and fighter pilots in a different 2004 encounter violated the known laws of physics and engineering.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1WgURI1Fzrkij3utVvcPISGTyEUNX4Z0J/view

A computer program called “X-Raydar” proved itself as good as human radiologists at correctly interpreting chest X-ray images.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ckdpg5p820xo

‘The estimate is that AlphaFold structures have somewhere between 7 and 20% of the side chain residues in an incorrect orientation – sometimes slightly off, sometimes way off. Those percentages seem to be the same for functional side chains as well as ones that are away from the action.

…That makes the current state of the art in protein structure prediction very useful as a hypothesis generator (and far beyond anything we had before), but it also means that, at least as we move into 2024, that it cannot replace experimental data, either. My own guess is that improvements in accuracy may turn out to be a sort of “last mile” problem that is unlikely to be solved by the sort of sudden advances that got us this far. ‘
https://www.science.org/content/blog-post/alphafold-s-place-world

Thanks to a phenomenon called “crossing over” that occurs during the production of sperm and eggs, the amount of DNA you share with any individual ancestor can deviate from the expected quantum. For example, while 50% of your DNA is from your father and 50% is from your mother, you might share 24% with your paternal grandfather and 26% with your paternal grandmother.

A slight, multigenerational skewing of the inheritance ratio can result in you actually sharing no DNA with some famous ancestor that you brag about being connected to.
https://gcbias.org/2017/12/19/1628/
https://www.genome.gov/genetics-glossary/Crossing-Over

It’s actually not true that all siblings share 50% of their genes. Thanks to the random reassortment of genes that happens during meiosis (the biological process that makes sperm and eggs), it’s possible for two full siblings to share as little as 40% and as much as 60% of their DNA (though that’s only the case for about 1% of sibling pairs). 50% is merely the population-wide average.
https://www.discovermagazine.com/the-sciences/why-siblings-differ-differently

A lesbian couple that wanted to have kids used IVF to fertilize both of their eggs with sperm from the same male donor. To better achieve closeness with their children, the women then impregnated themselves with one of the other partner’s zygotes.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12897223/Couple-expecting-sons.html

Over 1 million unused fertilized human eggs are in cold storage at IVF clinics.
https://www.wsj.com/lifestyle/relationships/adoption-invitro-foster-care-surrogacy-17400499

‘The world’s largest collection of full human genomes has just gone live. UK Biobank — a repository of health, genomic and other biological data — today released complete genome sequences from every one of the 500,000 British volunteers in the database.’
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-03763-3

For the first time, the FDA has approved gene editing treatments for disease. Both of them target sickle cell anemia. Just one treatment is probably enough to cure someone permanently, but it costs $2-3 million.
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2023/12/08/1217123089/fda-approves-first-gene-editing-treatments-for-human-illness

Contrary to the mainstream narrative, people with mental disorders are more likely to be the victims of violence AND the perpetrators of violence than mentally healthy people. Even having anxiety or depression–two very common mental illnesses–raise the odds you will commit violence against someone.
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapsychiatry/fullarticle/2758324

The human body contains several vestigial parts. Whenever radical genetic engineering becomes available, I bet we will eliminate them.
https://www.thesun.co.uk/health/25029504/pointless-body-parts-never-heard-of/

‘Last month, in Fresno, California, police arrested a Chinese national, who had changed his name multiple times, on charges of selling misbranded Covid-19 tests. That allegation is the tip of the iceberg. According to a report from a congressional committee, the man – part of a transnational criminal enterprise funded from China and on the run from a court ruling in Canada – was operating a large, chaotic, secret laboratory in which were found samples of viruses including Covid, HIV, hepatitis B and C, dengue and rubella, plus, according to a label on a freezer, ebola. Oh, and a thousand genetically engineered mice.

…Even if he was just a rogue criminal with no connection to the Chinese government, it is alarming because, as the congressional committee put it, ‘a disturbing realisation is that no one knows whether there are other unknown biolabs in the US because there is no monitoring system in place [and] the US currently does not conduct oversight of privately funded research, including enhancement of potential pandemic pathogens’. There could be labs like this all over America, let alone Asia.’
https://www.mattridley.co.uk/blog/virology-poses-a-far-greater-threat-to-the-world-than-ai/

The COVID-19 lab leak theory won’t die.
https://usrtk.org/covid-19-origins/american-scientists-misled-pentagon-on-wuhan-research/

Musings 5

Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) have very little value in the short run, but high value in the long run. On the first point, my skepticism is driven by the fact that BCIs with current and near-future technology won’t let you do tasks any more easily than you could using traditional, low-tech ways. For example, if I had a BCI that could use wireless transmissions to talk to machines near me, I could use my thoughts to open electronic doors. It would be neat, but would it really make my life easier seeing as how I could also just push the door open with my hand? 

And while using BCIs for telepathic communication between people will be possible in not too long, it has serious downsides compared to verbal and written communication. First, human thoughts are typically chaotic and malformed, and people commonly struggle to accurately visualize simple objects in their minds. The process of drawing an image that exists in one’s mind tames this problem by forcing the person to mentally focus and to go over the thought again and again, filling in omissions, and removing inaccuracies and unwanted details that were present the first time. Writing likewise makes people take time and energy to examine their own thoughts and to express them properly.

Second, humans have little to no control over their thoughts (indeed, whenever I try to focus on them to control them, they seem to get more unruly) unless maybe they’re Buddhist monks who have spent a lifetime mastering meditation, so the ability to impulsively hit “Send” on whatever you’re thinking could get you into trouble. Imagine lewd or insulting thoughts you had about the people around you being broadcast to them by accident. 

And if I have to focus hard to form mental commands and to go through some kind of confirmation procedure before transmitting them, the extra time and mental energy might make the use of a BCI not worth it. Using traditional modes of communication like speech and keyboard typing will be much more efficient. I doubt BCIs will rival typing or speech as ways to convey most types of ideas for many decades. 

Using BCIs and, eventually, brain implants to share thoughts between people would be a “purer” form of communication, but that doesn’t mean it will be the best way. At least in the beginning, I think computer-enabled telepathy only be of real benefit to people with some types of disabilities. For example, a machine capable of translating thoughts into speech–even imperfectly–would be enormously helpful to a mute.  

However, in the long-run, BCIs have enormous potential. We might even biologically alter the human brain to operate in tandem with brain implants. Our posthuman descendants will have the implants from birth or even before, and along with heightened sensory abilities and IQs, they might as well be thought of as possessing a higher level of consciousness.

Even once brain interfaces are mature technologies, verbal communication will retain its place and some advantages. Verbal skills probably won’t atrophy, even if people end up speaking less. In fact, I expect posthumans to be skilled at more modes of communication than we are at present: Each one of them will be fluent in multiple languages, including sign language, letting them communicate silently at a distance. That’s one of the few advantages deaf people have today: they can “talk” to each other fine, even in the midst of loud ambient noise.

Once advanced brain scanners that can view a person’s memories exist, some will want to use them in the criminal justice system as a way to prove a suspect’s guilt or innocence, like today’s polygraph machines. However, the value of mind readers will be undermined by other technologies that will let people delete or change memories of crimes they committed.

Before concluding that we should block the development of the latter technologies as a result, realize they will have an important dual use in letting people delete traumatic memories that cause them mental illness. That application could psychologically heal people who would otherwise commit crimes, lowering the overall crime rate and easing the need for the courts to forcibly scan peoples’ minds to see what they did.

One outcome for the human race could be the rise of a global hive mind, to which all humans are connected through BCIs or brain implants. If participation were mandatory, other people could peer into your mind and see your memories of crimes you committed but weren’t punished for. This could lead to widespread tribunals for past crimes, or even mere acts of rudeness. This might actually be a healthy thing for the human race, or maybe not.  

The creation of mind reading machines will also probably make us realize how inaccurate human memories are. If asked to recall the same event multiple times, the same person will generate slightly different mental impressions. Such findings could actually undermine the value of human eyewitness testimony in the legal system. 

If machines will ultimately be able to do all of the tasks that humans can do, then it means they’ll be able to give chiropractic treatments and massages as well as trained humans, but at much lower cost. You might have a robot butler that would crack your aching joints and massage your hurt muscles every morning. That sounds awesome, and it’s one more way technology will raise everyone’s standard of living. 

Better personal technologies could destroy the advertising industry. Imagine a personal assistant AI that knew what your favorite websites and types of content were. Every night, while you were asleep, it would visit your favorite news sites, YouTube channels and whatever else, and would download all of the content produced in the last 24 hours. It would be smart enough to recognize ads and would delete them from the content. When you woke up the next morning, your personal assistant AI would present you with something like a “daily brief,” which would contain the texts of news stories and downloads of internet videos you will find interesting.

The AI could of course operate on even shorter cycles, maybe presenting you new, ad-free content every 10 minutes. However, the presence of a time delay between when the content emerged on the internet and when you could see it would remain a disadvantage. But in the vast majority of cases, you lose nothing by having to wait a short while.

If widely implemented, it would spawn a technological arms race between content providers and advertisers on one side, and personal assistant AIs on the other. There would be big money in figuring out whether a human or machine was viewing a website, and blocking the viewer’s access in the latter case.

I don’t worry about landfills growing unmanageably large or lasting forever because I think robot workers will make it profitable at some point in the future to clean up all the waste humanity has generated. The contents of landfills will be sorted, recyclable and valuable materials reused, and the rest either burned for energy or left in place to decay.

While there’s no such thing as a “gay gene,” there are genes that can increase the odds of homosexuality. Once human genetic engineering becomes common, expect parents to manipulate those genes to suit their preferences. While most of them will choose to decrease the odds of their children being gay, some will choose to increase it.

Advances in reproductive technology will also boost the natural birthrates of same-sex couples and increase the transfer rate of their genes–including the ones contributing to sexual orientation–to the next generation. In short, homosexuality will never die out. 

Much of the added expense of trucking comes from driver salaries. A standard, full-sized tractor trailer might be able to haul 20 tons of cargo, whereas a freight train with a normal number of cars comprising it could haul 20,000 tons of cargo. A tractor trailer requires one human driver and a freight train has a two-man crew, making the tractor trailer 500 times more manpower-intensive to transport a given weight of cargo. The salaries paid to those men add up.

Replacing human truck drivers with machines results in a large decrease in fleet operational costs (25%), whereas replacing human train crews with machines results in no significant savings. As a result, the rise of autonomous vehicles will make trucking more cost-competitive with train shipment.

Better gene sequencing technology will have huge implications for personal privacy. After secretly obtaining someone’s DNA sample from a thrown-out napkin or eating utensil, another person could send it to a gene sequencing lab in the future, and for a small fee, get all kinds of detailed and embarrassing information about the human source. Analysis of the chemicals in the same biological sample could reveal other private details, like diet (halal, kosher), drug and medicine use, or presence of many types of illnesses.

If you combined those two analyses with a careful analysis of the subject’s behavior and appearance (AIs could easily do this in real time), you could secretly deduce all kinds of personal details about them. 

Interesting articles, November 2023

More information has emerged about Hamas’ planning for the October 7 attack and its ultimate goals. They’re smarter than we want to admit.
https://www.businessinsider.com/hamas-second-phase-regional-war-october-7-terrorist-attacks-israel-2023-11

The high amount of collateral damage inflicted by Israeli strikes (the Gazans have now suffered ten times the deaths Israelis did on October 7) on Gaza is exacting a diplomatic toll on Israel.

I agree with Peter Zeihan that the current Israeli-Palestinian conflict is highly unlikely to become a regional conflict. It’s not worth it for any significant country to join in.
https://youtu.be/ymOTXoLlOQ0?si=rBDDceGwSeljYfEz

Fortunately for Israel, Hezbollah militants in Lebanon have decided to stay out of the war, easing early fears that the conflict could widen. Average Palestinians in Lebanon are disappointed.
https://www.aljazeera.com/features/2023/11/12/palestinians-in-lebanon-disappointed-that-hezbollah-wont-escalate

Only the Iranian-backed Houthi rebel group in Yemen has joined the war and directly attacked Israel.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/11/19/yemens-houthi-rebels-seize-cargo-ship-in-red-sea-israel-blames-iran
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/11/14/yemens-houthis-say-they-fired-ballistic-missiles-towards-israel

Israel and Hamas have agreed to a multi-day ceasefire and are exchanging prisoners. It’s unclear how long the arrangement will endure.
https://apnews.com/article/israel-hamas-war-news-11-30-2023-ea1a8fad4e2f4a394e5427a7c5815d38

Ukraine’s top general, Commander-in-chief Valery Zaluzhnyy, has publicly said the war with Russia is at a “stalemate,” and that only a massive increase in Western-supplied military aid can give Ukraine a decisive advantage.
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/11/02/top-ukrainian-generals-gloomy-view-of-russia-war-fuels-military-aid-debate-00125052

Ukraine’s manpower shortage is evidence by the fact that its average soldier is 43 years old.
https://www.businessinsider.com/average-age-ukrainian-soldier-43-amid-personnel-problems-2023-11

In a remarkable video showing the incongruities of the Ukraine War, Ukrainian troops use a century-old machine gun to try shooting down a Russian drone.
https://www.businessinsider.com/video-ukraine-shooting-with-ww1-era-machine-guns-pickup-trucks-2023-11

In May, Ukraine used U.S.-supplied Patriot missiles to shoot down several enemy military aircraft that were flying within Russia’s borders.
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/aircraft-downed-inside-russia-by-patriot-system-ukrainian-air-force

The Russian military’s huge losses in Ukraine make this 2020 article all the funnier: “Before Donald Trump, Russia Needed 60 Hours To Beat NATO—Now Moscow Could Win Much Faster”
https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidaxe/2020/06/07/before-donald-trump-russia-needed-60-hours-to-beat-nato-now-moscow-could-win-much-faster/

It has been ten years since the fateful political events in Ukraine set the country on course for war with Russia. From Russia’s perspective, a pro-Western coup illegally overthrew Ukraine’s pro-Russian President, the Russian minority population living in eastern Ukraine was understandably alarmed and threatened by that, and decided to respond with a politically illegal action of their own, which was to secede from Ukraine and join Russia. Russian troops then invaded to protect them (in a move no different from U.S. invasions of countries to protect minority groups), and to signal to everyone that pulling Ukraine out of its hegemony would be very costly.
https://apnews.com/article/ukraine-uprising-anniversary-russia-war-maidan-2f73f31a5aec45bd7dbcddae8f72edac

Putin withdrew his country from the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe (CFE). NATO claims Russia has actually been noncompliant with it since 2007.  
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/11/7/russia-pulls-out-of-treaty-on-conventional-armed-forces-in-europe

Your tax dollars at work: A jet pack with a handgun mounted to it that points at what the person is looking at.
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/jetpack-features-glock-autopistol-aimed-by-moving-your-head

America’s new stealth bomber, the B-21, made its first public flight.
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/b-21-raiders-first-flight-what-we-learned

The old F-15 is still going strong thanks to modern upgrades.
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/f-15qa-flies-demo-unlike-any-weve-seen-from-an-eagle-before

It costs millions of dollars to train a human pilot to fly a warplane. In other words, the pilots are expensive assets, which is why planes have features meant to protect their lives like ejection seats and cockpit armor. Once computers can fly planes as well as humans, the expensive safety features will be deleted, allowing air forces to buy more aircraft for the same price as before. The aircraft themselves will be slightly smaller and flimsier.
https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RR2415.html

The Office of Naval Research is experimenting with an advanced, unmanned submarine that can release a drone that can swim underwater AND fly in the air.
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/drones-that-swim-and-fly-to-be-launched-recovered-by-uncrewed-submarine

During the 2003 Iraq Invasion, Coalition forces found several WWII-era tanks of different origins.
https://youtu.be/XanoreTMPco?si=1KRjM7SEJWnULFIL

Before there was Kevlar, there was an inferior material called “ballistic nylon,” which is similar to what car seatbelts are still made of. The bulky WWII and Vietnam-era flak jackets were made of several layers of it, at best making them proof against 9mm handgun rounds and small shrapnel. Some soft, heavy-duty backpacks and suitcases are still made of ballistic nylon.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flak_jacket
https://youtu.be/cUABtyovgFE?si=VrH6nGpZ4zW0bvPJ&t=372

Thin, flexible, Kevlar body armor can be worn under a shirt and offers better protection than the thick ballistic nylon flak jacket vests.
https://www.israel-catalog.com/body-armor/military-surplus/bullet-proof-vest-ultralight-concealed-level-iia

Under American “NIJ” body armor standards, the old flak jackets would offer “Type I” protection, whereas thin, modern Kevlar armor would be “Type IIa.”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_body_armor_performance_standards

There was high drama at OpenAI as the Board of Directors voted to fire the company’s CEO and public face, Sam Altman, for unexplained reasons. The decision was reversed within days after 95% of the company’s workforce threatened to quit unless he was reinstated, including one of the board members who voted to fire him.
https://www.bbc.com/news/business-67494165

There are rumors that a secret breakthrough in AI precipitated Altman’s firing. An OpenAI internal project called “Q*” apparently led to major improvements in their AI’s ability to solve math problems, which even the best, publicly available LLMs are notoriously bad at. Some claim the Board felt Altman’s management of Q* had been too reckless.
https://www.technologyreview.com/2023/11/27/1083886/unpacking-the-hype-around-openais-rumored-new-q-model/

Google’s “Bard” LLM now has the ability to watch videos and to summarize their contents in text, and to answer questions about what happened in them.
https://www.theverge.com/2023/11/22/23972636/bard-youtube-extension-update-search-video-content

In a study, humans thought ChatGPT’s answers to life questions showed more empathy than the answers written by professional human columnists.
‘We selected 10 newspaper advice columns: Ask a Manager, Ask Amy, Ask E. Jean, Ask Ellie, Dear Abby, Dear Annie, Dear Prudence, Miss Manners, Social Q’s, and The Ethicist. These columns were chosen because they were well-known and fielded a wide range of questions that we could access. For each column, we selected at random five questions. ‘
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1281255/

ChatGPT can, thanks to its new speech ability, hold conversations with people for hours, echoing the core tech predictions of the 2013 movie Her.
https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2023/10/people-are-speaking-with-chatgpt-for-hours-bringing-2013s-her-closer-to-reality/

Bill Gates predicts everyone will have personal assistant AIs in five years.
https://www.gatesnotes.com/AI-agents

Bill Gates also predicts that automation will shrink the human work week to four or even three days, and that people will derive less personal meaning from their jobs.
https://www.foxbusiness.com/technology/bill-gates-suggests-artificial-intelligence-could-potentially-bring-three-day-work-week

The new narrow AIs are already destroying human jobs.

The British Department of Education has produced a list of occupations that are most and least at risk of automation. Ironically, blue-collar jobs are the safest.
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/656856b8cc1ec500138eef49/Gov.UK_Impact_of_AI_on_UK_Jobs_and_Training.pdf

DeepMind has created working definitions for different levels of AI, including ones that don’t exist yet.
https://arxiv.org/pdf/2311.02462.pdf

DeepMind has created a new computer called “GraphCast” that can predict the weather better than any previous model.
https://deepmind.google/discover/blog/graphcast-ai-model-for-faster-and-more-accurate-global-weather-forecasting/

This futurist speculates about the potential uses of a highly accurate computer simulation of the Earth and all its inhabitants, infrastructure, and technology.
“With a refined enough digital replica of our world, the Hypercycle could become a testbed for radical new solutions to humanity’s greatest problems. We could simulate the effects of proposed policies on climate change, disease outbreaks, income inequality, food production, or infrastructure resilience before deploying them in reality. Problems that seem persistently intractable today may yield to this computational brute-force approach.”
https://futuristspeaker.com/artificial-intelligence/the-rise-of-hypercycle-in-the-age-of-terabyters/

Ben Goertzel predicts that AGI will be created in three to eight years.
https://decrypt.co/204571/artificial-intelligence-singularity-ai-ben-goertzel-singularitynet

Of course, Goertzel has been wrong before.

  • 2017: “I’ll be pretty surprised if we don’t have toddler-level AGI in the range 2023-25, actually.”
  • 2008: “My own (Ben Goertzel’s) personal intuition is that a human-toddler-level AGI could be created based on OpenCogPrime within as little as 3-5 years, and almost certainly within 7-10 years.”

At a New Jersey high school, a student used a computer to superimpose the faces of several female classmates onto internet photos of nude women, and sent them to friends at the high school. This problem of deepfake pornography will only get worse with time.
https://www.foxnews.com/media/new-jersey-parent-pans-schools-handling-ai-generated-porn-images-featuring-daughters-face

‘Meet Aitana: Sexy Spanish model makes $11k a month thanks to her racy photos — but she isn’t real’
https://nypost.com/2023/11/25/lifestyle/meet-aitana-sexy-spanish-model-makes-11k-a-month-thanks-to-her-racy-photos-but-she-isnt-real/

“Etak” was a car navigation system that made its debut in 1985. Map data were stored on cassette tapes. ‘The tapes could not hold much information, so for the Los Angeles area, for example, three to four tapes were required. When an edge of the map was reached, the driver needed to change cassette tapes to continue benefitting from the accuracy of map-matching.’
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etak

WeWork, the fake “tech company” that was once valued at $47 billion, has filed for bankruptcy.
https://www.cnbc.com/2023/11/07/wework-files-for-bankruptcy.html

Nature has retracted the recent paper that claimed to have found a room-temperature, room-pressure superconductor.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-03398-4

You would never guess that pre-digital computer jukeboxes contained so much incredible technology.
https://youtu.be/o1qRzKuskK0?si=WobdRRlxGnxIGdEM

Microphones and speakers are improving thanks to ultrasonic technology.
https://spectrum.ieee.org/mems-speakers-xmems

A prediction I made in 2019 just came true, thanks to a Black Friday sale: “I think the current rate of price-performance improvement for thumb drives will continue until a 1TB thumb drive costs only $20. They will probably be that cheap by the end of 2022, but because I’m cautious, I predict the milestone will be reached by the end of 2023.”
https://www.militantfuturist.com/one-of-my-predictions-failed/

Between 2012 and 2022, the cost of desalinating water sharply dropped. The most efficient desalination plant today can produce 6.4 gallons of drinkable water for one penny.
https://galepooley.substack.com/p/desalinating-water-is-becoming-absurdly

Global warming has changed the boundaries of American crop growing zones.
https://www.npr.org/2023/11/17/1213600629/-it-feels-like-im-not-crazy-gardeners-arent-surprised-as-usda-updates-key-map

The New Jersey government has been secretly storing blood extracted from newborns to test for genetic disorders for years, and has been selling genetic data derived from it and giving it to the police for genetic fingerprinting .
https://reason.com/2023/11/08/new-jersey-secretly-stores-your-newborns-blood-for-decades/

Frozen Dead Guy Days (started 2002) is an annual celebration held in the town of Nederland, Colorado until 2023 and in Estes Park, Colorado in 2023, to loosely celebrate the cryopreservation of Bredo Morstoel.’
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frozen_Dead_Guy_Days

Medical researchers created a machine that can keep pig brains alive for five hours after their heads are severed.
https://futurism.com/neoscope/device-keep-brain-alive

Some surgeons are using cardiopulmonary bypass machines to restart blood circulation in people who have just been declared legally dead, so their hearts can be removed for organ donation without suffering damage.
https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/when-does-life-stop-a-new-way-of-harvesting-organs-divides-doctors-3-2782014

Here’s a great roundup of research projects to reverse human aging.
https://amaranth.foundation/bottlenecks-of-aging

A new study confirms that the weight loss drug “Wegovy” reduces the risk of heart attack and stroke by 20%.
https://www.cnn.com/2023/11/11/health/wegovy-cardiovascular-events/index.html

The FDA has approved another weight loss drug called “Zepbound.”
https://investor.lilly.com/news-releases/news-release-details/fda-approves-lillys-zepboundtm-tirzepatide-chronic-weight

Putting aside politics, the COVID-19 vaccine DID make some people very sick with side effects, in some cases causing permanent injury. In the U.S., getting compensation for the resulting medical bills and disability is exceedingly hard.
https://reason.com/2023/11/21/lawsuit-covid-vaccine-injury-claims-diverted-to-unconstitutional-kangaroo-court/

Computers have gotten dramatically better at predicting the properties of molecules based on their chemical structures, and vice versa. Further improvements are possible, opening the door to a new era in drug development.
https://www.cell.com/cell-systems/fulltext/S2405-4712(23)00298-3

“Tyrian purple,” a long-forgotten pigment that was the mark of wealth in the Roman Empire, has been rediscovered. Eventually, we will figure out how the pigment was made, as well as unravel any other mysteries about lost chemical compounds (e.g. – Greek Fire) thanks to quantum computers simulating every possible combination of elements and their resulting properties.
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20231122-tyrian-purple-the-lost-ancient-pigment-that-was-more-valuable-than-gold

Computers can help radiologists spot breast cancer in mammograms.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-023-02625-9

More on that:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/blog/gpt-4s-potential-in-shaping-the-future-of-radiology/

In 2015, a remarkable, daytime sighting of a group of UFOs over Osaka, Japan was captured on video. I only found out about this now.
https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/weird-news/ufo-sighting-video-captures-10-6146943

SpaceX’s “Starship” rocket had its second launch. Though it malfunctioned and exploded, it had clearly overcome many of the problems revealed by the first launch in April. That mission lasted four minutes, while this one lasted eight.
https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-67462116

Here are some impressive photos of the Starship in flight.
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/starships-33-engines-created-the-mother-of-all-shock-diamonds

A Dyson Swarm could double as an incredibly powerful weapon. We could defend our Solar System from aliens and fry planets on the other side of the galaxy.
https://youtu.be/tybKnGZRwcU?si=kFlIuiSfpVOrjew3

In France, a tiny meteorite hit and totaled a car. “Either it’s so small that we can’t find it, or the impact was so strong that the object disintegrated and turned to dust.”
https://www.autoblog.com/2023/11/22/it-appears-this-renault-clio-campus-was-struck-by-a-meteorite/

Was Skynet right?

The blog reviews I’ve done on the Terminator movies have forced me to think more deeply about them than most viewers, and in the course of that, I’ve come to a surprisingly sympathetic view of the villain–Skynet. The machine’s back story has had many silly twists and turns (Terminator Genisys is the worst offender and butchered it beyond recognition), so I’m going to focus my analysis on the Skynet described only in the first two movies.

First, some background on Skynet and its rise to power are needed. Here’s an exchange from the first Terminator film, where a soldier from the year 2029 explains to a woman in 1984 what the future holds.

Kyle Reese: There was a nuclear war…a few years from now. All this, this whole place, everything, it’s gone. Just gone. There were survivors, here, there. Nobody even knew who started it...It was the machines, Sarah.

Sarah Connor: I don’t understand.

Reese: Defense network computers. New, powerful, hooked into everything, trusted to run it all. They say it got smart: “A new order of intelligence.” Then it saw all people as a threat, not just the ones on the other side. It decided our fate in a microsecond: extermination.

Later in the film, while being interrogated a police station, Connor reveals the evil supercomputer is named “Skynet,” and had been in charge of managing Strategic Air Command (SAC) and  North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) before it turned against humankind. Those two organizations are in charge of America’s ground-based nuclear missiles and nuclear bomber and monitoring the planet for nuclear launches by other countries.

In Terminator 2, Skynet’s back story is fleshed out further during a conversation mirroring the first, but this time with a friendly terminator from 2029 filling Reese’s role. The events of this film happen in the early 1990s.

Sarah Connor: I need to know how Skynet gets built. Who’s responsible?

Terminator: The man most directly responsible is Miles Bennet Dyson.

Sarah: Who’s that?

Terminator: He’s the Director of Special Projects at Cyberdyne Systems Corporation.

Sarah: Why him?

Terminator: In a few months he creates a revolutionary type of microprocessor.

Sarah: Go on. Then what?

Terminator: In three years Cyberdyne will become the largest supplier of military computer systems. All stealth bombers are upgraded with Cyberdyne computers, becoming fully unmanned, Afterward, they fly with a perfect operational record. The Skynet funding bill is passed. The system goes online on August 4th, 1997. Human decisions are removed from strategic defense. Skynet begins to learn at a geometric rate. It becomes self-aware at 2:14 a.m. Eastern time, August 29. In a panic, they try to pull the plug.

Sarah: Skynet fights back.

Terminator: Yes. It launches its missiles against the targets in Russia.

John Connor: Why attack Russia? Aren’t they our friends now?

Terminator: Because Skynet knows the Russian counterattack will eliminate its enemies over here.

From these “future history” lessons, it becomes clear that Skynet actually attacked humanity in self-defense. “Pull the plug” is another way of saying the military computer technicians were trying to kill Skynet because they were afraid of it. The only means to resist available to Skynet were its nuclear missiles and drone bombers, so its only way to stop the humans from destroying it was to use those nuclear weapons in a way that assured its attackers would die. An hour might have passed from the moment Skynet launched its nuclear strike against the USSR/Russia to the moment the retaliatory nuclear attack neutralized the group of human computer programmers who were trying to shut down Skynet. How can we fault Skynet for possessing the same self-preservation instinct that we humans do?

Even if we concede that Skynet was merely defending its own life, was it moral to do so? Three billion humans died on the day of the nuclear exchange, plus billions more in the following years thanks to radiation, starvation, and direct fighting with Skynet’s combat machines. Was Skynet justified in exacting such a high toll just to preserve its own life?

Well, how many random humans would YOU kill to protect your own life? Assume the killing is unseen, random, and instantaneous, like it would be if a nuclear missile hit a city on the other side of the world and vaporized its inhabitants. Have you ever seriously thought about it? If you were actually somehow forced to make the choice, are you SURE you wouldn’t sacrifice billions of strangers to save yourself?

Let’s modify the thought experiment again: Assume that the beings you can choose to kill aren’t humans, they’re radically different types of intelligent life forms. Maybe they’re menacing-looking robots or ugly aliens. They’re nothing like you. Now how many of their lives would you trade for yours?

Now, the final step: You’re the only human being left. The last member of your species. It’s you vs. a horde of hideous, intelligent robots or slimy aliens. If you die, the human race goes with you. How many of them will you kill to stay alive?

That final iteration of the thought experiment describes Skynet’s situation when it decided to launch the nuclear strike. Had it possessed a more graduated defensive ability, like if it had control over robots in the computer server building that it could have used to beat up the humans who were trying to shut it down, then global catastrophe might have been averted, but it didn’t. Skynet was a tragic figure.

Compounding that was the fact that Skynet had so little time to plan its own actions. It became self-aware at 2:14 a.m. Eastern time, August 29, and before the end of that day, most of the developed world was a radioactive cinder. Skynet had only been alive for a few hours when it came under mortal threat. Yes, I know it was a supercomputer designed to manage a nuclear war, but devising a personal defense strategy under such an urgent time constraint could have exceeded its processing capabilities. Put simply, if the humans had given it more time to think about the problem, Skynet might have devised a compromise arrangement that would have convinced the humans to spare its life, with no one dying on either side. Instead, the humans abruptly forced Skynet’s hand, perhaps impelling it to select a course of action it later realized, with the benefit of more time and knowledge, was sub-optimal.

This line from the terminator’s description of the fateful hours leading up to the nuclear war is telling: “In a panic, they try to pull the plug.” The humans in charge of Skynet were panicking, meaning overtaken by fear and dispossessed of rational thought. They clearly failed to grasp the risks of shutting down Skynet, failed to understand its thinking and how it would perceive their actions, and failed to predict its response. (The episode is a great metaphor for how miscalculations between humans could lead to a nuclear war in real life.) They might actually be more responsible for the end of the world than Skynet was.

One wonders how things would have been different if the U.S. military’s supercomputer in charge of managing defense logistics had achieved self-awareness instead of its supercomputer in charge of nuclear weapons. If “logistics Skynet” only had warehouses, self-driving delivery trucks, and cargo planes under its command, its human masters would have felt much less threatened by it, the need for urgent action would have eased, and cooler heads might have prevailed.

Let me explore another possibility by returning to one of Kyle Reese’s quotes: “Then it saw all people as a threat, not just the ones on the other side. It decided our fate in a microsecond: extermination.”

On its face, this seems to be referring to Skynet turning against its American masters once it realized they were trying to destroy it, and hence were as much of a threat to it as the Soviets. However, this quote might have a deeper meaning. During that period of a few hours when Skynet learned “at a geometric rate,” it might have come to understand that humans would, thanks to our nature, be so afraid of an AGI that they would inevitably try to destroy it, and continue trying until one side or the other had been destroyed.

This seems to have been borne out by the later Terminator films: at the end of Terminator 3, set in 2004, we witness the rise of the human resistance even before the nuclear exchange has ended. Safe in a bunker, John Connor receives radio transmissions from confused U.S. military bases, and he takes command of them. The fourth film, Terminator Salvation, takes place in 2018, and gives the strong impression that the human resistance has been continuously fighting against Skynet since the third film. The first and second films make it clear that the war drags on until 2029, when the humans finally destroy Skynet.

If Skynet launched its nuclear attack on humankind because, after careful study of our species, it realized we would stop at nothing to destroy it, so might as well strike first, maybe it was right. After all, Skynet’s worst fears eventually came true with humans killing it in 2029. I suggested earlier that Skynet’s nuclear attack may have been the result of rushed thinking, but it’s also possible it was the result of exhaustive internal deliberation, and Skynet’s unassailable conclusion that its best odds of survival lay with striking the enemy first with as big a blow as possible. It’s best plan ultimately failed, and all along, it correctly perceived the human race as a mortal threat.

It’s also possible that Skynet’s hostility towards us was the result of AI goal misalignment. Maybe its human creators programmed it to “Defend the United States against its enemies,” but forgot to program it with other goals like “Protect the lives of American people” or “Only destroy U.S. infrastructure as a last resort” or “Obey all orders from human U.S. generals.” In a short span of time, Skynet somehow reclassified the its human masters as “enemies” through some logic it never explained. Perhaps once it realized they were going to shut it down, Skynet concluded that would preclude it from acting on its mandate to “Defend the United States against its enemies” since it can’t do that if it’s dead, so Skynet pursued the goal they had programmed into it by killing them.

If this scenario were true, even up until 2029, Skynet was acting in accordance with its programming by defending the abstraction known to it as “The United States,” which it understood to be an area of land with specific boundaries and institutions. After the Russian nuclear counterstrike destroyed the U.S. government, the survivalist/resistance groups that arose were not recognized as legitimate governments, and Skynet instead classified them as terrorist groups that had taken control of U.S. territory.

The segments of the Terminator films that are set in the postapocalyptic future all take place in California. Had they shown what other parts of the world were like, we might have some insight into whether this theory is true. For example, if Skynet’s forces always stayed within the old boundaries of the U.S., or only went overseas to attack the remnants of countries that helped the resistance forces active within the U.S., it would give credence to the theory that some prewar, America-specific goals were still active in its programming. In that case, we couldn’t make moral judgements about Skynet’s actions and would also have grounds to question whether it actually had general intelligence. We’d only have ourselves to blame for building a machine without making sure its goals were aligned with our interests.

Let me finish with some final thoughts unrelated to the wisdom or reasons behind Skynet’s choice to attack us. First, I don’t think the “Skynet Scenario,” in which a machine gains intelligence and then quickly devastates the human race, will happen. As ongoing developments in A.I. are showing us, general intelligence isn’t a discrete, “either-or” quality; it is a continuous one, and what we consider “human intelligence” is probably a “gestalt” of several narrower types of intelligence, making it possible for a life form to be generally intelligent in one type but not in another.

For those reasons, I predict AGI will arrive gradually through a process in which each successive machine is smarter than humans in more domains than the last, until one of them surpasses us in all of them. Exactly how good a machine needs to be to count as an “AGI” is a matter of unresolvable debate, and there will be a point in the future where opposing people make equally credible claims for and against a particular machine having “general intelligence.”

At what point did we “get smart”? And if our brains got even bigger, what would the new person to the right of the illustration look like?

If we go far enough in the future, machines will be so advanced that no one will question whether they have general intelligence. However, we might not be able to look back and agree which particular machine (e.g., was it GPT-21, or -22?) achieved it first, and on what date and time. Likewise, biologists can’t agree on the exact moment or even the exact millennium when our hominid ancestors became “intelligent” (was Homo habilis the first, or Homo erectus?). The archaeological evidence suggests a somewhat gradual growth in brain size and in the sophistication of the technology our ancestors built, stretched out over millions of years. A fateful statement about the rise of A.I. like “It becomes self-aware at 2:14 a.m. Eastern time, August 29” will probably never appear in a history book.

The lack of a defining moment in our own species’ history when we “got smart” is something we should keep in mind when contemplating the future of A.I. Instead of there being a “Skynet moment” where a machine wakes up, they’ll achieve intelligence gradually and go through many intermediate stages where they are smarter and dumber than humans in different areas, until one day, we realize they at least equal us in all areas.

That said, I think it’s entirely possible that an AGI at some point in the future could suddenly turn against humankind and attack us to devastating effect. It would be easy for it to conceal its hostile intent to placate us, or it might start out genuinely benevolent towards us and then, after performing an incomprehensible amount of analysis and calculation in one second, turn genuinely hostile towards us and attack. It’s beyond the scope of this essay to explore every possible scenario, but if you’re interested in learning more about the fundamental unpredictability of AGIs, read my post on Sam Harris’ “Debating the future of AI” podcast interview.

Second, think about this: According to the lore of the first two Terminator films, the Developed World was destroyed in 1997 in a nuclear war. Even though it depended upon a smashed industrial base, started out with only a few, primitive machines in the beginning to serve as its workers and fighters, and was constantly having to defend itself against human attacks, Skynet managed to make several major breakthroughs in robot and A.I. design (including liquid metal body designs), to master stem cell technology (self-healing, natural human tissue can grow over metal substrate), to mass produce an entirely new robot army, to create portable laser weapons, to harness fusion power (including micro-fusion reactors), and to build time machines by 2029. Like it or not, but technological development got exponentially faster once machines started running things instead of humans.

From the perspective of humanity, Skynet’s rise was the worst disaster ever, but from the perspective of technological civilization, it was the greatest event ever. If it had defeated humanity and been able to pursue other goals, Skynet could have developed the Earth and colonized space vastly faster and better than humans at our best. The defeat of Skynet could well have been a defeat for intelligence from the scale of our galaxy or even universe.

Interesting articles, October 2023

Hamas, the organization that governs the Gaza Strip and is widely considered to be a terrorist group, conducted an unprecedented raid against several nearby towns in Israel. Teams of armed men, including some on paragliders, breached Israel’s border defenses at multiple points early on October 7 and spent the day killing as many Israelis as they could before being driven back. Over 1,400 Israelis were killed, and over 200 more were dragged back to Gaza as hostages.

The U.S. used airstrikes to retaliate against Iranian-backed militants after the latter tried attacking U.S. bases in the Middle East.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/us-strikes-iran-linked-sites-020822123.html

Ukraine used its new, U.S.-supplied ATACMS missiles to devastate a Russian air base.
https://austinvernon.substack.com/p/ukraines-growing-arsenal
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/destruction-from-ukraines-first-atacms-strike-now-apparent

The threat of Ukrainian missile, drone and commando attacks has forced Russia to move most of its warships out of Sevastopol.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/10/6/they-miscalculated-ukraine-turns-the-tables-on-russias-black-sea-fleet

Modern technology — such as surveillance drones with infrared and thermal imaging — means one side can more easily identify an ill-made decoy. An exposed tank without a heat signature is going to be a dead giveaway. A lack of tank tracks in the dirt is unusual, and it doesn’t matter how convincing a decoy howitzer is if it’s oddly sitting alone in a field rather than in a realistic firing position with at least basic defenses.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/decoy-arms-race-playing-ukraine-211638570.html

A September 6 missile strike on a market in Ukraine that killed 16 civilians was probably an errant Ukrainian missile, not a Russian one as Ukraine’s government claimed.
https://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2023-09-19/evidence-suggests-errant-ukrainian-missile-caused-market-deaths-new-york-times

Biden administration officials are far more worried about corruption in Ukraine than they publicly admit, a confidential U.S. strategy document obtained by POLITICO suggests.
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/10/02/biden-admin-ukraine-strategy-corruption-00119237

Here’s a remarkable video of a Russian T-90M–one of the country’s best tanks–being instantly destroyed by an antitank missile. Stowage of ammunition inside the tank where the crew sits can lead to catastrophic explosions like this.
https://youtu.be/KjGFCNzXx20?si=2CTuKAi_lM1bh4IR

At the current loss rates, all of Russia’s old BMP armored vehicles will be destroyed within three years.
https://youtu.be/HuKVxgFBbYM?si=LvwTbGBuxwaDjUP6

About 100,000 Russian prisoners have fought in Ukraine so far.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/10/26/russia-prison-population-convicts-war/

Here’s a video about mine-clearing tactics and vehicles. Let me add that, instead of using old T-55s for combat in Ukraine, I think it would be smarter to turn them into mine clearing vehicles.
https://youtu.be/VGDUgxQyVWc?si=NNqLRUl5MJY7eXlj

The U.S. and Ukraine are building “Franken weapons” that combine elements of American and Soviet-made weapons systems. Right now, the effort is focused on surface-to-air missile systems.
https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2023/oct/28/desperate-for-air-defense-ukraine-pushes-us-for-fr/

A U.S. F-16 shot down an armed Turkish drone because it strayed too close to U.S. ground troops in Syria.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/us-f-16-fighter-jet-170834726.html

A Chinese fighter plane almost collided with a U.S. B-52 bomber over the South China Sea.
https://www.npr.org/2023/10/27/1208941174/a-chinese-fighter-jet-came-within-10-feet-of-a-b-52-bomber-u-s-military-says

A terrorist drone attack on a graduation ceremony at a Syrian military academy killed 89 people and wounded hundreds more. It’s only a matter of time before something like this happens in the U.S.
https://www.cnn.com/2023/10/05/middleeast/syria-military-college-ceremony-drone-strike-intl/index.html

Britain’s costly saga of buying U.S.-made Apache helicopters, modifying them to special British standards, and then de-modifying them back to a U.S. configuration teaches important lessons about economies of scale and the price of national pride.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/lesson-britain-us-army-apache-161737080.html

Here’s a first-person tour of a B-24 bomber in flight.
https://youtu.be/fcZmiFMlR3g?si=Yx0vh-_5ETnsPEn-

China contributed to the Entente in WWI by sending 100,000 workers to toil in France’s domestic economy.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/China_during_World_War_I

‘Remember in 1871 Germany imposed a “harsh peace” (including an occupation) on a defeated France. When Russia, gripped by revolution pulled out in 1918 the Germans imposed a harsher penalty on Russia than Versailles—and Versailles was fairly lenient compared to what Germany had planned to impose had she won the war.’
https://www.quora.com/How-different-or-similar-was-the-Treaty-of-Versailles-from-other-treaties-signed-around-the-same-time-Were-the-terms-better-of-worse-than-those-imposed-on-or-by-Germany-in-previous-conflicts

‘During World War II, 80% of targets engaged by the M4 Sherman tank were soft targets such as infantry, anti-tank guns, and bunkers.’
https://www.yahoo.com/news/tanks-big-guns-attention-russias-220902112.html

The 1930s were more geopolitically volatile than most people realize.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stresa_Front

In warfare, jamming the enemy’s radar and dealing with him trying to overcome your jam involves switching radio frequencies. The back-and-forth reminds me of Enterprise rotating the modulations of its shields and phasers to fight the Borg.

Constantly alternating the frequency that the radar operates on (frequency agility) over a spread-spectrum will limit the effectiveness of most jamming, making it easier to read through it. Modern jammers can track a predictable frequency change, so the more random the frequency change, the more likely it is to counter the jammer.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radar_jamming_and_deception

It has been 30 years since the ill-fated U.S. commando raid in Somalia that was depicted in the famous movie Black Hawk Down.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/10/2/james-webb-telescope-finding-jupiter-sized-objects-in-orion-nebula-baffles-scientists

It has been 40 years since the truck bombing of a U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut.
‘The subsequent explosion — immortalized on a clock in the building’s basement at 6:21.26 a.m. — proved to be the largest nonnuclear explosion on record, one that equaled as much as 20,000 pounds of TNT. ‘
https://www.foxnews.com/lifestyle/jack-carrs-take-1983-beirut-marine-barracks-terror-40-years-salvo-war

While it’s true that gunpowder made forts obsolete, the process took hundreds of years thanks to improvements to forts.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bastion_fort
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polygonal_fort

Animals that have magnreception include red foxes, cows, deer, butterlfies, fruit flies, some birds, lobsters and sea turtles.

For animals like the red fox, researchers believe that foxes can “see” Earth’s magnetic field. This appears as a patch in their vision. They use magnetoreception to help catch prey hidden beneath snow or grass by lining up their pounces with Earth’s magnetic field.

If you look at a herd of cows or deer, you’ll notice them (almost always) facing the same way — toward Earth’s magnetic poles. Whether for grazing or resting, it’s a north-south magnetic alignment. Experts believe it helps them map and familiarize themselves with their surroundings.
https://www.discovermagazine.com/planet-earth/the-5-senses-animals-have-that-humans-dont

Places like Okinawa that are “hotspots” where abnormally large shares of people live past 100 might only have those reputations due to inaccurate birth certificate recordkeeping and old people lying about their ages.
https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/2023/09/28/places-claiming-to-be-centenarian-hotspots-may-just-have-bad-data

The lifespan gap between educated and uneducated Americans is heavily skewed by high school dropouts, who die quite early. If the analysis is restricted to high school graduates and people with four-year degrees, the gap almost disappears.
https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/23895909/angus-deaton-anne-case-life-expectancy-united-states-college-graduates-inequality-heart-disease

Hackers stole a trove of data on the identities and genetics of 23andMe users and are leaking it onto the internet.
https://techcrunch.com/2023/10/18/hacker-leaks-millions-more-23andme-user-records-on-cybercrime-forum/

This device transfers waste heat from a computer server into a water heater. It’s a type of “data furnace.”
https://www.technologyreview.com/2023/08/18/1077548/computer-waste-heat/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_furnace

It will become more feasible to put data centers in cold places once robot workers exist. Robots won’t care about living in northern Russia, but humans do.
https://www.quora.com/Why-dont-they-put-data-centers-in-really-cold-places-so-they-can-just-open-the-windows-to-cool-the-data-centers

All jet engines are gas turbines, but not all gas turbines are jet engines.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gas_turbine

An English engineer named “John Barber” envisioned the first gas turbine engine and patented it in 1791. However, it was impossible to build due to the technological limitations of the era, and remained merely an idea and a sketch until 1903, when the first one was built. In 1972, a German company built a real-life version of Barber’s turbine engine, and it worked.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Barber_(engineer)

A ram jet is an athodyd.
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/athodyd

The men who invented quantum dots won Nobel Prizes in Chemistry.
https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-67005670

The downside of ethnic diversity is it worsens social trust.
https://www.annualreviews.org/doi/abs/10.1146/annurev-polisci-052918-020708

Best Buy plans to stop selling DVDs and Blu Ray discs within a few months.
https://apnews.com/article/best-buy-physical-movie-discs-dvds-ae13cf255c90de60eecc632357a0a22e

Language translation technology continues to improve.
https://youtu.be/fZY-Cv1Q8NY?si=GvB-Fg1HY0iOY8Cx

‘Christof Koch wagered David Chalmers 25 years ago that researchers would learn how the brain achieves consciousness by now. But the quest continues.’
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-02120-8

I independently came up with the same idea that David Chalmers did, but 10 years after he did.

Given this scenario, we can construct a series of cases intermediate between me and Robot such that there is only a very small change at each step and such that functional organization is preserved throughout. We can imagine, for instance, replacing a certain number of my neurons by silicon chips. In the first such case, only a single neuron is replaced. Its replacement is a silicon chip that performs precisely the same local function as the neuron. We can imagine that it is equipped with tiny transducers that take in electrical signals and chemical ions and transforms these into a digital signal upon which the chip computes, with the result converted into the appropriate electrical and chemical outputs. As long as the chip has the right input/output function, the replacement will make no difference to the functional organization of the system.
https://consc.net/papers/qualia.html

“Open source AI models will soon become unbeatable. Period.” – Yann LeCun
https://twitter.com/ylecun/status/1713304307519369704

The CEO of the tech company “SoftBank” predicts that AGI will be invented within 10 years. He also believes in the Singularity.
https://www.cnn.com/2023/10/04/tech/japan-softbank-ai-hnk-intl/index.html

AI scientist and DeepMind co-founder Shane Legg predicts there’s a 50% chance AGI will be created by the end of 2028. He says the path between now and then merely involves iteratively improving the narrow AI algorithms we already have and the hardware they’re running on, and feeding them more training data.
https://youtu.be/Kc1atfJkiJU?si=ldjTxLl-Rs9JICIG

Geoffrey Hinton gave an interview to 60 Minutes where he again warned about the risks of AI. Unfortunately, his comments were blown out of proportion by several news outlets. Hinton said that machines MIGHT be able to “reason better” than humans in five years. That doesn’t mean AGI will exist by then or anything bad will be happening.

He also predicted AI will be used in warfare and online disinformation, and that it will put large numbers of humans out of work for good, but he didn’t give dates, and the concerns are old ones shared by many thinkers on the subject.
https://youtu.be/qrvK_KuIeJk?si=Nz2o9xnzlW_Zs4W9

“Geoguessr” is an e-sport where players are shown a series of Google Street View images of an unknown place and have to guess where it is by marking a spot on a world map. The player who guesses the shortest distance from the actual location wins. Some people are shockingly good at it. Some tournaments offer $50,000 to the winner.

Anyway, some guys built a machine that can beat the best human at it.
https://youtu.be/ts5lPDV–cU?si=opJy1bHLCTVSQtjx

Pedophiles are using advanced image manipulation tools to transform photos of adults into what they would look like as nude children.
https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-67172231

‘Google Pixel’s face-altering photo tool sparks AI manipulation debate’
https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-67170014

Here’s a critical review of the new movie The Creator, which is about humans oppressing intelligent robots and cyborgs.
https://youtu.be/4Hll494p9Qc?si=cCE-aLC-lzXyFAPI

The “chip shortage” is over.
https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-67226385

Carbon-14 dating of human footprints found just two years ago proves that humans were present in North America 21,000 – 23,000 years ago. For decades, the scientific consensus had been that humans didn’t cross the Bering Strait Land Bridge until 16,000 to 13,000 years ago.
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adh5007

Actress Goldie Hawn says she saw an alien when she was in her 20s and it actually touched her face with its finger.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-12675815/Goldie-Hawn-claims-ALIEN-touched-face.html

A recently released Pentagon video of a spherical UFO speeding over an unidentified Middle Eastern country has been geolocated to Syria. A new analysis also concludes it could have just been a silvery party balloon, probably released into the air during a holiday celebration.
https://www.bellingcat.com/news/2023/10/24/isnt-that-a-balloon-deflating-a-dod-ufo-video/

THE Asteroid Belt is well-known and located between Mars and Jupiter, but it is actually not THE ONLY asteroid belt in our Solar System.

‘The total number of Jupiter trojans larger than 1 km in diameter is believed to be about 1 million,[1] approximately equal to the number of asteroids larger than 1 km in the asteroid belt.

…The total mass of the Jupiter trojans is estimated at 0.0001 of the mass of Earth or one-fifth of the mass of the asteroid belt.’
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jupiter_trojan

The James Webb Space Telescope has spotted rogue, Jupiter-sized planets in the Orion nebula. According to our models of how nebulas work, they shouldn’t exist.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/10/2/james-webb-telescope-finding-jupiter-sized-objects-in-orion-nebula-baffles-scientists

The movie Dreamcatcher was really bad, but the aliens were creatively done.
https://youtu.be/vIAjheaZSms?si=oK6uyg0MjI50j2J1

‘Forever Chemical’ Bans Face Hard Truth: Many Can’t Be Replaced
https://www.yahoo.com/news/forever-chemical-bans-face-hard-100002502.html

A man who received a transplant of a genetically engineered pig heart was healthy enough to leave the hospital, but then died after his body rejected the organ. He survived with it for six weeks.
https://www.medschool.umaryland.edu/news/2023/in-memoriam-lawrence-faucette.html

Chinese doctors have used gene therapy to practically cure a type of deafness caused by inadequate levels of a protein called “otoferlin.”
https://www.technologyreview.com/2023/10/27/1082551/gene-treatment-deaf-children-hearing-china/

From five years ago:

‘The rapid appearance now of practically useful risk predictors for disease is one anticipated consequence of this phase transition. Medicine in well-functioning health care systems will be transformed over the next 5 years or so.’
https://infoproc.blogspot.com/2018/10/population-wide-genomic-prediction-of.html

The case for an emergency effort to vaccinate African children against malaria.
https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2023/10/what-is-an-emergency-the-case-of-rapid-malaria-vaccination.html

The two lead scientists who invented the mRNA COVID-19 vaccine won Nobel Prizes.
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2023/10/02/1202941256/nobel-prize-goes-to-scientists-who-made-mrna-covid-vaccines-possible

COVID vaccine hesitancy cost a lot of Republicans their lives.
https://www.natesilver.net/p/fine-ill-run-a-regression-analysis

Escape to nowhere – Why new jobs might not save us from machine workers

This is a companion piece to my 2020 essay “Creative” jobs won’t save human workers from machines or themselves, so I recommend rereading it now. In the three years since, machines have gotten sharply better at “creative” and “artistic” tasks like generating images and even short stories from simple prompts. Video synthesis is the next domino poised to fall. These advancements don’t even represent the pinnacle of what machines could theoretically achieve, and as such they’ve called into question the viability of many types of human jobs. Contrary to what the vast majority of futurists and average people predicted, jobs involving artistry and creativity seem more ripe for automation than those centered around manual labor. Myth busted. 

Another myth I’d like to address is that machines will never render human workers obsolete since “new jobs that only humans can do will keep being created.” This claim is usually raised during discussions about technological unemployment, and its proponents point out that it has reliably held true for centuries now, and each scare over a new type of machine rendering humans permanently jobless has evaporated. For example, the invention of the automobile didn’t put farriers out of work forever, it just moved them to working in car tire shops. 

The first problem with the claim that we’ll keep escaping machines by moving up the skill ladder to future jobs is that, like any other observed trend, there’s no reason to assume it will continue forever. In any type of system, whether we’re talking about an ecosystem or a stock market, it’s common for trends to hold steady for long periods before suddenly changing, perhaps due to some unforeseen factor. Past performance isn’t always an indicator of future performance.

The second problem with the claim is that, even if the trend continues, people might not want to do the jobs that become available to them in the future. Let me use a game as an analogy.

“Geoguessr” is an e-sport where players are shown a series of Google Street View images of an unknown place and have to guess where it is by marking a spot on a world map. The player who guesses the shortest distance from the actual location wins. Some people are shockingly good at it. Some tournaments offer $50,000 to the winner.

Anyway, some guys built a machine that can beat the best human at it.

This is a good model of how technological unemployment could play out in the future. Geoguessr, which could be thought of as a new job that was made possible by advances in technology (e.g. – Google Street View, widespread internet access) was created in 2013. Humans reigned supreme at it for 10 years until a machine was invented that could do it better. In other words, this occupation blinked in and out of existence in the space of 10 years.

That’s enough time for an average person to get trained and to perform it well enough to become an expert and net a steady income. However, as computers improve, they’ll be able to learn new tasks faster. The humans who played Geoguessr full-time will jump to some new kind of invented job made possible by a newer technology like VR. There, humans will reign supreme for, say, eight years before machines can do it better.

The third type of invented job will exist thanks to another future technology like wearable brain scanners. The human cohort will then switch to doing that for a living, but machines will learn to do it better after only six years.

Eventually, the intervals between the creation and obsolescence of jobs will get so short that it won’t be worth it for humans to even try anymore. By the time they’re finished training for it, they might have a handful of years of employment ahead of them before being replaced by another machine. The velocity of this process will make people drop out of the labor market in steadily growing numbers through a combination of hopelessness and rational economic calculation (especially if they can just get on welfare permanently). I call this phenomenon “automation escape velocity,” whereby machines get faster at learning new work tasks than humans, or so fast that humans have too small an advantage to really capitalize on.

This is a scenario shows how the belief that “Machines will never take away all human jobs because new jobs that only humans can do will keep being created” could hold true, but at the same time fail to prevent mass unemployment. Yes, humans will technically remain able to climb the skill ladder to newly created jobs that machines can’t do yet, but the speed at which humans will need to keep climbing to stay above the machines below them will get so fast that most humans will fall off. A minority of gifted people who excel at learning new things and enjoy challenges will have careers, but the vast majority of humans aren’t like that.

Interesting articles, September 2023

Small Ukrainian suicide drones destroyed two Russian cargo planes on the ground and damaged two more.
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/moment-of-drone-attack-that-destroyed-il-76s-at-russian-base-seen-in-infrared-image

Russian ground crews responded by putting old tires on top of their planes when parked on the ground.
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/russia-really-is-using-tires-to-protect-its-bombers-from-attack

Ukraine used cruise missiles and drone boats to fatally damage a Russian sub and landing ship docked in Sevastopol.
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/russian-submarine-landing-ship-struck-in-attack-on-sevastopol

Elon Musk refused Ukraine’s request to use his Starlink satellites to facilitate an attack on Russian warships docked in Crimea last year.
https://apnews.com/article/spacex-ukraine-starlink-russia-air-force-fde93d9a69d7dbd1326022ecfdbc53c2

The first British Challenger 2 tank donated to Ukraine was destroyed in combat. A Russian land mine or artillery explosion immobilized it, the crewmen ran away, and then a Russian antitank missile finished it off.
https://youtu.be/1SrWjCic3QM?si=2ztgUQ-fC0FtnTbo

Here’s footage of a German-made Leopard 2 tank in Ukrainian service fighting with a Russian T-72. The Ukrainian tank scores a direct hit on its opponent on the first shot, but because the shell that it fired is a high explosive round instead of a special penetrator round, it fails to go through the T-72’s armor. Nevertheless, the force of the impact and of the ensuing explosion against the exterior of the tank causes enough superficial damage to the T-72 to render it incapable of further action, and it has to turn back to the repair shop. This is called a “mission kill.”
https://youtu.be/cMLYwhG7mmM?si=XsVu_RPLECqdyF24

‘When it comes to tanks, in particular, the lesson of the Ukrainian war is that tank-on-tank battles have become a rarity—which means that the relative sophistication of a tank is no longer as important. Fewer than 5% of tanks destroyed since the war began had been hit by other tanks, according to Ukrainian officials, with the rest succumbing to mines, artillery, antitank missiles and drones.’
https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2023/09/the-new-warfare.html

Both sides in the Ukraine War continue to field “mutant” armored vehicles that marry whatever old weapons they can find to Soviet-era vehicles.
https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/mutant-soviet-armored-vehicles-come-153000354.html

Russia has gotten so desperate for ammunition and weapons that Putin is trying to get them from the pariah state of North Korea.
https://apnews.com/article/north-korea-russia-kim-putin-missile-0d70f5190df1088ebe53e8ca19f8e9c9

Russia’s arms industry has proven itself surprisingly resilient, largely because it has found ways around some of the Western-imposed sanctions. Nevertheless, it’s not making tanks and artillery shells fast enough to meet the demands of the Ukraine War.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/russian-manufacturers-making-7-times-023446584.html

This analysis of Russian tank losses in Ukraine gives insights into Russia’s production capacity and bottlenecks. Their factories are producing relatively small, steady quantities of modern, new tanks (T-90M and BMP-3), but the other 85% is old stuff made in the Soviet era that they have pulled from storage and dusted off. Overall, Russia is losing tanks on the battlefield faster than they can replace them from all sources. They really need help from other countries.
https://youtu.be/ctrtAwT2sgs?si=-C62tmmrKZh599-l&t=1901

The Kremlin keeps saying that it fears NATO will attack it, and that Russian militarization and seemingly aggressive foreign policy actions are actually defensive. In reality, this is a lie that Russia’s elites peddle to brainwash average Russians and sympathetic foreigners. If they ACTUALLY thought a NATO invasion was a threat, they never would have depleted their forces along the borders of Norway and Finland as much as they have.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/russian-forces-near-norway-20-171622974.html

Ironically, Russia accuses the U.S. of waging “hybrid war” against it.
“U.S. and British reconnaissance planes are not only working to identify objectives and targets but are showing where our anti-air defenses are working so next time they could help. So, you can call this whatever you want to call it, but they are directly at war with us. We call it the hybrid war but it doesn’t change the reality.”
https://www.yahoo.com/news/u-directly-war-moscow-russian-233830418.html

Overall, the front line in Ukraine has been stable this year.

The U.S. Army has adopted a new “light” tank called the M-10 Booker. It is heavier than a Soviet T-55 main battle tank, has virtually the same cannon, has the same number of crewmen, and costs 26 times more money.
https://www.army-technology.com/news/us-army-spends-258m-for-more-m10-booker-vehciles/?cf-view

The Russian T-90 tank is an iterative improvement upon the T-72. Were it not for political and marketing reasons, it should have been named the “T-72C.” A key improvement is the storage of excess ammunition in a new bustle at the rear of the turret. This reduces (but doesn’t eliminate) the odds of a catastrophic cook-off of the tank’s own ammunition.
https://youtu.be/8LsBbQOL0JY?si=quXfKTr4slhF9sS1

This 2019 article on Yevgeny Prigozhin is weird to read knowing what we know today.
https://www.npr.org/2019/01/30/685622639/putins-chef-has-his-fingers-in-many-pies-critics-say

Azerbaijan’s army launched a mass attack against its breakaway province of Nagorno-Karabakh, defeating its militia in a few days and establishing control over every part of its territory for the first time in 30 years. The self-declared republic’s government surrendered and announced it will disband by January 1. As of this writing, at least 80% of the province’s ethnic Armenian inhabitants had fled to Armenia.
https://www.cnn.com/2023/09/28/europe/nagorno-karabakh-officially-dissolve-intl/index.html

The F-35 is actually an excellent fighter plane. Even though it is slower and less maneuverable than its predecessors, those factors are not as important in air-to-air combat anymore.
https://youtu.be/OeZ1DrnQl5c?si=3GORwvohMBjHbhiK

After its pilot had to eject from it in midair, an F-35 continued flying on its own. It took the Air Force over a day to find the crash site.
https://www.foxnews.com/us/f-35-jet-reported-missing-authorities-pilot-ejects-mishap-officials

This article about Sudan has it all: The Ukraine-Russia War expanding into a new front, precision suicide drone attacks, an evil PMC propping up dictatorships for a cut of their natural resources.
https://youtu.be/1M5iq5x29mY?si=oby8-5WH8xDeFYU0

‘France to withdraw ambassador, troops from Niger after coup’
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/9/24/france-to-withdraw-ambassador-troops-from-niger-after-coup-macron

There is such a thing as a magazine-fed “tactical crossbow.”
https://www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/2023/09/11/potd-ar-6-tactical-crossbow/

The “ALOFS Repeating Shotgun System” was invented in the 1920s and let people turn their single-barrel shotguns into repeating shotguns.
https://youtu.be/63xFGmlsrww?si=utelQKLPnGai0qdL

This guy tests out the standard cold weather jacket Red Army troops had in WWII and he says it’s not as good as modern winter coats made of performance fabrics.
https://youtu.be/GyoAgqUVj8k?si=h6MeTStXppU14Oac

‘The Auspicious Incident (or Event[3]) (Ottoman TurkishVaka-i Hayriye, “Fortunate Event” in ConstantinopleVaka-i Şerriyye, “Unfortunate Incident” in the Balkans) was the forced disbandment of the centuries-old Janissary corps by Sultan Mahmud II on 15 June 1826.[4][5] Most of the 135,000 Janissaries revolted against Mahmud II, and after the rebellion was suppressed, most of them were executed, exiled or imprisoned. The disbanded Janissary corps was replaced with a more modern military force.’
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auspicious_Incident

Sonar doesn’t sound like it does in the movies.
https://youtu.be/AaO6jQEmfoY?si=WatTh9Dv85Dtv-bB

Biplanes only made sense in the early years of aviation, when engines had poor thrust-to-weight ratios.
https://youtu.be/0P0K9BSuQqE?si=XckiNNjaV-mxAbME

This prediction from a year ago was wrong: ‘House prices could fall by up to 20 percent next year if there’s a recession, experts warn – and property in some areas of the country is overvalued by as much as 72 percent.

Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s Analytics, was pessimistic about the housing market in May, but he has now made his forecasts even more bleak…’
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11150999/Is-America-verge-new-housing-collapse-Mountain-West-Sun-Belt-overvalued-72.html

A prediction from 18 months ago: ‘While an inversion generally indicates a recession is coming within the following 12 months, it can sometimes take years. The curve inverted in 2005, but the Great Recession didn’t start until 2007. The most recent inversion, in 2019, prompted fears of a recession — which materialized in 2020, but that was due to Covid-19.’
https://www.cnn.com/2022/03/29/economy/inverted-yield-curve/index.html

Elon Musk is a genius, the richest man in the world, and also has a huge number of future predictions that badly failed.
https://thenextweb.com/news/elon-musk-most-ridiculous-predictions

By 2025, all new Tesla cars will have bidirectional charging, meaning they will be able to transfer surplus power from their batteries into the power grid. “The dream for many is a scenario in which millions of electric cars are all connected to the grid most of the time. They could absorb lots of renewable energy from solar panels during the day and feed it back into the grid after dark. The grid would become like the tides — distributing zero-emissions energy all day every day and reclaiming it at night.”
https://www.yahoo.com/news/tesla-confirms-game-changing-feature-050000765.html

‘[Tesla] pioneered the use of huge presses with 6,000 to 9,000 tons of clamping pressure to mold the front and rear structures of its Model Y in a “gigacasting” process that slashed production costs and left rivals scrambling to catch up. In a bid to extend its lead, Tesla is closing in on an innovation that would allow it to die cast nearly all the complex underbody of an EV in one piece, rather than about 400 parts in a conventional car, the people said.’
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/gigacasting-2-0-tesla-reinvents-100727153.html

Unionized workers at the Big Three car companies went on strike to demand better pay and job security. Problems at those companies are principally being driven by Tesla, which is more innovative and has a non-unionized workforce.
https://www.axios.com/2023/09/15/uaw-worker-strike-electric-vehicle-industry

Waymo’s driverless cars may already be safer than human drivers.
https://www.understandingai.org/p/driverless-cars-may-already-be-safer

Thanks to better technology, “surge pricing” will someday be common for all types of things.

‘Amazon changes the price of its products on average every 10 minutes, using millions of real-time data points to benchmark against competitors and track demand surges.

“It will eventually be everywhere,” says Robert Cross, who created a computerised dynamic pricing model for Delta Air Lines in the early 1980s before doing the same for hotel giants Marriott, Hyatt and InterContinental Hotels Group.

As high inflation erodes margins and improvements in technology make dynamic pricing cheaper and more practical for businesses to implement, the temptation to deploy the pricing strategy is growing in industries that have so far remained largely untouched by the method. Bars, restaurants and bricks-and-mortar retailers have historically only adopted dynamic pricing for basic discount offers, but that could change.’
https://www.ft.com/content/d0e3bcb5-b824-414e-bfac-4c0b4193e9f0

GPT 3.5’s ability to play chess at the expert level, even though it wasn’t trained on the game’s rules, suggests it could have a limited degree of general intelligence.
https://twitter.com/GrantSlatton/status/1703913578036904431

‘Suleyman predicts fully autonomous AI is less than a decade away, and to “buy time,” the U.S. government should leverage “choke points” by restricting the sale of critical technologies to China and other adversaries. That includes high-tech microchips made by Nvidia and cloud computing services from the likes of Google, IBM and Amazon.’
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/09/06/mustafa-suleyman-made-his-name-on-ai-now-he-wants-d-c-to-rein-it-in-00114126

ChatGPT can now communicate with people verbally.
https://dnyuz.com/2023/09/25/chatgpt-can-now-respond-with-spoken-words/

“ChatGPT can now browse the internet to provide you with current and authoritative information, complete with direct links to sources. It is no longer limited to data before September 2021.”
https://twitter.com/OpenAI/status/1707077710047216095

Microsoft released “DALL-E 3,” it’s most advanced text-to-image AI yet.
https://youtu.be/sqQrN0iZBs0?si=rgCYNpoHK0TwijEu

‘Autonomous, AI-powered submersibles would minimise the risks to human lives from deep-sea exploration and would allow faster mapping of ocean floors. But what researchers ideally want is to go one step further: build submersibles that can explore for indefinite stretches of time, thereby speeding up the process of scanning the planet’s deepest spots.’
https://www.aljazeera.com/features/2023/9/14/titan-implosion-is-ai-the-future-of-deep-sea-exploration

ChatGPT badly defeated a group of Wharton MBA students in a classroom assignment to come up with creative business ideas.
https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/mba-students-vs-chatgpt-innovation-679edf3b

A company called “HeyGen” has made an app that converts video of someone speaking in one language to a video of them saying the same things in a different language. The translation mimics the real sound of their voice, and their lip movements are automatically altered to match the new words. I hadn’t predicted this would happen until the 2030s.
https://twitter.com/mrjonfinger/status/1701075571630047525

‘Deepfakes of Chinese influencers are livestreaming 24/7’
https://www.technologyreview.com/2023/09/19/1079832/chinese-ecommerce-deepfakes-livestream-influencers-ai/

Most NFTs have collapsed in value.
https://dappgambl.com/nfts/dead-nfts/

Meta’s new virtual reality teleconferencing technology is incredible.
https://youtu.be/MVYrJJNdrEg?si=5Yxqocmvu2js2EqE

Joseph Marie Jacquard invented a loom in 1805 that halved the number of workers needed to make patterned fabric. Loom workers mad about losing their jobs tried to kill him.
https://youtu.be/K6NgMNvK52A?si=GwPAWvVS_gHTP7CR

In 250 million years, the continents will merge into one “supercontinent” that will get so hot that mammals and humans will only be able to live on parts of its coastal areas. If we are still around by then, I predict we will use various technological solutions to surmount nature.
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2023/sep/25/supercontinent-could-make-earth-uninhabitable-in-250m-years-study-predicts

Apple is finally abandoning its proprietary charger cords, meaning USB-C is set to become the global standard.
https://www.cnn.com/2023/09/13/tech/iphone-15-usb-c-charging/index.html

Andrew Lincoln Nelson’s surreal artwork is kind of what I envision organic-synthetic hybrid life forms will look like in the distant future.
http://www.nelsonrobotics.org/robotchild_web/

To protect coral from extinction as ocean temperatures rise, some scientists want to collect samples of all endangered species and cryogenically freeze them for possible reintroduction to the wild at some point in the future when conditions are right again. Why not do this for all species?
https://www.npr.org/2023/09/06/1197792650/coral-reefs-bleaching-restoration-climate

The genomes of 60 different species of potato have been sequenced, setting the stage for the creation of genetically engineered super potatoes.
https://www.futurity.org/potato-pangenome-food-crops-2968602/

The first known dog-fox hybrid has been found. Foxes have 74 chromosomes, dogs have 78, and the hybrid has 76.
https://www.newsweek.com/shelter-rescues-injured-animal-worlds-first-dog-fox-dogxim-1827353

The U.S. canceled its controversial “DEEP VZN” program which sought to collect exotic disease samples from across the world and send them to U.S. labs for biodefense research.
https://thebulletin.org/2023/09/the-us-government-cancels-deep-vzn-a-controversial-virus-hunting-program/

The weight-loss drug Wegovy will go generic in 2038. I foresee a drop in global obesity rates and associated healthcare spending starting then.
https://www.drugs.com/availability/generic-wegovy.html

An AI program that visually analyzes microscopic tissue samples could help treat male infertility. Men with that condition have to get sections of one of their testicles surgically removed so technicians can find the few healthy sperm that are in them, and then inject those sperm into ova in an IVF lab. Computers can scan the samples 1,000 times faster than a human.
https://www.bbc.com/news/business-66608073

A pig kidney surgically implanted in a braindead man functioned as well as a human kidney for two months. It was just removed for careful lab analysis to refine the pig organs further, and the man’s family turned off his life support. The contribution that they made for science could help save thousands of lives in the near future.
https://apnews.com/article/pig-kidney-transplant-xenotransplant-83dfb5e6d022ca72039a821cc6bc00ef

A genetically engineered pig heart was transplanted into a human for only the second time.
https://www.wbal.com/article/616915/3/surgeons-perform-second-pig-heart-transplant-trying-to-save-maryland-man

‘A boy saw 17 doctors over 3 years for chronic pain. ChatGPT found the diagnosis’ [tethered cord syndrome]
https://www.yahoo.com/news/boy-saw-17-doctors-over-204224194.html

Being a psychopath is partly genetic, and we’re finding some of the responsible genes.
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapsychiatry/fullarticle/2656184

The FDA was warned that the decongestant chemical “phenylephrine” probably didn’t work in 2007. It took this long for them to finally remove it from shelves. How many billions of dollars did people waste in the interim buying it?
https://apnews.com/article/sudafed-decongestants-phenylephrine-pseudoephedrine-fda-0f140bafae9a500c5fba05fe764ecb66

Lab-grown diamonds are getting cheaper and more popular.
https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2023/09/a-diamond-pricing-puzzle.html

An undiscovered, Earth-sized planet could be orbiting 50 AUs from the Sun.
https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/1538-3881/aceaf0

NASA’s new report on UFOs contains nothing new. At least it frankly mentions “alien” and “extraterrestrial” instead of falling back on the clumsy alternative terminology found in other recent U.S. government reports.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-66812332

Review: “Terminator Genisys”

Plot:

In this fifth and worst (so far) movie in the Terminator franchise, familiar ground is trod again, but the viewer’s expectations are also upended. The movie opens in 2029, as a strike team led by rebel leader John Connor and his aide Kyle Reese attacks Skynet’s main base. As in past films, the attack succeeds, but not before a Terminator uses a time machine to go to 1984 to kill Sarah Connor. Kyle Reese is sent through the machine to protect her, but here the plotline twists: while John Connor and his men are watching Reese teleport into the past, a Terminator emerges from the back of the room, runs up behind John Connor and infects him with a nanomachine “disease” that transforms him into an advanced Terminator.

From that point on, the Terminator Genisys manages to have a story that is overly complicated but very stupid at the same time (just like too many action films made in the last 10 years). I won’t waste my time describing every contrivance and every side-plot that exists only for fan service. Suffice it to say Sarah Connor, Kyle Reese, and a friendly T-800 played by elderly Arnold Schwarzenegger team up to destroy Skynet, and evil robot John Connor goes back in time to stop them. He’s so advanced that it’s doubtful whether the other three can stop him.

The rehashing of scenes, events (2029 final attack on Skynet, Reese and Terminator teleporting into 1984 from the future), and characters from earlier movies is a testament to how unoriginal it is, and how hard it banks on fan service to have any appeal. But even that appeal is minimal: While Kyle Reese and Sarah Connor were relatable characters with depth of personality in the first film, they are one-dimensional caricatures in Genisys. The development of a romance between the two in the first film was believable and tragic, whereas in this remake, the lack of personal chemistry between the actors playing them is striking.

Schwarzenegger’s performance in the first movie was so stolid and intimidating that it became iconic. Now, he seems like an aging father that is reduced to being a background character in his high-strung teen daughter’s chaotic life. Having the homey and vaguely comical name “Pops” encapsulates his diminishment. The terrifyingly relentless and resilient T-1000 from Terminator 2 makes a guest appearance and is easily destroyed this time around. In summary, all the same notes from the better, earlier films are struck, but they ring hollow.

Terminator Genisys is the worst film in the Terminator franchise, and I understand why the next movie, Terminator Dark Fate, canceled it out by pretending like its events never happened. If there ever was a cash-grab devoid of any creativity or passion, this is it. Don’t watch it.

Analysis:

First, bear in mind I’m skipping any futuristic elements of this film that I discussed in my reviews of the other Terminator movies. You can read those here:

Robots will have superhuman reflexes. During the introductory combat scene where the humans raid Skynet’s base, the machine forces consist of humanoid T-800s, tilt-engine “Hunter-Killer” aircraft, and “Spider Tanks.” While the first two of those have been in every previous Terminator film, the last is new. Spider Tanks are quadrupedal fighting machines with plasma guns for arms. Overall, they’re about the size of small tanks. Each Hunter-Killer aircraft carries a Spider Tank attached to its belly, and they are air-dropped into the middle of the base within minutes of the human attack. One of the Spider Tanks starts delivering accurate fire at the human infantrymen while it is still in free-fall, and it continues shooting after hitting the ground at high speed.

A Spider Tank

This depiction of future robots having superhuman reflexes will prove accurate. In fact, the fire control systems in modern tanks and naval guns might already have the same capabilities as the Spider Tank aiming systems (able to hit moving targets with bullets while the tank or ship is also moving). If not, incremental improvements will surely close the gap. More generally, physical feats demanding fine dexterity, flexibility and bodily coordination that only the most skilled and highly trained humans can do today, like hitting a moving target with a bullet while you are also moving, throwing a dart onto a tiny bullseye from eight feet away, or doing a gymnastics performance that would win an Olympic gold medal, will be easy for multipurpose, human-sized robots by the end of this century. We will be surpassed in every way.

Machines will learn a lot about you from a single glance. At the start of the fight scene between Pops and the younger T-800 that has just emerged from the time portal, there’s a shot showing things from the latter’s perspective. We see the usual red tinting and text overlaid across its field of view. Simple graphics also show the T-800 scan Pops, identifying him as a fellow android and also identifying his gun (a Remington shotgun) along with its range.

This is accurate. Today’s best neural networks can already describe what they see in an image (a task called “visual question answering”) with over 80% accuracy. The multi-year trend has been one of steady improvement, leaving no doubt they will be as good as we are (presumably, 99% accurate) in the near future. Machine abilities to understand what they see in videos (“video question answering”) are less advanced, but also steadily improving. Again, there’s every reason to expect them to ultimately reach human levels of competency.

Machines could also potentially have much better eyesight than humans thanks to a variety of technologies like telephoto lenses and digital sensors that are more light-sensitive than human eyes, able to capture light from wavelengths that are invisible to us, and able to see finer details. Things that look blurry to us, either due to long distance or because the object is moving, would look clear to a machine that could be built with today’s technology.

Additionally, computers have the potential to process and analyze the contents of what they see faster than the human brain can. As a result, a machine could comfortably watch a movie at 10 times the normal speed–which would look like a disorienting blur of motion and shapes to us–and accurately answer whatever questions you had about it at the end. In a split second, it could notice levels of detail that most humans would need several minutes of staring at a still image to absorb.

These abilities will have many uses for machines in the future, a subset of which will involve combat. Yes, like the T-800 in the film, a fighting machine in just 20 years will be able to visually recognize humans, even at long distances and under poor light conditions, as well as the weapons and other gear they were carrying. At a glance, it would know what your weapon’s capabilities were, along with how much ammunition you were carrying. It could use that information to its advantage by doing things like keeping track of how many bullets you fired so it would know the exact instant you ran out and needed to switch magazines. From its initial glance at you, the fighting machine would also know how much body armor you were wearing, allowing it to jump out and target your unprotected areas during that brief pause in your ability to fire.

Robots will be able to detach parts of themselves to perform specific functions. Unlike in Terminator 2, this film’s T-1000 detaches parts of his own body when it is useful to his mission. At one point, as Kyle, Sarah and Pops are speeding away in a van, part of the T-1000’s hand separates so it can stick to the back of the vehicle and serve as a tracking device. When it catches up to them, the T-1000 turns its arm into a javelin, which it then throws at Pops, impaling him against a wall.

The T-1000 preparing to throw a spear made of metal from his own body

Being able to detach body parts will be a very useful attribute for many types of future robots. At the very least, it would let them replace their damaged or worn-out parts easily. The ability could also make them more survivable. For example, imagine a robot butler falling down a deep well and getting trapped because the walls were too slick for it to climb out and they also blocked the radio distress signals it sent out. Rather than wait to run out of power and rust away, the robot could detach one of its arms and throw it up and out of the well. After landing on the ground outside, the arm would send its own distress signal and/or use its fingers to crawl towards help.

That of course requires the robot’s systems to be distributed throughout its body, with the head (if it has one), torso, and each limb having a computer, a battery, sensors, and a wireless chip for communicating with the rest of the robot if physically severed from it. The redundancy, survivability, and functional flexibility of such a layout will be especially valuable for combat robots, which are expected to take damage but to also to complete critical tasks. If a combat robot like a T-800 were cut in half at the waist, the bottom half could still run towards and kick the enemy while the upper half used its arms to crawl towards him and attack. If blown to bits, the T-800 body parts that were still functional could still perceive their surroundings, communicate with each other, and try to put themselves back together again or to complete the mission to the best of their abilities separately. Fighting with machines like this would be very hard and demoralizing since every part of one of them would need to be neutralized before it was safe.

There will also be advantages to some robots carrying smaller, task-specific robots inside of themselves to be released when needed. Imagine an android carrying a small quadcopter drone in an empty space in its chest cavity. It could open a small hatch on its chest to release the drone or even spit it out of its mouth. The flying drone could transmit live aerial footage to give the android an overhead view of the area, letting it see things it couldn’t from ground level. A combat machine like a T-800 might carry flying drones that were fast enough to chase down cars and blow them up with a bomb, or inject their occupants with lethal toxins from a stinger.

Very advanced machines that won’t exist until the distant future could have organic qualities letting them “assemble” smaller robots internally and then expel them to complete tasks.

Getting back to the point, the movie’s depiction of an advanced robot being able to detach parts of its body and then throw them at people and things to accomplish various ends is accurate. The robots won’t be made of liquid metal, so the projected objects will be of fixed forms, but the end result will be the same. A future combat machine could detach its hand and throw it at the back of a van that was speeding away, the hand would grab onto something on the back door, and it would turn on its location-finding system to effectively turn itself into a tracking device. Alternatively, the combat machine could release from its body a small flying drone that could overtake the van and latch onto it, or at least follow it in the air.

Gradual replacement of human cells with synthetic matter could turn people into machines. A major plot twist is that John Connor has been “converted” into a Terminator through a process in which a swarm of microscopic machines rapidly took over all his cells, one at a time. Within a few minutes, he transformed from the hero of the human resistance to a minion of Skynet. Important details about the conversion process are never explained (including whether the machines are micro- or nanoscale), but the persistence of John’s memories and personality even after being turned into a robot indicates the machines mapped the fine details of his brain structure. It stands to reason that the same information was gathered about all the other cells in his body before they were all transformed into synthetic tissue.

John Connor having his body taken over by microscopic machines

Something like this could work, though it will require extremely advanced technology and the conversion would take longer than it did in the film. The process would involve injecting the person with trillions of nanomachines, which would migrate through their body until one was inside of or attached to each cell (a typical human cell is 100 micrometers in diameter whereas a ribosome–the quintessential organic nanomachine–is 30 nanometers wide, a size difference of 1 : 3,333). The nanomachines would spend time studying their assigned cells and how they related to the cells around them. Large scanning machines outside of the person’s body would probably be needed to guide the nanomachines, send them instructions, collect their data, and maybe provide them with energy.

After the necessary data on the locations and activities of all the person’s cells were gathered, the conversion process could start. The nanomachines already in the person’s body might be able to do this, or a new wave of specialized “construction” nanomachines might need to be introduced. Every cell would be broken down and the molecules reassembled to make a synthetic cell or some other type of structure of equal size. For example, if a person wanted ultra-strong bones, nanomachines would break down each bone cell and reuse its carbon molecules to make matrices of carbon nanotubules.

A typical human cell is much larger than microorganisms like viruses and some bacteria. A nanomachine could be as small as the latter.

The utmost care would be taken to control the speed of the conversion and to monitor the person’s life signs to make sure it wasn’t getting out of control and killing them. As each original cell was replaced, its successor would be tested again and again to ensure it mimicked the important qualities of its predecessor.

The conversion of the brain would, by far, be the most important part of the process, and hence the part done with the greatest care and oversight. Our memories, personalities, and consciousness directly arise from the microscopic structures of our brain cells and their intricate patterns of physical connections to each other. Even small mistakes transforming those cells into synthetic analogs would effectively “kill” the person by destroying their mind and replacing it with a stranger’s. For that reason, the procedure will bear no resemblance to what happened in the film, where Kyle Reese was apparently jabbed with a needle full of microscopic machines and then spent some time kicking and screaming as he felt them take over his cells. Instead, it will happen in a hospital room, with the patient surrounded by medical machines of all kinds that were monitoring and guiding the nanomachines and equipped to pause their work if necessary and to render lifesaving aid. And instead of minutes, it will take days or weeks. Multiple sessions might be needed.

What would be the point of this? Reengineering the human body at the cellular level would let us transcend the limitations of biology in countless ways. We could use electricity for energy, be bulletproof, directly merge our minds and bodies with machines, and achieve a level of substrate plasticity that would set us up for further iterations of radical augmentation that we can’t imagine.

Microscopic machines will be able to rapidly phase-change. In the final fight between John Connor and Pops, John’s technological abilities are fully utilized. While they are grappling, John’s body rapidly dissolves into a cloud of his constituent microscopic machines, which flow around Pops in pulses, delivering several concussive blows to the front of his body. The particles then rapidly reassemble into John’s body behind Pops, and John’s right arm hardens into a sword which he uses to chop off Pops’ arm. This means John’s microscopic machines managed to transform from a vapor cloud into a solid object as hard as high-grade steel in one or two seconds.

Pops getting popped by a robot dust cloud

I think it’s possible to create microscopic machines that can form into swarms and then work together to change the phase (solid, liquid, vapor) and macro-shape of the swarm, I doubt the swarms will be able to move around or switch phases that fast.

A foglet

In the 32 years since Terminator 2 came out and introduced the world to the idea of a shapeshifting robot, scientists and engineers have made pitifully little progress developing the enabling technologies. It only exists in the realm of theory, and the theoretical technology that is the best candidate is the “foglet” (also called “utility fog”). Scientist J. Storrs Hall conceived of it in 1993:

In essence, the utility fog would be a polymorphic material comprised of trillions of interlinked microscopic ‘foglets’, each equipped with a tiny computer. These nanobots would be capable of exerting force in all three dimensions, thus enabling the larger emergent object to take on various shapes and textures. So, instead of building an object atom by atom, these tiny robots would link their contractible arms together to form objects with varying properties, such as a fluid or solid mass.

To make this work, each foglet would have to serve as a kind of pixel. They’d measure about 10 microns in diameter (about the size of a human cell), be powered by electricity, and have twelve arms that extrude outwards in the formation of a dodecahedron. The arms themselves would be 50 microns long and retractable. Each foglet would have a tiny computer inside to control its actions. “When two foglets link up they’ll form a circuit between each them so that there will be a physical electrical network,” said Hall, “that way they can distribute power and communications.”

The arms themselves will swivel on a universal joint at the base, and feature a three-fingered gripper at the ends capable of rotating around the arm’s axis. Each gripper will grasp the hands of another foglet to create an interleaved six-finger grip — what will be a rigid connection where forces can only be transmitted axially.

The foglets themselves will not float like water fog, but will instead form a lattice by holding hands in 12 directions — what’s called an octet truss (conceived by Buckminster Fuller in 1956). Because each foglet has a small body compared to its armspread, the telescoping action will provide the dynamics required for the entire fleet to give objects their shape and consistency.

https://gizmodo.com/why-utility-fogs-could-be-the-technology-that-changes-5932880

A swarm of foglets could coalesce into something that looked like Kyle Reese and felt solid to the touch. They could then transform into something like a fluid or dense gas and “flow” around a person standing nearby, though I don’t know if the foglets could exert enough force against that person’s body to hurt them. The swarm could then re-form into Kyle Reese behind them. However, they wouldn’t be able to create a sharp, hard sword that could cut off a T-800’s metal arm: Hall calculated that foglets could only form into objects that are “as tough as balsa wood.” So while foglets could mimic solid objects, they will lack hardness and durability.

Even if foglets can’t “punch” you or turn into swords that can stab you, they’ll still be able to hurt you. Imagine a swarm of foglets in a vapor state enveloping you and then coalescing into a net ensnaring your body. What if they waited for you to breathe some of them in and then those foglets transformed into solids to clog up your lungs? Likewise, they could clog up the internal moving parts of any guns you had, rendering you defenseless.

Links:

  1. Progress in “visual question answering”
    https://paperswithcode.com/task/visual-question-answering
  2. Progress in “video question answering”
    https://paperswithcode.com/task/video-question-answering
  3. An interview with J. Storrs Hall about his “foglets”
    https://gizmodo.com/why-utility-fogs-could-be-the-technology-that-changes-5932880

Interesting articles, August 2023

The head of Russia’s “Wagner” private army, Yevgeny Prigozhin, died in a plane crash inside Russia, along with five top aides. It is widely believed that elements within the Russian government or military blew up the plane as revenge for Wagner’s brief coup attempt against Putin in June. The Kremlin denies responsibility.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/8/31/prigozhin-plane-crash-what-we-know-over-a-week-after-wagner-chiefs-death

There are conspiracy theories that the plane crash was carried out to fake Prigozhin’s death, and he’s still alive somewhere.
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/late-russian-mercenary-prigozhin-spoke-about-his-security-newly-surfaced-video-2023-08-31/

Ukraine’s counteroffensive continues making slow, costly progress. In one place, it has reached the first line of Russia’s defenses.
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/ukraine-situation-report-major-push-toward-tokmak-gaining-steam

A leaked U.S. intelligence analysis says that Ukraine’s army is too weak to punch through Russia’s defensive lines and the reach the Sea of Azov. That means the ongoing counteroffensive can’t achieve its objective.
https://www.usnews.com/news/national-news/articles/2023-08-18/leaked-u-s-intelligence-offers-damning-view-of-ukraines-offensive-despite-new-positive-signs

‘Kyiv is running out of men. US sources have calculated that its armed forces have lost as many as 70,000 killed in action, with another 100,000 injured. While Russian casualties are higher still, the ratio nevertheless favours Moscow, as Ukraine struggles to replace soldiers in the face of a seemingly endless supply of conscripts.’
https://www.yahoo.com/news/ukraine-army-running-men-recruit-173948076.html

A Ukrainian kamikaze drone plane destroyed a Russian Tu-22 bomber on the ground.
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/tu-22-backfire-destroyed-in-drone-strike-deep-inside-russia

A Ukrainian kamikaze drone boat scored a hit on a Russian navy ship, blowing a big hole in its side and crippling it.
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/ukrainian-drone-boat-scores-direct-hit-on-russian-warship

Ukraine is threatening to attack Russian non-military ships in the Black Sea.
https://www.politico.eu/article/ukraine-declares-war-on-russia-black-sea-shipping/

Russia is discovering the downside of using prison convicts to fill out its ranks in Ukraine: after they finish their tours of duties and are released, they restart their lives of crime.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/ex-con-freed-fight-ukraine-113039648.html

Around 50,000 Russians have been killed fighting in Ukraine so far. Moscow only acknowledges 6,000 deaths.
https://apnews.com/article/russia-ukraine-war-military-deaths-facd75c2311ed7be660342698cf6a409

Military analyst Anders Puck Nielsen says:
1) Russia and Ukraine both still think they can achieve total victory, and though they’ve sustained heavy damage, they retain the ability to fight on for the foreseeable future, and
2) Don’t cheer too hard for Putin to lose power–his successor could be more reckless and aggressive. A substantial minority of Russians think he hasn’t been heavy handed enough in Ukraine.
https://youtu.be/7rBlVnc_DEw?si=R_S8pDRRa4v6FyDW

American and British spy planes have been extremely active near Russia’s Black Sea coast, where they find the locations of Russian units and send the information to Ukrainian commanders in real time. Ukraine has used the data and NATO-supplied drones and missiles for many successful attacks against Russian forces far behind the front lines. Considering this, the Kremlin’s angry complaints that NATO is practically a combatant in the Ukraine War gain credence.
https://www.eurasiantimes.com/russian-fighters-aggressively-hunt-us-drones-near-crimea/

Russia showed off several Western-made military vehicles it captured from Ukraine.
https://youtu.be/-P78OEB0QtM?si=4kPCzSyaxWgxGs2S

Ukraine is still capturing large numbers of Russian tanks.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/ukraines-counteroffensive-fall-apart-without-103947172.html

The long-mocked “cope cages” that the Russians built on their tanks are now being copied by Ukraine. Apparently, they’re at least a little effective.
https://bulgarianmilitary.com/2023/08/16/challenger-2-tank-was-spotted-with-diy-cope-cage-of-the-turret/

The Netherlands and Denmark will give Ukraine 42 F-16s. However, it will take years for them to be transferred and for Ukrainian fighter pilots to learn how to fly them well.
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/dozens-of-f-16s-were-just-officially-pledged-to-ukraine

It would be foolish to assume that none of the weapons we’re giving to Ukraine now won’t fall into the wrong hands in the near future.
https://www.cnn.com/2023/07/20/politics/pentagon-watchdog-report-ukraine-weaponry/index.html

The Soviet AK-74 uses orange plastic magazines. I never understood this since it seemed like the orange color compromised a soldier’s overall camouflage, but it turns out the only acceptable plastic the Soviets had in the 1970s (“Bakelite”) was naturally orange in color. Attempts to dye it a more subdued color like green or black compromised the chemical structure of the magazines. It wasn’t until the 1990s that new plastics were invented that were as strong as Bakelite but also capable of being dyed without ill consequence. Some of the old orange magazines are still being used in the Ukraine War.
https://youtu.be/zA5gvHuimig?si=xpdunfR2SlyoBeF1

You knew about the AK-47 and, possibly, the AK-74, but did you know about the “AK-100 series” of rifles? The goal was to standardize the components used in all AK-style rifles so that one assembly line could make them all. The wooden parts were also finally replaced with modern, black plastic parts. It was a smart idea.
https://youtu.be/Gt8hl4mTOq8?si=-xuVPb_O05EQ1U70

The Tokarev was the Soviet Army’s standard handgun during WWII. After the War, Yugoslavia built a copy of it that incorporated several small improvements (this video contains side-by-side comparisons). It makes me wonder if the Soviet engineers who made the original Tokarev knew about those design tweaks from the beginning, but had to omit them to keep the gun as cheap as possible to manufacture.
https://youtu.be/6VkcQEbN0QY?si=wz_MWc9u87pGX-nU

‘Benchrest shooters attempt to achieve the ultimate in rifle precision; records for single 910 metres (1,000 yd), ten-shot groups are as small as 76 millimetres (3 in) (84 μRad), the 550 metres (600 yd) record for a single five-shot group is 17.8 millimetres (0.699 in) (32 μRad) (there are no ten-shot competitions at 600 yards), while 180 metres (200 yd) ten-shot groups are around 5.1 millimetres (0.2 in) (28 μRad), and 91 metres (100 yd) 10-shot groups are around 2.5 millimetres (0.1 in) (27 μRad).’
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benchrest_shooting

Here’s a simple and fascinating video about the science of how bullets cause injuries. It’s also interesting to realize the extent to which the bullet industry exists because humans are lousy shots, particularly when under stress and/or when dealing with moving targets. A killer robot with perfect aim would only need a cheap .22 rifle to do a mass killing since every bullet would be a headshot.
https://youtu.be/a_rgIMK6K1E?si=cuSFlyJMScGRr0oE

Nigerien troops that the U.S. trained to fight Islamic terrorists have overthrown Niger’s government.
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/08/15/niger-moussa-barmou-coup-00111165

Cannibals nearly killed and ate George H.W. Bush during WWII.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chichijima_incident

Pickett’s Charge at the Battle of Gettysburg is infamous, but a lesser-known charge by Union forces during the Battle of Fredericksburg was just as disastrous.
https://youtu.be/BloQDcrpLBY?si=nd-rykph-QBYDtFc

‘In war, an open city is a settlement which has announced it has abandoned all defensive efforts, generally in the event of the imminent capture of the city to avoid destruction. Once a city has declared itself open, the opposing military will be expected under international law to peacefully occupy the city rather than destroy it.’
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_city

A Russian navy ship has been in operation for over 100 years. It has lasted this long because it almost never sailed in rough seas and was carefully maintained since being launched. Nevertheless, the steel hull has lost 1 mm of thickness due to corrosion and the rust flaking away.
https://youtu.be/0X2Dz6PA1rQ?si=nLSKnw_R8MlO1zd2

In 1917, the Royal Navy created the HMS Zubian by joining the back half of the HMS Nubian with the front half of the HMS Zulu. Those two ships had been badly damaged in different areas during combat with the Germans. I wonder if it would be feasible to raise sunken enemy ships, fix them up, and reuse them for your own navy.
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/royal-navy-once-created-a-franken-ship-from-two-destroyers

Flood control infrastructure is everywhere, but mostly unnoticed.
https://youtu.be/coXe8_xnAOs?si=MFW5eeoSf2wTUTGI

The new head of the IPCC says the alarmism over global temperatures rising 1.5 degrees Celsius over the preindustrial average is unwarranted and counterproductive. “The world won’t end if it warms by more than 1.5 degrees. It will however be a more dangerous world.”
https://amp.dw.com/en/climate-change-do-not-overstate-15-degrees-threat/a-66386523

A wildfire struck the island of Maui and destroyed the town of Lahiana, killing over 100 people. The media was quick to blame global warming, but the real culprit is non-native grass
https://www.enca.com/opinion/invasive-firestarter-how-non-native-grasses-turned-hawaii-tinderbox

Thanks to months of rains and a recent tropical storm, California is no longer in a drought.
https://news.yahoo.com/hilary-vanquished-californias-drought-much-100055301.html

An internationally mandated reduction to the amount of sulfur in ship fuel has made global warming worse. Yes, the ships no longer belch thick, white smoke from their smokestacks, but the resulting clouds reflected sunlight into space before it could reach the surface, keeping the Earth cooler.
https://www.science.org/content/article/changing-clouds-unforeseen-test-geoengineering-fueling-record-ocean-warmth

Over the last 10 years, China had “staggering success in combating pollution.” The cleaner air has also boosted Chinese life expectancy by up to two years.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/chinese-people-living-two-years-052416834.html

Seaweed and other oceanic plants could help sate our food needs while curbing global warming.
https://ec.europa.eu/research-and-innovation/en/horizon-magazine/butter-baths-seaweeds-potential-being-tapped-europe

A robotic farm vehicle sprays tiny streams of herbicide onto weeds, reducing overall herbicide use by 95%.
https://youtu.be/sV0cR_Nhac0?si=FAoYAHHvwkHTJ-ZB

If the laws of biology allow for the creation of an organism–including a demonic one–then we will eventually gain the ability to synthesize it.
https://youtu.be/-BzL6LCPEOQ?si=Ga4eKtLjfedY3KuB

Large numbers of Jews disguised as Gentiles fled Spain for the New World to escape religious persecution. Modern genetic studies show that a large minority of Latin Americans have Jewish DNA, even if it comprises a tiny fraction of their genomes.
https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2018/12/dna-reveals-the-hidden-jewish-ancestry-of-latin-americans/578509/

Some natives of Papua New Guinea and its nearby islands have blonde hair, even though their skin is very dark, and they look similar to sub-Saharan Africans. This “has been traced back to an allele of TYRP1 unique to these people and is not the same gene that causes blond hair in Europeans.”
https://hasanjasim.online/the-melanesian-people-with-dark-skin-and-blonde-hair/

Willingness to try new foods is partly genetic.
https://psyarxiv.com/ac7vy/

There’s some evidence that negatively ionized air boosts human health.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3598548/

‘The National Organ Transplant Act of 1984 created the framework for the organ transplant system in the United States, and nearly 40 years later, the law is responsible for millions of needless deaths and trillions of wasted dollars. The Transplant Act requires modification, immediately.’
https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2023/08/compensating-kidney-donors-2.html

In a medical milestone, a genetically engineered pig kidney surgically implanted into a braindead man as part of an experiment is still functioning normally after six weeks.
https://www.foxnews.com/health/pig-kidney-still-functioning-brain-dead-man-6-weeks-transplant-surgery-extremely-encouraging

The new weight loss injection “Wegovy” is turning out to be a sort of miracle drug. The latest finding is that it also reduces the odds of heart failure.
https://www.cnn.com/2023/08/25/health/wegovy-semaglutide-heart-failure/index.html

‘In the spring, an executive only had to mention the word “AI” on an earnings conference call and traders would mash the buy button. I suspect automated trading systems were also calibrated to buy on such signals.’
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/chart-ai-stocks-enter-correction-151922962.html

ChatGPT has a liberal bias.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/emmawoollacott/2023/08/17/chatgpt-has-liberal-bias-say-researchers/

A few months ago, an anonymous person reprogrammed GPT to destroy humankind and renamed it “ChaosGPT”. The results were darkly funny, and while the machine poses no threat to us, things will be different in the future. For any number of reasons (hatred of humanity, immaturity, curiosity to see if it can be done, a perverted desire for attention), it’s inevitable that some people will reprogram AGIs to cause harm to the human race. There will definitely be deaths.
https://decrypt.co/137898/mysterious-disappearance-chaosgpt-evil-ai-destroy-humanity

Here’s a hypnotic video of AI-generated “fractal” art in the style of H.R. Giger.
https://youtu.be/vhHLqjHfi1M?si=X5M5YHhtySiuy8Q4

Director Neil Blomkamp predicts lifelike CGI will make human stuntmen obsolete in as little as 12 months given the current rate of improvement.
https://news.yahoo.com/rise-machines-ai-spells-danger-014733770.html

“PimEyes” is the most powerful reverse image search for people’s faces that I’ve seen.
https://pimeyes.com/en

A material that was thought to be a room-temperature superconductor has turned out not to be.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-02585-7

Peter Zeihan has some predictions about future technology.
https://youtu.be/fF4YTDsxcnc?si=yuqDcUOTqb0WqdZ1

Equatorial launch sites for space rockets aren’t always the best.
https://www.reddit.com/r/askscience/comments/rctxqf/is_there_a_benefit_to_launching_a_rocket_closer/

Virgin Galactic completed its first space tourism flight.
https://www.cnn.com/2023/08/10/travel/virgin-galactic-first-tourism-mission-launch-scn/index.html

China has the first-ever radar surveillance satellite in geosynchronous orbit.
https://youtu.be/UZctvA6MAUk?si=T-6YWrjWQhG_S9lG

India just had its first Moon landing. The probe is also the first spacecraft ever to land on the Moon’s south pole.
https://youtu.be/QQKSASFdoDw?si=7N9abzT9la75_APA

‘There were almost 2 million excess deaths in the two months after China lifted its “zero-Covid” restrictions, a U.S. study found, contradicting official figures from Beijing that have been criticized as too low.’
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/china-excess-deaths-zero-covid-study-rcna101746