Yes that does seem to be the case. People spend so long focusing on predicting technology, but I wonder what a prediction of future culture would be like? In the near term I think the current rapid liberalisation of pretty much everything, mixed with reactionary resurgence, will continue. After that I don't really know. It will be interesting at least, hopefully I live long enough to see it.
That's true. There are people who have thought about this though. The New York Times did a series of imaginary editorials from the future that dealt with politics, language, and culture.
Imagine being born in 1900. First ever flight when your are a toddler, passenger planes when you're a teen, massive world war, then metal airplanes and fast cars, then another world war, then nuclear weapons, jet engines, supersonic travel, rockets, and men landing on the moon by the time you're 70.
I don't have to imagine too hard, or else you could say I'm always imagining that scenario: my grandfather was born in 1901. I often find myself placing semi-recent historical events in the framework of his lifetime. I can place more recent notable events within the span of my own: I already broke the half-century mark a while back. Let's just say the first moon landing happened in my lifetime, but not the spaceflight of Yuri Gagarin. I remember precisely where I was when the Challenger disaster occurred. Plenty of historical events have occurred in the lifetime of other folks in this thread, of course, and they'll see many more after I'm dead... assuming we don't manage to do ourselves in first, that is. I can only hope those events will be as transformative & amazing.
Yep. This shows that there's literally no way for our brains to figure out the way things are going to advance. Kinda depressing in a way because there's no way I can wrap my head around how the world will look in 100 years and I'll never know.
@@fpsreactions8481 As 1900 did not predict 2000, 2000 and present is unlikely to accurately imagine 2100, and so forth. Unless society and technology stagnate due to some means either internal or external, predictions are unlikely to be accurate except in a few particularly luck or far-sighted cases.
Imo, flying things are silly. It takes a lot of specialization to pull a pilot off, so generally speaking, flying drunks with plummeting high-powered, battery-powered flying devices are a problem, and so is terraforming any place with gravity that’s different from the gravity of the place where humans evolved for many, many weeks. You also need a magnetosphere to shield wacky radiation and good luck pumping many, many ounces of CO2 to the atmosphere and SOMEHOW resurrecting geothermal activity, given we can’t even dig down more than, like, 14 km and sheet. Let’s also vacuum-cleaner up all the toxic ultra-thin particles covering the entire celestial bodies whereto traveling takes many, many seconds. Let’s focus on terraforming montana or smth sheet...
I remember always seeing old predictions like this and noticing how much they overestimated humanity. I don't think much crazy stuff will happen in the next 50 years or so. I imagine it to be like today but just, *more* of it if that makes sense. Taller skyscrapers, more crowded citys, faster PCs with prettier rainbow lights, less resources, higher temperatures with stuffier air, more expensive everything.
Really, a ton has changed, we have invented so much, it's crazy. We have sent people to the moon, harnessed the oceans to make electricity, all the vehicles they show we made far more advanced and far bigger versions of, like the dinky little cloth winged airplanes they thought we would have? Nope, massive supersonic jets and huge commerical airliners, and soooo much more, heck, they *under* estimated us.
I feel like Ur living under a rock, I think alot of crazy advancements will be made as they have for the past 100 years, I mean we went from flying a glider to landing on the moon within 60 years, right now AI technology is evolving rapidly and will change the way we live in the coming future, who knows what other technology humans will conjure up in the next 50 years
OK... I've got a few more interesting ones for you, based on things already happening. 1. Virtually unlimited, clean electricity though deep geothermal. 2. Literally making fuel such as gasoline and Diesel out of thin air (CO2 and water vapor). That would also make it carbon neutral. 3. Making meats in a fashion something like we now make cheese and beer. The basic meat is grown in vats and then 3d printed. 4. Large scale, custom manufacturing using additive manufacturing. (3d printing). Anything from plastic bits to whole buildings. You want a new water pump for your 32 Packard? (Or the parts for a whole new 32 Packard), get it printed.
@@JeffDeWitt That actually makes a lot of sense! I never thought of that. Also back when I wrote this comment I didn't realize how fast AI was evolving. I'm pretty sure ai will change the future a lot too.
One of the most prescient books I’ve ever read was “The Machine Stops” by E. M. Forster, published in 1909. Given the first flight was 6 years earlier, he envisioned a world in which passenger planes were already obsolete, and people lived in hive-like structures and communicated using a device that sounds very much like an iPad. It’s a short read and very worthwhile when looking at predictions of the future.
Shows how corrupt the world is these days. Back then, the future possibilities were endless. Now, we are trying to save it from climate change, monopolies, corrupt governments, etc.
I dont think future can go beyond this generation's thinkin anymore. What are we expecting? Superpowers? ✅ Aliens? ✅ Multiverse? ✅ Parallel Universe? ✅ Time machine? ✅ Fucking dying to asteroids or Nuclear weapons? ✅ We have come too far on somethings that are unbelievably advance yet unachievable for this generation maybe even after 500 years......
Why tf do people even want flying cars? They do the same thing as regular cars, so why would you want them to have a greater chance of ending your life??
I was wondering why people in the 1900s thought we'd have moved all of civilization into the sky? Where's the practicality in that? The guy reaching out for a glass of wine on the go in his private plane made me laugh xD
@@IDontWantThisStupidHandle a straight line from a to b is always going to be the shortest way to travel (that is if we don't discover teleportation) so it is very practical if everyone can fly or live in the air it would mean having more space for yourself and less time wasted in traveling through traffics. The only reason why we aren't all flying is because of energy as it is still very costly to be airborne with the amount of energy we are generating today, same goes for the future in space and other things. It's always been a problem of resource holding back our progress
@@dandyND I agree that the fastest path is the way the crow flies, but life isn't only travel. We would need to create infrastructure to grow billions of pounds of food in the air, and connect water sources to our buildings (again, stationed in the air) -- it makes no practical sense. You're only displacing the space problem to higher altitude, when on the ground, we have just that -- ground to grow food, lay water transport pipes and electric cables, dispose of waste (not an ideal place for it, but that will again be a huge problem in airborne life as well), etc.
@@IDontWantThisStupidHandle yes, that is why predictions are most of the time wrong, because we have more problem to take care of than just the new trending technology. It's like we all used to dream of big things as kids but as we grow up, we have so many things to take account of that we have to set aside what our dreamed future was. Maybe if we have a super computer that could consider all aspect in life, it could accurately predict what the future would look like
One thing never changes: we only see how the richest live. Edit: because of many comments, here's an explanation: I meant richest societies, not richest people
@@starhalv2427 Like living underground sounds much different. People are looking for ways to eradicate poverty. I wouldn't be surprised if they literally took a shortcut and just pushed all the poor people to live in what is basically just the sewers with mostly suburban and industrial infrastructure.
Well tbf in the very early 1900s fashion hadn’t changed that much from the previous few centuries, why would they expect the next century to be any different?
@@killerkitten7534 actually, fashion had changed a lot. We usally look superficially at fashion thinking that it really started to change only after 1900, but in reality you can totally compare the changes of 1900-2000 fashion with, perhaps, 1700-1800. It's just that we overlook them and assume they dressed the same for centuries... Wich is just wrong. Humans have always been humans, if yuo dig a bit into history you'll discover that even the Romans had the same behaviours that we have today, and the trend to change fashion every decade was certanly one of them ;)
@@stefrong2260 And the Victorian era (which had just come to an end) was known for rapidly changing silhouettes and fashions, so it's strange they didn't expect anything to be different
@@HughMiller98 they probably did predict that fashion would be different they just didn't bother to predict what it would look like because they knew that they had no real way of predicting something like that
8:18 for people who don’t understand Fahrenheit vs celsius, there is a formula that you have to use to convert, you can’t say that x celsius is x farenheit, like in inches vs cm, etc. While 3 celsius is equivalent to 37 Fahrenheit, you can’t apply that to an increase in temperature. For instance, 70 farenheit is 21 celsius, but 24 celsius is 75 farenheit, not 107. 10 c is 50 f, while 13 c is 55 f, etc. Meaning the number below celsius should be 5 farenheit.
Prediction: “Shop for items with the click of a button” Me: “Hey that’s actually pretty accura--“ Prediction: “You will also eat sawdust” Me: “nevermind”
Actually that one about eating sawdust isn't that off, given that raspberry flavor (like other industrial food ingredients) can be chemically synthesised using actual sawdust.
@@lepusarcticus5363 there are also brands of grated cheese that is actually made of sawdust. More like a filker. Perfectly legal. Also Sawdust is a natural resource. Read lables.
This video made me reconsider the fact that we went from inventing a simple flying machine, to land on the moon in under 70 years. Humanity did some serious speedrunning
Imagine someone watching the first airplane flight and someons speculating that now that we can fly, we will probably fly to the moon within our lifetime. People would think he was crazy.
Add to this we didn't go further only because the public didn't see the purpose of funding more, and NASA's budget was cut 3 times after the last Apollo. By that time NASA had figured nuclear rocket engines and wanted to put nuclear tows on the orbit to be used for frequent travels to the Moon to build spacecrafts for interplanetary travel there. In early 70s top engineers in NASA believed they would put people on Mars by 1980s. By now NASA only comes back to these old technologies. To put men on Mars and get them back quickly enough before they would get too ill from space radiation, a nuclear rocket engine is the only thing that can provide the necessary speed of travel. Building this spacecraft on the Moon is then necessary for both safety purposes as launching an assembled with active fuel straight from Earth would be too risky, and to shield astronauts from it's radiation the spacecraft need to be too big and heavy to be launched from Earth. So we need to build a lunar spacecraft and nuclear reactor factory on Moon first, and then launch the interplanetary spacecraft from there.
To think it took about 180,000 years to learn how to put a seed in the ground and there was 66 years difference between the first flight and the moon landing
I LOVE content like this and, while I'm late to this by 2 years, I want to say that I am so so glad I found this. This entire theme, and technology themes like it, are ones that I think of often. I was actually looking for this about a month back, in today's time, and surprisingly no one showed up that had a video I agreed with. But maybe today I worded it correctly. Anyway. Thank you sir, the man behind hochelega, for making such a profound yet exciting video. By the by, unrelated, you do have quite a good speaking voice. Right then. I wish you the best!
You’re right, they were talking about a flying car but they never would have fathomed we would have self driving cars. They wouldn’t have thought there would be an international space station circling the globe. I think we’ve gotten even further than what they thought. Most people focus on what we don’t have but don’t realize what we’ve already created.
@@a.bagasm.7253 Yeah, but the bottleneck is actually much earlier than that. Driving a helicopter is harder and took a lengthy time to master. This will make helicopter very expensive.
They'd be horrified. Some clothing barely classifies as clothing. Crop tops would give them heart-attacks, leggings would be no different from painting your skin black, appearance-wise. Once they see bikinis, they'd die. Gotta say, I get where that memed boomer opinion that kids these days dress too scandalously comes from.
Actually, the 2020s were like 90 times more peaceful. Humanity is at its golden age, and nobody appreciates it. Oh no, I was wrong, modern art is bad, pop music is bad, modern architecture is bad, everything is bad
@@QUEfrang i hope you joking?things are so good seemingly because there is many lies and manipulation perhaps?our internet_products and smartphones are partly made by childslaves in extreme pollluting mines for its mineral neccesities and forests are worldwide deteriorating like the climate and disappearance of wildlife.too many chinese_people are still very poor but that is hidding from the worldpublic because with dictatorship not many info can published to the outsideworld and statistics are manipulated.obesitas loniness are ravaging rampage epidemics and tiktok is not a true cultural enrichment but of you thinking we living a golden_age for humanity yes in terms of overpopulation while elswhere people are massively died out as they becoming old but leaving not much descendants but maybe replacement perhaps with immigrants also not its a ideal solution either for that problem without considering cultural tensions, media_technology_acces medical_care and food_access and some amount of safety we do have indeed required,but are we really happy or satisfyed(if you take account how many today people using anti_depressivum) or worse is the near future so peacefull with emerging wars genocides in some places right now on earth?if we where all happy why is there massive migrant_crisis or why this worsening climate_change or overuse of harddrugs?and don,t forget microplastic is almost in every humanbrain infiltrated.but if you want to believing this is a golden_age its true only for the eyes of the beholder to appreciating this socalled beautyfull times!😊😊😊in case you think i,m some saintly idealist i can answer no i,m not,but i also not pretending its all oke:in reality i don,t really care if this world goes to shit!by the way i having relatively good living in the modern west where things a better then socalled new emerging powerhouses like india or china and the 2020s where indeed unforgettable(although is not yet finished the twenties )for its covid_epidemic for some people horrendous isolating period but who cares?!😊
Honestly what I predict in the future is stagnation, 2020 won't look that different from 2040. Technology doesn't seem to be rapidly developing as of now, and the limits of our current computers are really being pushed.
@@unlimited8410 The future looks bleak for humankind, but I wouldn't call it "stagnation." Two things are developing rapidly: AI ( _Terminator_ is getting closer to becoming a reality every day) and global-warming-climate-change which is mushrooming into a fully blown crisis.
The past: I bet we'll have flying cars in the future! 2020: *watching a video of flying car prediction on a handheld supercomputer whilst sitting on the toilet during a global pandemic*
It's so fascinating that these past generations thought we would have fancy things like miniature suns and commercial space bases that we don't actually have today, but none of them predicted the internet. That was a total wild card in the sense of development, which has wildly altered the course of human history. Just think of all of the societal changes that have happened in the last 20-30 years from the start of the internet to now, and what humanity will look like in another 20-30 years as a result of it
predictions of the future from the past : optimistic and hopeful. usually read out by a calm, happy narrator predictions of the future from around this time : *dystopian cyberpunk synthwave intensifies*
@@nmg1541 bruh the fact that they predicted in the future where glass panes on top of cities so that rain won't fall down on buildings is already considered witchcraft. The illustration of people flying with wings is already considered witchcraft. Maybe medieval era people would think of it as witchcraft..
@@humanman2358 The internet... smart phones... self driving cars... creating oxygen from CO2... the dome thing is honestly unrealistic, unnecessary and pointless. We could do it if we wanted to, but it has more cons then pros
If it doesn’t happen and global warming is wrong or something people in 2123 will look at us and laugh at our stupidity. “Look at those people 100 years ago, thinking that they were going to die in 50 years”. Interesting to think about.
There were plenty of doomsday and dystopian predictions throughout the 1900s. WW1 was often called the War to End All Wars. Soviet nations made an onslaught of post apocalypse fiction. This video is incredibly cherry picked.
Pretty predictable. If people like the guy above me reproduced, the future will peaceful and relaxing since pretty much everybody with -70 IQ won't survive for long. Probably even kill themselves in some dumb accident. Humans will be extinct either way. From smartest to dumbest animal on the planet.
Not the same. There had been a reformist movement at the time that wanted women to be allowed to wear underwear, and cotton underdresses instead of whale-bone corsets. It was quite predictable that the reformists would succeed eventually.
1920: “in the future we’ll have flying cars!” 2020: *person watching this on a mobile computer that can fit in your pocket that has access to nearly all of humanity’s collective knowledge right at my fingertips* “yeah, why does the future suck so much?”
Love this comment. Internet and smartphones are so incredible that no one was capable of predicting it. And it literally changed the world. The reality went far further than people imagination in that field.
One thing nobody accounted for was the rise of negativity and pessimism/ Nihilism over the years. Even now, nobody accounts for it and all people say these days is ' Society bad ' without proposing any meaningful solution. I personally believe the future is going to be more in between. We'll have a lot more of good and beautiful things yet A huge majority will only focus on the negatives. Our predictions would be correct, just not in the ways we envisioned.
@@livelife4928 I think our impending doom due to Climate change is a pretty fair thing to be pessimistic about. And honesty the positive ignorant boomers dying off definitely isn't a bad thing
@Odinson Warrior you commented under the wrong comment mate Humans like to predict stuff that happens in the future. That's why most of sci-fi exists. "Technology progresses fast, but not as fast as human ambition" For example, how many times have you seen faster than light travel in a sci-fi thing? Countless times. How many times have you seen faster than light travel in real life? Zero. That's what the comment meant
We just need the right "human" to progress us to the future. and that person might not even been born yet or is in some 3rd world corrupt country ruining his or her potential
I'm convinced that we're not only living in a future that differs from what we had predicted previously, but an adjacent one. I think alternate timelines and planes of reality exist and somehow we got knocked off course.
I predict the USA will remain the largest military and economic power (when combined with its allies) until atleast 2100. China will probably eventually rival it as a second superpower, since China was historically the most powerful country in the World.
Mainland China will chomp the USA in the next two decades or so. So will the state of Uttar Pradesh in India, which will eat Mainland China in turn with Lagos in Nigeria.
I'm not sure I'd say that there's less optimism... "Duck and Cover" wasn't optimistic. The Day After wasn't optimistic. The Terminator wasn't optimistic. But, we went from optimism about flying 30 feet off the ground in personal transportation to optimism about living among the stars with a bunch of other people.
people before year 2000: "oh yeah we all gonna live a futuristic luxury life! we will use the nuclear power and we will harvest and conquer the solar system!!" people after 2000: "don't you see the data!?? don't you see what we have done to this fucking planet? don't you see the effect?? this world is fucked, we all gonna die in a nuclear war or by polution and global warming!!!"
@@kakyoindonut3213 🙄 Umm, sorry man. You're dead wrong. During the Cold War, we were all scared that the other side was gonna nuke us. Towards the end of the Cold War, we were all worried that we were about to permanently eff up the Ozone layer. We keep pinballing from one thing to another... Also, if you hadn't paid attention in Grade School... the earth goes through these periods... ice ages and tropical climes. Humanity isn't doing anything that the earth hasn't done before we came along.
@@davidsloat1016 before 2000s, not after world war 2, so 1900 optimism were included, and idk why you bring up ice age, it's not like it will happen again. "Humanity isn't doing anything that the earth hasn't done before we came along." tf does this mean, humans don't do stuff that the earth hasn't do before we came?? tbh I can't seem to find what your point is and what you're trying to disprove about my comment.
Found your channel with the angel video. I’ve since watched a few more of yours and now I’m hooked! Your vids are super high quality. I look forward to sticking around and watching this channel grow
To everyone watching this in the 22nd century, I know it may seem normal for you to read comments from a hundred years ago, but for us a 6-year-old comment is old. Heck, a 2-year-old comment is considered pretty old! It's all about perspective, and yours is very different than ours.
Honestly i feel like most young people nowadays don't expect us to live another hundred years at all, which is kinda depressing in contrast to the past generations having mostly hopeful ideas of the present.
Well, millennials and especially gen Z kids have it a lot harder than older generations in many new ways that you probably haven't considered. The world is going through a technological and informational revolution more drastic than anything in the past few thousand years thanks to the internet, and it's causing a lot of new and unique problems -problems that do not have the benefit of hundreds of years of trial and error to find their solutions like all other human problems we've dealt with- to sprout up for them on top of all the problems of regular life and the doomed world heaped onto them by the admittedly short sighted decisions our past generations.
@@rpkelly3825 it's kind of like being born when a meteor was about to hit, but too late to do anything about it. And even if they weren't given to despair from that, they're pioneering the digitally revolutionized world with no guide which is causing the worst mental health crisis in modern history simultaneously, and if that wasn't enough, even if they were still hopeful and willing to try to stop said meteor despite everything, their parents and grandparents won't get out of the way to let them try.
@@rpkelly3825 Yes, the invention of the internet and its effect on culture and socialization for those who are actually familiar with it (that is to say only millennials and gen Z kids truly) is more drastic a change and societal/technological revolution than anything you mentioned, it's almost on par with the invention of math or writing, or the invention of tools. I know that's hard to grasp but it's true and clear if you look at the grand scale. It's literally the beginning of a sort of unified world/hivemind intelligence for all humanity, it's kind of insane. Technology advances on a J curve, so the advancements become more and more drastic as time goes on, exponentially.
@@rpkelly3825 Perhaps you should reread my comment and pay attention so you know what I'm actually saying before you reply and rage at me. I never said they were revolutionary, I just said they're growing up during an inordinately revolutionary period, and are pioneering the culture of said digital revolution, even if they didn't set it off themselves. Then again, most every device made today that anyone uses presently was made by either millennials or gen z kids in sweatshops.
@@rpkelly3825 The fact of the matter is, someone who has to memorize and fill their brain with mundane trivial information is effectively less intelligent than a kid with the sum of human knowledge in 2 seconds in his pocket.
People in past: "In 2020 we will have extremely futuristic technology and will conquer space" People now: "OMG i just donated five million dollars to make the e-girl say my name"
I've also noticed that the skyscraper city as imagined by the Europeans and Americans in the 1920s (like Fritz Lang, or Le Corbusier) never really took hold in Europe outside of some relatively isolated examples, or at least not to the same extent as other regions. The Anglosphere did, to varying extents, but they're mostly overshadowed by Asian and Middle Eastern cities.
1900: the future’s gonna be dope 1910: the future’s gonna be dope 1920: the future’s gonna be dope 1930: the future’s gonna be dope 1940: the future’s gonna be dope 1950: the future’s gonna be dope 1960: the future’s gonna be dope 1970: the future’s gonna be dope 1980: the future’s gonna be dope 1990: the future’s gonna be dope 2000: the future’s gonna be dope 2010: we’re all gonna die 2020: among us
Actually the “we’re all gonna die” started in 1963 with _Dr Strangelove_ . Stanley Kubrick invented the first black comedy about nuclear war, and techno-optimism has never been the same since.
@@SlapstickGenius23 Computers especially AIs aren't even smart enough to shoot without being zold too they will some day but there won't be killer robots
Great video! Quick point: at 8:18 you convert 3C to 37.4F which isn't really accurate. Relative to zero degrees Celsius (or 32 Fahrenheit), that'd be an increase of 5.4 degrees F.
The one thing I love about these drawings is that everybody just seems to be in peace like everything just seems to come natural to everybody and this is the way of life.
Wasn't it always like this? In the 1910's you had WW1, wich was so big that they thought it should had been the last, and then, they had WW2, wich was even larger. We are always on the verge of death, it's Just that it can take some time to realize that.
There were a few predictions of doom back then. E.M Forster wrote "The Machine Stops" in 1909, which told of a future ruled by automation, and what happens when it all suddenly goes wrong. We'll need to wait until the next Carrington event to see if he got it right, but with modern reliance on technology I'd say he probably isn't far off.
@@bigpoop3073 Says BigPoop. If you are dim enough to not comprehend what's going on around you, I guess you are to be envied. There is a reason most people with Down's syndrome are always happy.
@@billbauer9795 Wow I wish I could be as intelligent as you. I’m only 12 but I wish I could be smart like you because you are very smart Edit: I was being sarcastic towards this guys because obviously he is a dickhead who belongs on r/iamverysmart
I just bought an oculus (meta) quest 2 vr headset last week. I showed it to my grandad today, and he was blown away. I set my home to a space-station. As soon as he put the headset on he was looking around and noticed the view of earth outside the window, and he was in awe. I put him on a game that uses hand tracking and he was so confused at first but then was solving puzzles like a pro! I showed him that the guardian boundary protects him from going out of the zone. He was lost for words and loved it. I gave him the controllers and put him on table tennis and mini golf, he loved it and said it’s amazing how far technology has come. And surprising he got the hang of it all pretty quickly!
"People prediction of the future are merely an upgrade to their own technologies, like making better spears out of better stones, but when someone makes an multi shot bow, now it's the future." - Tree Body Theory
It doesn't really apply anymore since our imaginations have been far expanded by Sci-fi. Star-Trek and Star Wars both contain potentially achievable technology that are not merely upgrades of currently existing stuff. Going outside the 2 big examples there are far more imaginative Sci-fi stories about dyson spheres, time travelling playboys in 1950 London's police boxes, mad scientist alcoholic sociopaths with portal guns, and numerous other examples I wish I could remember right now.
@@thecensoredmuscle563 I was going to say something about microchips and materials science but then I realized you were the same guy I just responded to... and scrolling down you have a loooooot of other comments. It helped me realized that maybe making youtube comments isn’t a valuable use of my time and that maybe I should get back to work... so thanks for that.
We're going to hit the inflection point of the S-curve at some point, but likely not until after AI hits some substantial stride...after which, how much of that progress is "we" anymore?
Similarly to how humanity's agricultural era was a plateau for three millenia, we might reach a technological plateau in future at some point... But not now, AI at least still has a way to go, who knows how long.
…yet we still cannot cure cancer. We can’t seem to CURE anything. We only make expensive pills that one must subscribe to for life, to reduce the symptoms.
*Person from 1850:* Hey, we're finally able to contact 2021! Hello, have we colonised Mars yet? *2021 Person:* nah, the Earth be flat dawg *1850 person:* ...
I think what this video tells us about visions of the future is that they're usually fixated around big current events and technologies- how we think the future will be is largely influenced by current events within the mainstream media- but like you said you have to predict the unpredictable, I find that by seeking out alternative news sources you can better do that, but at the same time you have to be careful you avoid paranoid anxieties and scaremongering- I can remember a few years ago being influenced by media that told me the future is gonna have Muslims invading England and installing Sharia law, a cabal of globalist "marxists" taking over the world and forcing everyone to attend mandatory education camps, etc. going through that phase made me realize a lot of how we think about the future is shaped by our environment (for me a working class white town in england) and the views of those around us locally/in our media (the powers that be)
I’m trying but with trump as the president (I’m American) and all the climate change videos and articles everywhere plus the pandemic, every day has been entirely unlivable for me lately. ALL I feel is anxiety and paranoia, and I don’t know what to do about it. My friends are so distant because of social restrictions and it feels like the live I’ve lived is gone, I’m not even a fraction of myself anymore because I can’t find any peace in my head. Even as I’m writing this now it’s 2:03am, I can’t sleep for shit lately. Everytime I try to lay down and close my eyes, I just see visions of fires and wildlife dying and friends fading away from me and fear. I don’t know how to get out of the Current Event state of mind and find myself again.
@@avril99887766 were going to be fine. My friend thought her mom would get deported when Trump became president 4 years ago. She’s still here. This anxiety around the election is an illusion!! Don’t feed into the hype ! We will be ok.
@@ariannagonzalez2618 whilst its amazing that circumstances prevented your friends mother from being deported, she was ultimately either lucky or just simply spared in the face of Trump's incompetence.. his crew wants to deport pretty much half the country because we didn't vote for him.. this is still a standing issue as of 11:15 pm Dec 31, 2020 and hopefully no more as of Jan 20 2020.. if given the chance, please read and seek assistance whenever anybody threatens your existence even if merely your citizenship
@@thedankknight8333 if you don't think he's racist, then just read his words If you don't think he's fascist, then ask the man himself If you don't think, then that's everybody's problem
Love how you made a genuinely insightful comment about aesthetics and how we look at things through our own closed-minded lens of what we can imagine... and then people took their closed-minded opinion of the aesthetics of your pfp as their sole take-away.
Quick google tells me US life expectancy in 1900 was only 46 years for men and 48 for women. Now it's 79. Tons of diseases like polio, smallpox etc. are eradicated. Healthcare has in general advanced astronomically. Even Covid has been managed in a way that would've been unthinkable back then, hence why it has still killed far less people than the Spanish flu. I know you're just making a joke but that is one prediction of the past that has partly come true.
@@greomgh Not true, the only new technology is internet bots and new diseases used to not form as commonly back then. Vaccines that change someone's DNA is NOT a good thing. Also in 2050 oil will run out and space travel along with lab research will be immpossible without oil.
@@greomgh Life expectancy was so low because of the super low infant mortality rate for babies. It brought the life expectancy done by LOADS. If you lived past childhood you could expect to live to around the same age as people do now.
@ゴロゴロ I don't think many people will want to stay working permanently remote in their homes (although of course not everyone thinks the same) because we are already more isolated with our technology, namely phones, and the lack of being able to interact with people in an office will further increase that physical isolation. Bear in mind this is just my opinion and certainly not every person or job is the same, but especially with the way school/college-aged people complain about online school compared to in-person, I don't think future generations are going to like the idea of working fully online even more. Lastly I think a big part of it is being permanently remote means almost all of your time living will be spent in your house (that is, unless you find another location to work remotely, but at that point you're basically commuting without the benefit of people working on the same things around you.). Surely it is human nature to not want to feel trapped/boxed in, and staying in one place for such long periods of time will likely feel like that in a sense.
@VisualPlugin the Multi-lingual Programmer I don't disagree with that point. I'm just trying to correct what looks like an extreme difference to people who don't know how to convert Celsius to Fahrenheit. If you think it's going to be 37.4°F warmer you're going to do things differently than if you think it's going to be 5.4°F warmer. That's a big difference.
Seems they just put 3 deg C into a converter. A temperature of +3 °C is +37.4 F, but a difference in temperature of 3C is 5.4F. It's confusing when the scales don't start at the same zero.
Every time I watch a sci-fi movie from the 70's or 80's that tried to predict what the near future would look like, I get a good chuckle out of everything they got wrong and feel pretty impressed about the things they got right. It's fun to compare what they thought would happen to things that actually happened or aren't even close to happening yet.
@@jeny0o0o there are billions of dollars invested in hundreds of different hospitals, laboratories and research spaces across the world and you, for some reason, think that them don't have as a priority finding a cure for the most dangerous disease in the planet? Comments like this are so fucking stupid
"You'll eat food made from sawdust." I mean...I guess that did kind of predict vegan substitutes. Like Impossible burgers. Not quite sawdust...but plant-based, yes. Lmao.
There are honestly scientists out there studying why we can't digest wood, and how we somehow could modify it to make an enormous food source. By the time they suss it out, ironically there will probably be no trees left!
Sad that the optimistic outlook for the future has all but gone, especially since we have the technology to actually make the world an amazing place for everyone.
Hmm, my expectations for what will happen in a few decades are pretty low. All I do know is, there's probably gonna be new memes, and songs from the 2000's would be like listening a classic 50's in our current year
@@user-ru2sb9yk8k yup. Twitter mobs that like cancelling people they disagree with, or in this case bringing up something someone said years ago to ruin their lives. That’s cancel culture
Good for Florida. Because it's nothing to care about. Stupid people are afraid of 'virus' which is not deadly as another disease like cancer etc. more people dying because they're not treated with their real problem and this is what actually kills them...
@@julieteller7194 Julie the virus isn't real bc u can't see it just like the Eiffel Tower isn't real bc who actually went there? That's literally y'all's logic.
Yeah right because I don't live on this earth and I can't see it what is the purpose of doing this lockdowns etc.lol . Like I said 'virus' most likely can kill weak old people which they have another disease the 'doctors' ignored
Something I find interesting is the “future” seems to be a potential, starting around 1960s and slowly get more and more realistic. While this realism keeps advancing, the time of imagination to the time of creation slowly gets smaller.
Technology is a cumulative effort hence its advancement is rather exponential. That said, on a long enough timeline, it's probably more like an S-curve. At some point, the very limitations of physics itself will keep certain ideas from coming to light, not to mention whatever social/political fallout we may experience that slows us down.
Back to the Future predicted 2015 to have flying cars as something common. So, we're getting slow/ going the wring way/ West Humanity is doing something wrong
@@timgorg1919 the difficulty of flying cars has far less to do with the tech itself and more to do with the fact that the "infrastructure" and laws associated with air traffic control would be a nightmare. And in order to keep buildings/people on the ground safe from poorly maintained cars from falling out of the sky, the inspection requirements would have to be remarkably stringent and frequent
I love how all the future predictions from the 50’s and such, could never imagine that we would have our whole lives in our hands. Pretty damn mind blowing.
Can you imagine in the future people might still be on youtube and your watching an old video and you see comments says 100 years ago
Damn this comment made me feel old
That's... scary.
Hello people from 2050
Yo dudes the old times were pretty chill maybe if you have a time machine or somethin-
@@ITSMYSTERYPLAYS69 fr though lol
One of things I've noticed about previous predictions of the future is that they expected culture to stay the same.
Seems legit.
Yes that does seem to be the case. People spend so long focusing on predicting technology, but I wonder what a prediction of future culture would be like? In the near term I think the current rapid liberalisation of pretty much everything, mixed with reactionary resurgence, will continue. After that I don't really know. It will be interesting at least, hopefully I live long enough to see it.
That's true. There are people who have thought about this though. The New York Times did a series of imaginary editorials from the future that dealt with politics, language, and culture.
@@TheJoemm Interesting.
@Rragg Ddoll Nah
See you all when UA-cam recommends this in 50 years
only if youtube is still mainstream media of 2071
I'm a bit pessimistic after watching this video.
But cya.
If y'all still alive
I'll already be in the afterlife on that year
I'll be dead. but yea, see you soon
My grandma has a book where someone in the early 1900's draw a picture of a dogfight in the year 2000. The dogfight was also fought with airships.
That kinda reminds me of the Trails series.
Imagine being born in 1900. First ever flight when your are a toddler, passenger planes when you're a teen, massive world war, then metal airplanes and fast cars, then another world war, then nuclear weapons, jet engines, supersonic travel, rockets, and men landing on the moon by the time you're 70.
the 1900's was speedrunning itself
@Anthony Tsimbikos so ur 13 just like me
And imagine living till 122 from 1900
@@terrorgaming459 Nabi Tajima of Japan (August 4 1900-April 21 2018) 117 years, 260 days
Last known person born in the 19th century!
I don't have to imagine too hard, or else you could say I'm always imagining that scenario: my grandfather was born in 1901. I often find myself placing semi-recent historical events in the framework of his lifetime. I can place more recent notable events within the span of my own: I already broke the half-century mark a while back. Let's just say the first moon landing happened in my lifetime, but not the spaceflight of Yuri Gagarin. I remember precisely where I was when the Challenger disaster occurred.
Plenty of historical events have occurred in the lifetime of other folks in this thread, of course, and they'll see many more after I'm dead... assuming we don't manage to do ourselves in first, that is. I can only hope those events will be as transformative & amazing.
I love how each generation basically takes their own style and makes it look more futuristic. The future is unpredictable.
Yep. This shows that there's literally no way for our brains to figure out the way things are going to advance. Kinda depressing in a way because there's no way I can wrap my head around how the world will look in 100 years and I'll never know.
@@chiarosuburekeni9325 Honestly it is sad. But oh well, I guess we probably won't be conscious to feel bad about it when the time comes
People tend to overestimate technological change and underestimate cultural change.
@@dekippiesip Well said
@@fpsreactions8481 As 1900 did not predict 2000, 2000 and present is unlikely to accurately imagine 2100, and so forth. Unless society and technology stagnate due to some means either internal or external, predictions are unlikely to be accurate except in a few particularly luck or far-sighted cases.
I think we still have unrealistic expectations for the future lol
(i btw tried sending you an email but it didn't go through?)
@@ToastersChannel Hey, I had some issues with setting up the address. Try the new one in the description. Thanks :)
Our growth is exponential though, so we might get predictions right 👀
I mean compare 1920 to 2020
Huge difference
Imo, flying things are silly. It takes a lot of specialization to pull a pilot off, so generally speaking, flying drunks with plummeting high-powered, battery-powered flying devices are a problem, and so is terraforming any place with gravity that’s different from the gravity of the place where humans evolved for many, many weeks. You also need a magnetosphere to shield wacky radiation and good luck pumping many, many ounces of CO2 to the atmosphere and SOMEHOW resurrecting geothermal activity, given we can’t even dig down more than, like, 14 km and sheet. Let’s also vacuum-cleaner up all the toxic ultra-thin particles covering the entire celestial bodies whereto traveling takes many, many seconds. Let’s focus on terraforming montana or smth sheet...
I remember always seeing old predictions like this and noticing how much they overestimated humanity. I don't think much crazy stuff will happen in the next 50 years or so. I imagine it to be like today but just, *more* of it if that makes sense. Taller skyscrapers, more crowded citys, faster PCs with prettier rainbow lights, less resources, higher temperatures with stuffier air, more expensive everything.
Isn't your faster PCs assumption just another over estimate? Are you just predicting that because we live in a time where that seems obvious?
Really, a ton has changed, we have invented so much, it's crazy. We have sent people to the moon, harnessed the oceans to make electricity, all the vehicles they show we made far more advanced and far bigger versions of, like the dinky little cloth winged airplanes they thought we would have? Nope, massive supersonic jets and huge commerical airliners, and soooo much more, heck, they *under* estimated us.
I feel like Ur living under a rock, I think alot of crazy advancements will be made as they have for the past 100 years, I mean we went from flying a glider to landing on the moon within 60 years, right now AI technology is evolving rapidly and will change the way we live in the coming future, who knows what other technology humans will conjure up in the next 50 years
OK... I've got a few more interesting ones for you, based on things already happening.
1. Virtually unlimited, clean electricity though deep geothermal.
2. Literally making fuel such as gasoline and Diesel out of thin air (CO2 and water vapor). That would also make it carbon neutral.
3. Making meats in a fashion something like we now make cheese and beer. The basic meat is grown in vats and then 3d printed.
4. Large scale, custom manufacturing using additive manufacturing. (3d printing). Anything from plastic bits to whole buildings. You want a new water pump for your 32 Packard? (Or the parts for a whole new 32 Packard), get it printed.
@@JeffDeWitt That actually makes a lot of sense! I never thought of that. Also back when I wrote this comment I didn't realize how fast AI was evolving. I'm pretty sure ai will change the future a lot too.
I predict this channel is going to BLOW UP!
exactly what i was about to comment! i can see lemmino and hochelaga make crossover videos
I predict this comment’s gonna blow too!!
same
The angel video brought me here, watched every video.
Same. Within 3 months. Awesome content
Now the year 2000 is considered nostalgic and oldschool lol
It will be considered ancient in the year 2120
@@humanman2358 and in 2200, 2120 will be considered ancient
@@humanman2358 no?!?
@@jayluis189 nope
@@gamecriticnl3339 considering more people like the first two replies, the majority _will_ consider those times ancient
I think Earth's "Deep Sea" DLC is gonna be unlocked soon
finally a naval update
The DLC keeps getting delayed
Are you playing Anno 2070? Lol
I don't think it would be viable since the atmosphere is getting huge nerfs
I think the textures at the bottom of the ocean keep getting corrupted or something. How much do you guys think the DLC will be?
One of the most prescient books I’ve ever read was “The Machine Stops” by E. M. Forster, published in 1909. Given the first flight was 6 years earlier, he envisioned a world in which passenger planes were already obsolete, and people lived in hive-like structures and communicated using a device that sounds very much like an iPad. It’s a short read and very worthwhile when looking at predictions of the future.
thanks for the recommendation, sounds good
Seeing how people drive, I hope personal aircraft commuting will never be a thing.
It would be 9/11 24/7
@@animentis8987 xd
@@animentis8987 bruh
They really should just make those simple color coded lines for people
flying helicopters everywhere
*I love how the predictions of the past is so optimistic while we in the present are just waiting for our looming doom.* 😂😂
Because we now know that we fu**ed up
Shows how corrupt the world is these days. Back then, the future possibilities were endless. Now, we are trying to save it from climate change, monopolies, corrupt governments, etc.
@@waliansari9467 I like how you're saying "we" as if you are actually doing something.
Year 2030: "You will own nothing but you'll be happy." 😆😎
by World Economic Forum
the crawler I meant we as in the world
“In the future, people would laugh at funny dog”
I think this is the only 100% accurate answer
funny dog is funny
The least of our problems tbh
when dog 😳😳😳😳
@@ok-dy9sw is sus
If Time Travel becomes possible without drawbacks, going into the future and see a glimpse of what we can see would be interesting.
I’m a time traveller and ice spice won a civil war again kim Jong drip I’m the last survivor
That is only a dream by some people who have had too much weird things to eat for dinner.
Without drawbacks?
Even if we do invent time travel, we should not use it. Its way too dangerous
I'd much rather visit the past than the future
No matter how hard you try, you'll always be stuck thinking within the boundries of your own time.
Or you'd just go back to the past.
@@Dezmont01 that's still a product of being stuck in your own time. The reason people invent stuff is to sort problems that they are currently facing.
in other words, you are basically saying we live in the present
I dont think future can go beyond this generation's thinkin anymore. What are we expecting?
Superpowers? ✅
Aliens? ✅
Multiverse? ✅
Parallel Universe? ✅
Time machine? ✅
Fucking dying to asteroids or Nuclear weapons? ✅
We have come too far on somethings that are unbelievably advance yet unachievable for this generation maybe even after 500 years......
Limited by the technology of our time, not your imagination. Einstein predicted many things about the universe long before they were provable.
“In the future, humor will be randomly generated!”
said a green cucumber
@@kevinralfi4641 yez
WEED EATER.
Well. They do have meme generators.
Potatoes
"We finally created the first ever flying machine!"
*118 years later*
"We are fucked."
lmaooo
I mean i was abandoned for reasons
But
Underrated comment
WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO YEEEEEEEAH BABY IM THE 1,000th PERSONNTO LIKE THIS WOOOOO
The Qu and the gravitals: ゴ
ゴ
ゴ
ゴ
@@d.plaguethedocter8542 tf
1900’s: flying cars
2020s: TikTok
1960's: "In the 21st century, the world will embrace peace and brotherhood."
2020's: The world embraces fascism and irredentism.
2020's: using smartphone to complain about unnecessary stuff
Why tf do people even want flying cars?
They do the same thing as regular cars, so why would you want them to have a greater chance of ending your life??
More lanes
I was wondering why people in the 1900s thought we'd have moved all of civilization into the sky? Where's the practicality in that? The guy reaching out for a glass of wine on the go in his private plane made me laugh xD
@@IDontWantThisStupidHandle a straight line from a to b is always going to be the shortest way to travel (that is if we don't discover teleportation) so it is very practical if everyone can fly or live in the air it would mean having more space for yourself and less time wasted in traveling through traffics. The only reason why we aren't all flying is because of energy as it is still very costly to be airborne with the amount of energy we are generating today, same goes for the future in space and other things. It's always been a problem of resource holding back our progress
@@dandyND I agree that the fastest path is the way the crow flies, but life isn't only travel. We would need to create infrastructure to grow billions of pounds of food in the air, and connect water sources to our buildings (again, stationed in the air) -- it makes no practical sense. You're only displacing the space problem to higher altitude, when on the ground, we have just that -- ground to grow food, lay water transport pipes and electric cables, dispose of waste (not an ideal place for it, but that will again be a huge problem in airborne life as well), etc.
@@IDontWantThisStupidHandle yes, that is why predictions are most of the time wrong, because we have more problem to take care of than just the new trending technology. It's like we all used to dream of big things as kids but as we grow up, we have so many things to take account of that we have to set aside what our dreamed future was. Maybe if we have a super computer that could consider all aspect in life, it could accurately predict what the future would look like
One thing never changes: we only see how the richest live.
Edit: because of many comments, here's an explanation: I meant richest societies, not richest people
sadly true
The way the poorest live doesn't change much.
@@livelife4928 Smallest details can change the world.
@@starhalv2427
Like living underground sounds much different. People are looking for ways to eradicate poverty. I wouldn't be surprised if they literally took a shortcut and just pushed all the poor people to live in what is basically just the sewers with mostly suburban and industrial infrastructure.
Oof hard hitting comment
I like how the expectation of 2000 from 1900 didn’t even bother to change fashion
Edit: oh dang thanks for 2k likes 👍
Ikr
Well tbf in the very early 1900s fashion hadn’t changed that much from the previous few centuries, why would they expect the next century to be any different?
@@killerkitten7534 actually, fashion had changed a lot. We usally look superficially at fashion thinking that it really started to change only after 1900, but in reality you can totally compare the changes of 1900-2000 fashion with, perhaps, 1700-1800. It's just that we overlook them and assume they dressed the same for centuries... Wich is just wrong. Humans have always been humans, if yuo dig a bit into history you'll discover that even the Romans had the same behaviours that we have today, and the trend to change fashion every decade was certanly one of them ;)
@@stefrong2260 And the Victorian era (which had just come to an end) was known for rapidly changing silhouettes and fashions, so it's strange they didn't expect anything to be different
@@HughMiller98 they probably did predict that fashion would be different they just didn't bother to predict what it would look like because they knew that they had no real way of predicting something like that
8:18 for people who don’t understand Fahrenheit vs celsius, there is a formula that you have to use to convert, you can’t say that x celsius is x farenheit, like in inches vs cm, etc. While 3 celsius is equivalent to 37 Fahrenheit, you can’t apply that to an increase in temperature. For instance, 70 farenheit is 21 celsius, but 24 celsius is 75 farenheit, not 107. 10 c is 50 f, while 13 c is 55 f, etc. Meaning the number below celsius should be 5 farenheit.
Prediction: “Shop for items with the click of a button”
Me: “Hey that’s actually pretty accura--“
Prediction: “You will also eat sawdust”
Me: “nevermind”
Actually that one about eating sawdust isn't that off, given that raspberry flavor (like other industrial food ingredients) can be chemically synthesised using actual sawdust.
@@lepusarcticus5363 gross sounds good but my throat ia gonna have splinters
@@lepusarcticus5363 there are also brands of grated cheese that is actually made of sawdust. More like a filker. Perfectly legal. Also Sawdust is a natural resource. Read lables.
You'd be surprised how much added cellulose is in your food. ;) Mmmm, sawdust.
@@lepusarcticus5363 well then, they were quite on the nose afterall xD
1900: "words are then played directly into the students' ears"
2021: *lockdown and online classes* i mean, they're not wrong
True
omfg
I wonder if the 1900s predicted the Simpsons 🤔🤨
fuck
SAY SUS 😳 EVERYWHERE ON UA-cam
This video made me reconsider the fact that we went from inventing a simple flying machine, to land on the moon in under 70 years. Humanity did some serious speedrunning
Imagine someone watching the first airplane flight and someons speculating that now that we can fly, we will probably fly to the moon within our lifetime.
People would think he was crazy.
Add to this we didn't go further only because the public didn't see the purpose of funding more, and NASA's budget was cut 3 times after the last Apollo. By that time NASA had figured nuclear rocket engines and wanted to put nuclear tows on the orbit to be used for frequent travels to the Moon to build spacecrafts for interplanetary travel there.
In early 70s top engineers in NASA believed they would put people on Mars by 1980s. By now NASA only comes back to these old technologies. To put men on Mars and get them back quickly enough before they would get too ill from space radiation, a nuclear rocket engine is the only thing that can provide the necessary speed of travel.
Building this spacecraft on the Moon is then necessary for both safety purposes as launching an assembled with active fuel straight from Earth would be too risky, and to shield astronauts from it's radiation the spacecraft need to be too big and heavy to be launched from Earth. So we need to build a lunar spacecraft and nuclear reactor factory on Moon first, and then launch the interplanetary spacecraft from there.
Then the focus shifted towards little thing called Internet
@@piotrmalewski8178 And we could use the caves of the Moon for these bases since they provide natural protection from the Sun's radiation.
To think it took about 180,000 years to learn how to put a seed in the ground and there was 66 years difference between the first flight and the moon landing
I LOVE content like this and, while I'm late to this by 2 years, I want to say that I am so so glad I found this. This entire theme, and technology themes like it, are ones that I think of often. I was actually looking for this about a month back, in today's time, and surprisingly no one showed up that had a video I agreed with. But maybe today I worded it correctly. Anyway.
Thank you sir, the man behind hochelega, for making such a profound yet exciting video. By the by, unrelated, you do have quite a good speaking voice.
Right then. I wish you the best!
When people predict the future, they think about their technology improving other than new technology.
You improve a technology then it's still a new technology-
@Lippy I agree but at the same time notice the hint of *SARCASM* of every sentence :/ I didn't meant it lit but a joke :/
You’re right, they were talking about a flying car but they never would have fathomed we would have self driving cars. They wouldn’t have thought there would be an international space station circling the globe. I think we’ve gotten even further than what they thought. Most people focus on what we don’t have but don’t realize what we’ve already created.
@@crunchynapkin said it better than I could🙌🏼
@Lippy 👍🏼
Aren't helicopters really the "flying car" of reality?
No. It's used by a few rich people, but it's too expensive for normal usage.
Unmanned flying car helicopters can be bought by anybody, and they would've blown 20th century people's brains off.
@@xwtek3505 till you relize, if evryone is flying then it will be as crowded and far more likely for you to die
@@a.bagasm.7253 Yeah, but the bottleneck is actually much earlier than that. Driving a helicopter is harder and took a lengthy time to master. This will make helicopter very expensive.
@@xwtek3505 so is a lambo and its still a car
I love how when a futuristic design is outdated, it's called "Retro Futuristic" lol
It shows how the present limits our vision of the future
They'd be horrified.
Some clothing barely classifies as clothing. Crop tops would give them heart-attacks, leggings would be no different from painting your skin black, appearance-wise. Once they see bikinis, they'd die.
Gotta say, I get where that memed boomer opinion that kids these days dress too scandalously comes from.
@@Zaire82 i think bikinis were around in the 30s
kind of an oxymoron lol
@@Zaire82 imagine how horrified proto-humans would be that we wear clothes at all and are pretty hairless comparatively lol.
Kinda crazy how back then the future was depicted as hopeful, but now it's bleak and hopeless
Walking facemasks zombies
Actually, the 2020s were like 90 times more peaceful. Humanity is at its golden age, and nobody appreciates it.
Oh no, I was wrong, modern art is bad, pop music is bad, modern architecture is bad, everything is bad
@@QUEfrang i hope you joking?things are so good seemingly because there is many lies and manipulation perhaps?our internet_products and smartphones are partly made by childslaves in extreme pollluting mines for its mineral neccesities and forests are worldwide deteriorating like the climate and disappearance of wildlife.too many chinese_people are still very poor but that is hidding from the worldpublic because with dictatorship not many info can published to the outsideworld and statistics are manipulated.obesitas loniness are ravaging rampage epidemics and tiktok is not a true cultural enrichment but of you thinking we living a golden_age for humanity yes in terms of overpopulation while elswhere people are massively died out as they becoming old but leaving not much descendants but maybe replacement perhaps with immigrants also not its a ideal solution either for that problem without considering cultural tensions, media_technology_acces medical_care and food_access and some amount of safety we do have indeed required,but are we really happy or satisfyed(if you take account how many today people using anti_depressivum) or worse is the near future so peacefull with emerging wars genocides in some places right now on earth?if we where all happy why is there massive migrant_crisis or why this worsening climate_change or overuse of harddrugs?and don,t forget microplastic is almost in every humanbrain infiltrated.but if you want to believing this is a golden_age its true only for the eyes of the beholder to appreciating this socalled beautyfull times!😊😊😊in case you think i,m some saintly idealist i can answer no i,m not,but i also not pretending its all oke:in reality i don,t really care if this world goes to shit!by the way i having relatively good living in the modern west where things a better then socalled new emerging powerhouses like india or china and the 2020s where indeed unforgettable(although is not yet finished the twenties )for its covid_epidemic for some people horrendous isolating period but who cares?!😊
@@QUEfrang
You’re based in unfiltered perspective. Bravo!
I love how each era predicted that their current fashion trends would continue unabated into the 21st century lol!
As another comment said, people overstimate technological advancement and understimate cultural change
@@ryoid6001 ... or even change style!
Like back to the future 2 is just futurized versions of the 1980s.
Honestly what I predict in the future is stagnation, 2020 won't look that different from 2040. Technology doesn't seem to be rapidly developing as of now, and the limits of our current computers are really being pushed.
@@unlimited8410 The future looks bleak for humankind, but I wouldn't call it "stagnation." Two things are developing rapidly: AI ( _Terminator_ is getting closer to becoming a reality every day) and global-warming-climate-change which is mushrooming into a fully blown crisis.
This guy is like a mini Aperture, but uploads more often
It’s like Skyrim with guns -IGN
and with better voice.
@@vikrant555 why? what's wrong with Aperture's voice?
@@golden2880
Nothing wrong with him but this guy's voice sounds better in my opinion.
@@vikrant555 aight
The past: I bet we'll have flying cars in the future!
2020: *watching a video of flying car prediction on a handheld supercomputer whilst sitting on the toilet during a global pandemic*
Now tell me this isn't better than flying cars. Minus the pandemic of course
@@greggegg8358 sitting on a toilet vs flying cars. 🤔
@@SamsungS23Ultr handheld supercomputer
@@DivineDefect I wasn't talking about the super computer. Everything in the og comment is worse. Except the super computer that I explicitly left out.
@@SamsungS23Ultr I was expecting to get whooshed but I got this instead. Hm.
It's so fascinating that these past generations thought we would have fancy things like miniature suns and commercial space bases that we don't actually have today, but none of them predicted the internet. That was a total wild card in the sense of development, which has wildly altered the course of human history. Just think of all of the societal changes that have happened in the last 20-30 years from the start of the internet to now, and what humanity will look like in another 20-30 years as a result of it
predictions of the future from the past : optimistic and hopeful. usually read out by a calm, happy narrator
predictions of the future from around this time : *dystopian cyberpunk synthwave intensifies*
In other words, predictions from the past were less retarded.
I feel like nowadays predictions are rather realistic than imaginitive
Probably because we're more depressed/disillusioned now and are therefore coming up with darker stuff. :P
You still see the “Optimistic” actually these days, mainly as a quasi ads for things.
✨✨Depressed & hopelessness.✨✨
I would pay good money to see people from the 1900s react to what we wear today if time travel was possible. They’d have heart attacks
They dressed really well to be honest. I wish we still dressed like that.
They would think that technology is witchcraft
@@nmg1541 bruh the fact that they predicted in the future where glass panes on top of cities so that rain won't fall down on buildings is already considered witchcraft. The illustration of people flying with wings is already considered witchcraft. Maybe medieval era people would think of it as witchcraft..
Tbh fashion is just highly impossible to predict (imo)
@@humanman2358 The internet... smart phones... self driving cars... creating oxygen from CO2... the dome thing is honestly unrealistic, unnecessary and pointless. We could do it if we wanted to, but it has more cons then pros
1900's future predictions: *Jetsons*
2000's future predictions: *Fallout*
This is all these comments in a way that makes sense.
Ironic
If it doesn’t happen and global warming is wrong or something people in 2123 will look at us and laugh at our stupidity. “Look at those people 100 years ago, thinking that they were going to die in 50 years”. Interesting to think about.
There were plenty of doomsday and dystopian predictions throughout the 1900s. WW1 was often called the War to End All Wars. Soviet nations made an onslaught of post apocalypse fiction. This video is incredibly cherry picked.
The fact you showed a clip from the original tomb raider further proves why I like your channel so much. Bravo
Us: That version of the future looks so... 60s
The future: That version of the future looks so... 2020s
BAHAHAH
but wouldn't it just be 20's?
@@cheesecake001 ummm that's kinda scary to think that when we are now will one day be referred to as "The 20's"
@@audreyanderson5931 ikr
@@audreyanderson5931 yeah
This truly just shows how unpredictable the future is
You ment Apocalypse?
Pretty predictable. If people like the guy above me reproduced, the future will peaceful and relaxing since pretty much everybody with -70 IQ won't survive for long. Probably even kill themselves in some dumb accident. Humans will be extinct either way. From smartest to dumbest animal on the planet.
It also shows that human expectation is a bit too high due to the progress of technologies at the time.
@@Zikeal-d4l holy shit you didnt have to fucking kill him
But we won’t get to experience it anyways so whys it matter
Sometimes I like to daydream about people from the past coming to the present and seeing them be horrified or amazed by the future.
Me too
@@noah-rt7rq Yes, or going back in time and trying to describe the future to people there. You'd have your work cut out for you, I think..
It’s different for every generation
I did that too
Probably a mix of horror and amazement at both the technological and societal changes
@hochelaga i am just always so impressed with your videos and your style of storytelling. it's an admirable skill!
Clothes in predictions: still looks the same after a century
Clothes in real 2000: C A R G O P A N T S
Not the same. There had been a reformist movement at the time that wanted women to be allowed to wear underwear, and cotton underdresses instead of whale-bone corsets.
It was quite predictable that the reformists would succeed eventually.
I like baggy cargo pants
I believe in cargo pants supremacy
@@kai0tfoool even as a woman I enjoy some of that stuff. I wish people tried to dress better occasionally, and freer dresses can be quite comfortable
@Tod x when exposing your ankle was scandalous? Ok, buddy...
1920: “in the future we’ll have flying cars!”
2020: *person watching this on a mobile computer that can fit in your pocket that has access to nearly all of humanity’s collective knowledge right at my fingertips* “yeah, why does the future suck so much?”
Love this comment. Internet and smartphones are so incredible that no one was capable of predicting it. And it literally changed the world. The reality went far further than people imagination in that field.
That's because people don't understand we truly are in the future
@@rodrigobatista7726 well I don't know if that makes much sense but I get what you mean
One thing nobody accounted for was the rise of negativity and pessimism/ Nihilism over the years. Even now, nobody accounts for it and all people say these days is ' Society bad ' without proposing any meaningful solution.
I personally believe the future is going to be more in between.
We'll have a lot more of good and beautiful things yet A huge majority will only focus on the negatives.
Our predictions would be correct, just not in the ways we envisioned.
@@livelife4928 I think our impending doom due to Climate change is a pretty fair thing to be pessimistic about. And honesty the positive ignorant boomers dying off definitely isn't a bad thing
Technology progresses fast, but not as fast as human ambition
Technology progresses fast in a different pace than the human mind does, and I'm not even sure if the pace is faster or slower
@@aurin_komak human mind is beyond of technology. Damn, we dont even know why we dream
@Odinson Warrior you commented under the wrong comment mate
Humans like to predict stuff that happens in the future. That's why most of sci-fi exists.
"Technology progresses fast, but not as fast as human ambition"
For example, how many times have you seen faster than light travel in a sci-fi thing? Countless times. How many times have you seen faster than light travel in real life? Zero. That's what the comment meant
Technology progresses as fast as humans decide it. We're just taking too long to do anything impressive because we don't have the need to.
We just need the right "human" to progress us to the future. and that person might not even been born yet or is in some 3rd world corrupt country ruining his or her potential
I'm convinced that we're not only living in a future that differs from what we had predicted previously, but an adjacent one. I think alternate timelines and planes of reality exist and somehow we got knocked off course.
bro was zooted when writing this comment, nearly 2 years ago
The geopolitics will probably change in 100 years, that’s all I can predict
I predict the USA will remain the largest military and economic power (when combined with its allies) until atleast 2100. China will probably eventually rival it as a second superpower, since China was historically the most powerful country in the World.
I predict it will change yet stay the same pile of conflicting interests and ego that politics has always been.
@@markhenley3097 chinas been on a usain bolt sprint the past couple of decades
Mainland China will chomp the USA in the next two decades or so. So will the state of Uttar Pradesh in India, which will eat Mainland China in turn with Lagos in Nigeria.
@@SlapstickGenius23 wtf
The running theme is: People slowly got less and less optimistic about our future.
Yeah a multi-decade threat of a nuclear war kinda does that to people.
I'm not sure I'd say that there's less optimism...
"Duck and Cover" wasn't optimistic.
The Day After wasn't optimistic.
The Terminator wasn't optimistic.
But, we went from optimism about flying 30 feet off the ground in personal transportation to optimism about living among the stars with a bunch of other people.
people before year 2000: "oh yeah we all gonna live a futuristic luxury life! we will use the nuclear power and we will harvest and conquer the solar system!!"
people after 2000: "don't you see the data!?? don't you see what we have done to this fucking planet? don't you see the effect?? this world is fucked, we all gonna die in a nuclear war or by polution and global warming!!!"
@@kakyoindonut3213 🙄 Umm, sorry man. You're dead wrong.
During the Cold War, we were all scared that the other side was gonna nuke us.
Towards the end of the Cold War, we were all worried that we were about to permanently eff up the Ozone layer.
We keep pinballing from one thing to another...
Also, if you hadn't paid attention in Grade School... the earth goes through these periods... ice ages and tropical climes.
Humanity isn't doing anything that the earth hasn't done before we came along.
@@davidsloat1016 before 2000s, not after world war 2, so 1900 optimism were included, and idk why you bring up ice age, it's not like it will happen again.
"Humanity isn't doing anything that the earth hasn't done before we came along."
tf does this mean, humans don't do stuff that the earth hasn't do before we came??
tbh I can't seem to find what your point is and what you're trying to disprove about my comment.
1900s: We be colonizing another galaxy in 2021!
2021: *m o n k e*
JAJAJAJAJAJAJAJA no kidding, this was the 1st comment that got through my mind when watching the video. I give you my respects, fellow top comedian.
when m o n k e 😱😱😱😱😳😳😳😳😎😎😎😎🍌🍌🍌🍌🍌
Lame Response
Reject humanity, embrace *monke*
1. This is overused (so stop)
2. Your wrong, they thought in the 2000s
2:07, right, that's just a Penny Farthing Pedalo, that's BRILLIANT.
in 2020 we'll have flying cars
2020 : we have better memes
Some form of flying cars does exist actually.
We don't have things that useless AND we have better memes? I see this as an absolute win
no we don't
2020 memes are cancer
2120: The return of the trope 😉
@@BRAIN_BLAST Only normalfgs say "normie"
Found your channel with the angel video. I’ve since watched a few more of yours and now I’m hooked! Your vids are super high quality. I look forward to sticking around and watching this channel grow
Exact same thing here too!
Lol same guys
Same
indeed
Same :)
To everyone watching this in the 22nd century, I know it may seem normal for you to read comments from a hundred years ago, but for us a 6-year-old comment is old. Heck, a 2-year-old comment is considered pretty old! It's all about perspective, and yours is very different than ours.
I doubt youtube will still be around after the great monke revolution
@@flutee6162 return to monke reject humanity
@@chaton897 reddit/internet hivemind bullshit.
They’re gonna read this comment addressing them directly from a hundred years ago by a dead man and they’re gonna get chilllls
@@snigdhasingh5682 it‘s just a meme you snowflake
Oh boy, it's one of those "future we were robbed of" videos that never fail to make me tear up
Mfs in the future are gonna come back to these kinds of videos and say "This didn't age well"
Or some shitty meme from future
LOL
@@tia4108 ok is the oldest meme. And lol is probably gonna be accepted as formal language haha
Yeah, I hope not many people comment here so they can personally tell you that lmao
Lmaooooooooooo 😂 😂
Honestly i feel like most young people nowadays don't expect us to live another hundred years at all, which is kinda depressing in contrast to the past generations having mostly hopeful ideas of the present.
Well, millennials and especially gen Z kids have it a lot harder than older generations in many new ways that you probably haven't considered. The world is going through a technological and informational revolution more drastic than anything in the past few thousand years thanks to the internet, and it's causing a lot of new and unique problems -problems that do not have the benefit of hundreds of years of trial and error to find their solutions like all other human problems we've dealt with- to sprout up for them on top of all the problems of regular life and the doomed world heaped onto them by the admittedly short sighted decisions our past generations.
@@rpkelly3825 it's kind of like being born when a meteor was about to hit, but too late to do anything about it. And even if they weren't given to despair from that, they're pioneering the digitally revolutionized world with no guide which is causing the worst mental health crisis in modern history simultaneously, and if that wasn't enough, even if they were still hopeful and willing to try to stop said meteor despite everything, their parents and grandparents won't get out of the way to let them try.
@@rpkelly3825 Yes, the invention of the internet and its effect on culture and socialization for those who are actually familiar with it (that is to say only millennials and gen Z kids truly) is more drastic a change and societal/technological revolution than anything you mentioned, it's almost on par with the invention of math or writing, or the invention of tools. I know that's hard to grasp but it's true and clear if you look at the grand scale. It's literally the beginning of a sort of unified world/hivemind intelligence for all humanity, it's kind of insane. Technology advances on a J curve, so the advancements become more and more drastic as time goes on, exponentially.
@@rpkelly3825 Perhaps you should reread my comment and pay attention so you know what I'm actually saying before you reply and rage at me. I never said they were revolutionary, I just said they're growing up during an inordinately revolutionary period, and are pioneering the culture of said digital revolution, even if they didn't set it off themselves. Then again, most every device made today that anyone uses presently was made by either millennials or gen z kids in sweatshops.
@@rpkelly3825 The fact of the matter is, someone who has to memorize and fill their brain with mundane trivial information is effectively less intelligent than a kid with the sum of human knowledge in 2 seconds in his pocket.
People in past: "In 2020 we will have extremely futuristic technology and will conquer space"
People now: "OMG i just donated five million dollars to make the e-girl say my name"
We got the best of both.
Vtubers come from amazing technology, and people spend a ton of money on them
@@chinmustache6420 yes
I mean they had some pretty dumb things in the past. But e girls are gonna be humanities downfall.
Technical we kinda do,the tech today like phone is extremely futuristic technological in the past
@@theegiver7478 Don't disrespect queens you turd
I've also noticed that the skyscraper city as imagined by the Europeans and Americans in the 1920s (like Fritz Lang, or Le Corbusier) never really took hold in Europe outside of some relatively isolated examples, or at least not to the same extent as other regions. The Anglosphere did, to varying extents, but they're mostly overshadowed by Asian and Middle Eastern cities.
1900: the future’s gonna be dope
1910: the future’s gonna be dope
1920: the future’s gonna be dope
1930: the future’s gonna be dope
1940: the future’s gonna be dope
1950: the future’s gonna be dope
1960: the future’s gonna be dope
1970: the future’s gonna be dope
1980: the future’s gonna be dope
1990: the future’s gonna be dope
2000: the future’s gonna be dope
2010: we’re all gonna die
2020: among us
Amongus
@@YouberChannel 😐
@@meloangelic when the world sucks, people need hope, when the world is fine, people need fear. I guess.
And 2012 , whole world ended 😐😐
Actually the “we’re all gonna die” started in 1963 with _Dr Strangelove_ . Stanley Kubrick invented the first black comedy about nuclear war, and techno-optimism has never been the same since.
One thing is for sure: our dumbass predictions of the future will have the most photo-realistic sheen to them in history.
The future will be full of killer computers that can murder anyone and go Yandere simply because of more powerful glitches and computer viruses.
our future is either bleak or prosperous. either fallout and hunger games or a utopia like many richer planets in star wars
To be honest, they may be using 3d realistic models and complaining that these 2d flat videso is stupid to watch.
@@SlapstickGenius23 Computers especially AIs aren't even smart enough to shoot without being zold too they will some day but there won't be killer robots
@@equaius893 thats abit binary don't you think
Great video! Quick point: at 8:18 you convert 3C to 37.4F which isn't really accurate. Relative to zero degrees Celsius (or 32 Fahrenheit), that'd be an increase of 5.4 degrees F.
The one thing I love about these drawings is that everybody just seems to be in peace like everything just seems to come natural to everybody and this is the way of life.
Because in the future, you're happy. 😂
These things had to be sold you know
@@gertjan1710 good point
1900s: “the future will be amazing”
2020: *we are all going to die*
To be fair several novels by H. G. Wells predicted ways in which society might collapse. The Time Machine and The War in the Air both come to mind.
@@KonradZielinski putin war
Wasn't it always like this? In the 1910's you had WW1, wich was so big that they thought it should had been the last, and then, they had WW2, wich was even larger.
We are always on the verge of death, it's Just that it can take some time to realize that.
There were a few predictions of doom back then. E.M Forster wrote "The Machine Stops" in 1909, which told of a future ruled by automation, and what happens when it all suddenly goes wrong. We'll need to wait until the next Carrington event to see if he got it right, but with modern reliance on technology I'd say he probably isn't far off.
@@davisdf3064
The Wars from the beginning of history, the fights. We haven’t learned.
It is so sad that there’s such a high possibility that I won’t get to live long enough to witness so many huge leaps in humanity.
@JF - 06SA 979288 Hazel McCallion Sr PS what
The time of leaps and improvements is over. Soon enough you'll be yearning to go back to 2020.
@@billbauer9795 nah
@@bigpoop3073 Says BigPoop.
If you are dim enough to not comprehend what's going on around you, I guess you are to be envied. There is a reason most people with Down's syndrome are always happy.
@@billbauer9795 Wow I wish I could be as intelligent as you. I’m only 12 but I wish I could be smart like you because you are very smart
Edit: I was being sarcastic towards this guys because obviously he is a dickhead who belongs on r/iamverysmart
I just bought an oculus (meta) quest 2 vr headset last week. I showed it to my grandad today, and he was blown away. I set my home to a space-station. As soon as he put the headset on he was looking around and noticed the view of earth outside the window, and he was in awe. I put him on a game that uses hand tracking and he was so confused at first but then was solving puzzles like a pro! I showed him that the guardian boundary protects him from going out of the zone. He was lost for words and loved it. I gave him the controllers and put him on table tennis and mini golf, he loved it and said it’s amazing how far technology has come. And surprising he got the hang of it all pretty quickly!
"People prediction of the future are merely an upgrade to their own technologies, like making better spears out of better stones, but when someone makes an multi shot bow, now it's the future."
- Tree Body Theory
"If I had asked people what they had wanted 10 years ago, they would've said faster horses"
-Henry Ford
It doesn't really apply anymore since our imaginations have been far expanded by Sci-fi. Star-Trek and Star Wars both contain potentially achievable technology that are not merely upgrades of currently existing stuff.
Going outside the 2 big examples there are far more imaginative Sci-fi stories about dyson spheres, time travelling playboys in 1950 London's police boxes, mad scientist alcoholic sociopaths with portal guns, and numerous other examples I wish I could remember right now.
69тн like
After the 1920s, for the most part its only been upgrades to things already invented.
@@thecensoredmuscle563 I was going to say something about microchips and materials science but then I realized you were the same guy I just responded to... and scrolling down you have a loooooot of other comments. It helped me realized that maybe making youtube comments isn’t a valuable use of my time and that maybe I should get back to work... so thanks for that.
1920: We loved to murder each other.
2020: We still can't get along.
We still love to murder each other.
2120: there's no one left
@@luismedina5792 possibly wrong that's just a prediction
That's not far off, isn't it.
220 BC : We loved to murder each other
What if God’s just like “oh shit they actually predicted the future correctly, let’s just make a few changes rq so the whole series isn’t a letdown “
Exactly what it is we live in a matrix
God: Time to drop Aliens vs Skynet in season 2056 instead of 2231 to spice things up.
@@hereyes783 after watching all of the Matrix movies I think it would be nicer to not know about it in the first place
he's doing it for his alien friends
@@thememeguy2195 finally something refreshing
My question is: will the speed of tech progress continue like it is now? Because it is absolutely crazy how fast we progressed in the last century.
We're going to hit the inflection point of the S-curve at some point, but likely not until after AI hits some substantial stride...after which, how much of that progress is "we" anymore?
Similarly to how humanity's agricultural era was a plateau for three millenia, we might reach a technological plateau in future at some point... But not now, AI at least still has a way to go, who knows how long.
…yet we still cannot cure cancer. We can’t seem to CURE anything. We only make expensive pills that one must subscribe to for life, to reduce the symptoms.
Your channel is a hidden gem, keep it up!
*Person from 1850:* Hey, we're finally able to contact 2021! Hello, have we colonised Mars yet?
*2021 Person:* nah, the Earth be flat dawg
*1850 person:* ...
"Breathing is now considered offensive"
@@nig_card you cannot be serious
@Дамир Птицын patched
@@flynnspencer3938 now i am
@@nig_card this may be difficult for you to comprehend but sex and gender arent the same
I think what this video tells us about visions of the future is that they're usually fixated around big current events and technologies- how we think the future will be is largely influenced by current events within the mainstream media- but like you said you have to predict the unpredictable, I find that by seeking out alternative news sources you can better do that, but at the same time you have to be careful you avoid paranoid anxieties and scaremongering- I can remember a few years ago being influenced by media that told me the future is gonna have Muslims invading England and installing Sharia law, a cabal of globalist "marxists" taking over the world and forcing everyone to attend mandatory education camps, etc. going through that phase made me realize a lot of how we think about the future is shaped by our environment (for me a working class white town in england) and the views of those around us locally/in our media (the powers that be)
I’m trying but with trump as the president (I’m American) and all the climate change videos and articles everywhere plus the pandemic, every day has been entirely unlivable for me lately. ALL I feel is anxiety and paranoia, and I don’t know what to do about it. My friends are so distant because of social restrictions and it feels like the live I’ve lived is gone, I’m not even a fraction of myself anymore because I can’t find any peace in my head. Even as I’m writing this now it’s 2:03am, I can’t sleep for shit lately. Everytime I try to lay down and close my eyes, I just see visions of fires and wildlife dying and friends fading away from me and fear. I don’t know how to get out of the Current Event state of mind and find myself again.
@@avril99887766 were going to be fine. My friend thought her mom would get deported when Trump became president 4 years ago. She’s still here. This anxiety around the election is an illusion!! Don’t feed into the hype ! We will be ok.
@@ariannagonzalez2618 whilst its amazing that circumstances prevented your friends mother from being deported, she was ultimately either lucky or just simply spared in the face of Trump's incompetence.. his crew wants to deport pretty much half the country because we didn't vote for him.. this is still a standing issue as of 11:15 pm Dec 31, 2020 and hopefully no more as of Jan 20 2020.. if given the chance, please read and seek assistance whenever anybody threatens your existence even if merely your citizenship
Dong Harvey illegal? That’s been the law for a long time, so... I don’t think Trump is some racist fascist like you think he is
@@thedankknight8333 if you don't think he's racist, then just read his words
If you don't think he's fascist, then ask the man himself
If you don't think, then that's everybody's problem
Well, now it’s 2023 and the thumbnail is kinda accurate
well he changes it every year for us.
what i love most about retro futurism is that their visions of the future are aesthetically based on their own
Eww... is that you in your profile picture? Please seek help
@@Iwipemyasswithpalestianflag relax
@@Iwipemyasswithpalestianflag imagine a cowboy from the 1800s traveling to the future and sees this guys profile pic.
Love how you made a genuinely insightful comment about aesthetics and how we look at things through our own closed-minded lens of what we can imagine... and then people took their closed-minded opinion of the aesthetics of your pfp as their sole take-away.
People in 1900: The future will have technology that will make our life easier and will make us live forever
People in 2021: We’re all gonna die soon
Quick google tells me US life expectancy in 1900 was only 46 years for men and 48 for women. Now it's 79. Tons of diseases like polio, smallpox etc. are eradicated. Healthcare has in general advanced astronomically. Even Covid has been managed in a way that would've been unthinkable back then, hence why it has still killed far less people than the Spanish flu. I know you're just making a joke but that is one prediction of the past that has partly come true.
@@greomgh Not true, the only new technology is internet bots and new diseases used to not form as commonly back then. Vaccines that change someone's DNA is NOT a good thing. Also in 2050 oil will run out and space travel along with lab research will be immpossible without oil.
@@greomgh Life expectancy was so low because of the super low infant mortality rate for babies. It brought the life expectancy done by LOADS. If you lived past childhood you could expect to live to around the same age as people do now.
@ゴロゴロ I don't think many people will want to stay working permanently remote in their homes (although of course not everyone thinks the same) because we are already more isolated with our technology, namely phones, and the lack of being able to interact with people in an office will further increase that physical isolation.
Bear in mind this is just my opinion and certainly not every person or job is the same, but especially with the way school/college-aged people complain about online school compared to in-person, I don't think future generations are going to like the idea of working fully online even more.
Lastly I think a big part of it is being permanently remote means almost all of your time living will be spent in your house (that is, unless you find another location to work remotely, but at that point you're basically commuting without the benefit of people working on the same things around you.). Surely it is human nature to not want to feel trapped/boxed in, and staying in one place for such long periods of time will likely feel like that in a sense.
@@THEVGELITE super HIGH mortality rate
Their predictions are like what I used to imagine as a child, I find it extremely wholesome
Getting recommended on the bink of 2023. Thanks youtube algorithm.
1910: people from 2020 will have flying cars"
2020:teaching people how to wear mask*
😔😔
Incoming idiot republicans getting angry to this
Just commenting so I can read the firestorm
And make a hole in it to breath better
Ye it’s true, flying car are expensive now, but we have it
“In 2020 we’ll be traveling across the millions of different universes!”
America in 2020: haha tank printer go brrrrrrrrrrrrr
2020: it’s ok to be gay now XD
@@princeyahwehtv1144 Uhhh why did you write XD at the end
@@dudumoomoo why did you write XD 3 words before the end?
@@dimitrisefstratiou4240 This question really, really confuses me I don’t know how to respond bro sorry
@@dudumoomoo it’s an emoticon
At 8:17 you imply that an increase of 3°C equals an increase of 37.4°F. In reality, it's an increase of 5.4°F.
@VisualPlugin the Multi-lingual Programmer I don't disagree with that point. I'm just trying to correct what looks like an extreme difference to people who don't know how to convert Celsius to Fahrenheit. If you think it's going to be 37.4°F warmer you're going to do things differently than if you think it's going to be 5.4°F warmer. That's a big difference.
Seems they just put 3 deg C into a converter. A temperature of +3 °C is +37.4 F, but a difference in temperature of 3C is 5.4F.
It's confusing when the scales don't start at the same zero.
@@pawelabrams Exactly.
He googled it and it Said how much it Is past zero so it was much more
Came to the comments hoping someone else noticed that as well XD
Interesting. I think I'll give this channel a sub 😊
Every time I watch a sci-fi movie from the 70's or 80's that tried to predict what the near future would look like, I get a good chuckle out of everything they got wrong and feel pretty impressed about the things they got right. It's fun to compare what they thought would happen to things that actually happened or aren't even close to happening yet.
that´s what makes Star Wars so special, it´s timeless because it´s not set in our world
I can't think of much they got right
@AndroidDoctorr They use flat screen TVs in back to the future 2.
@@GBart Heh heh, I know of a good few.
@@pandemicphilly60 flat screen TVs were invented in the 1960s
Expectations: “Colonizing space” -
Humans: Haven’t even cured cancer yet
2021: science isnt real
Well actually CRISPR definitely could but depends on our priorities as humans
I mean we made meat from dna from a cow with a syringe
Not even the common cold....
@@jeny0o0o there are billions of dollars invested in hundreds of different hospitals, laboratories and research spaces across the world and you, for some reason, think that them don't have as a priority finding a cure for the most dangerous disease in the planet? Comments like this are so fucking stupid
"You'll eat food made from sawdust." I mean...I guess that did kind of predict vegan substitutes. Like Impossible burgers. Not quite sawdust...but plant-based, yes. Lmao.
And tide pods
Look at the shit they put in the worst fast food.
Once i ate a toothpick that kinda counts
Yup now we have furries and other weird pointless stuff
There are honestly scientists out there studying why we can't digest wood, and how we somehow could modify it to make an enormous food source. By the time they suss it out, ironically there will probably be no trees left!
Sad that the optimistic outlook for the future has all but gone, especially since we have the technology to actually make the world an amazing place for everyone.
We’ve come a long way since the early 1900’s. But our expectations are still too high.
From buggies to cars!
SIMPLE
In 2025 we will colonize Mars and cure all diseases!
Your kidding right?
Hmm, my expectations for what will happen in a few decades are pretty low. All I do know is, there's probably gonna be new memes, and songs from the 2000's would be like listening a classic 50's in our current year
Imagine people in 50 years finding this video and going like: "CYBERNETIC ENHANCEMENTS?! BRUH, WE'RE NEARLY BACK TO THE STONEAGE"
According to baba wanga, the first cyborgs will be in 2120
@@Pyro256 baba wnaga?
@@Pyro256 Cyborgs already exist, there are people with robotic prosthetic limbs that they can control with signals from their brain.
@@lozfactor not brains but muscle movement
@@annusrideviravindran6396 Muscle movement is controlled by signals from the brain.
In the future people gonna be like "ew 4k I can see the pixels" or "ew 60fps is like a slide show"
"WTF?????? ONLY 6.9 × 10⁴²⁰ FRAMES PER SECOND?????? THIS SHIT'S UNPLAYABLE"
60 fps does actually feel like a slideshow for me though
first world problems
Why are all films 24fps...
@@Woah595 Traditional animation films are in 24 fps, movies and 3d animated movies are on 60 fps.
Your voice is so relaxing!
Ah, nice video, by the way! :)
A magnificent sort of discernment.
2021: ruining peoples lives over a joke they made years ago on twitter
EXACTLY
🙌🏼Cancel culture🙌🏼
Imagine 1000 years later someone found a joke that Kevin Hart made and started pissing on his grave.
@@canadianrage5224 cancel culture?
@@user-ru2sb9yk8k yup. Twitter mobs that like cancelling people they disagree with, or in this case bringing up something someone said years ago to ruin their lives. That’s cancel culture
We thought we would get flying cars in the future,and here we are...where even the planes can't fly
Florida is open because they don't care
Good for Florida. Because it's nothing to care about. Stupid people are afraid of 'virus' which is not deadly as another disease like cancer etc. more people dying because they're not treated with their real problem and this is what actually kills them...
@@julieteller7194 tell that to my dead neighbor
@@julieteller7194 Julie the virus isn't real bc u can't see it just like the Eiffel Tower isn't real bc who actually went there? That's literally y'all's logic.
Yeah right because I don't live on this earth and I can't see it what is the purpose of doing this lockdowns etc.lol . Like I said 'virus' most likely can kill weak old people which they have another disease the 'doctors' ignored
I want differently colored roads. That seemed cool!
Not so cool for color blind people 😬
Me, too! When I saw that, I was like, "Differently-colored roads for different routes. That's actually quite a brilliant idea."
@ok! Deadpoppin yes and no.
it's actually cool
Once i saw a red bus lane
The guy taking wine while flying a plane shows how different things used to be. I'm glad we live in a time where knowledge is so readily available
Something I find interesting is the “future” seems to be a potential, starting around 1960s and slowly get more and more realistic. While this realism keeps advancing, the time of imagination to the time of creation slowly gets smaller.
Technology is a cumulative effort hence its advancement is rather exponential. That said, on a long enough timeline, it's probably more like an S-curve. At some point, the very limitations of physics itself will keep certain ideas from coming to light, not to mention whatever social/political fallout we may experience that slows us down.
Back to the Future predicted 2015 to have flying cars as something common. So, we're getting slow/ going the wring way/ West Humanity is doing something wrong
@@timgorg1919 the difficulty of flying cars has far less to do with the tech itself and more to do with the fact that the "infrastructure" and laws associated with air traffic control would be a nightmare. And in order to keep buildings/people on the ground safe from poorly maintained cars from falling out of the sky, the inspection requirements would have to be remarkably stringent and frequent
@@chrisjfox8715 Also Back to the Future predicted trash as an energy source for cars
@@timgorg1919we have that, it's just not used much.
I love how all the future predictions from the 50’s and such, could never imagine that we would have our whole lives in our hands. Pretty damn mind blowing.
I think predictions are more like ”dreams” that you turn in to goals.
Lets be honest, 2001 eliminated ANY demand for flying cars in the USA..
The past prediction to this day:there will be flying cars!
What actually happened:people simping to a virtual character
*Is this a personal attack?*
@@PrinceaIIy yes
cant blame me kaeya and dazai is hot
BahahshH- oh wait I think I'm part of that ._.