How People In 1899 Imagined The Year 2000.

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  • Опубліковано 28 лис 2024

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  • @jonntischnabel
    @jonntischnabel Рік тому +11050

    Its quite amusing that they could imagine these technologies, but that fashion would not progress at all in 100 years. Everyone still has waistcoats , moustaches, and the ladies all have frilly petticoats etc. 😂

    • @verynearlyinteresting
      @verynearlyinteresting  Рік тому +814

      Good point 😆

    • @themightykabool
      @themightykabool Рік тому +357

      Clothung styles are cyclical.
      Belbottoms
      Deminim everyhting
      Aviators
      Etcetc
      Aaaaaahaha
      Ohhoo the day when big hoop ball gown dressss come back.

    • @DomingoDeSantaClara
      @DomingoDeSantaClara Рік тому +154

      You don't watch the same porn channels as me😅

    • @laurencewinch-furness9450
      @laurencewinch-furness9450 Рік тому +515

      It's pretty much impossible to predict what the future of fashion will be. An attempt by Victorians to design "futuristic" fashions would probably look more ridiculous than just imagining future people dressed exactly like them

    • @ivilivo
      @ivilivo Рік тому +64

      All sci-fi is easy to spot when it's made based in clothing imagination. So as predicting future clothing, I guess humankind just suck.

  • @colonelcustard.9883
    @colonelcustard.9883 11 місяців тому +3464

    As a firefighter, I have to say, having a jetpack and a long hose would be a terrible idea. The jet reaction from a main jet hose is so strong that sometimes it requires to firefighters two prevent it lifting you off your feet. If it was one person holding the hose and balancing on a jetpack the result would be a firefighter snaking across the sky before crashing to earth.

    • @verynearlyinteresting
      @verynearlyinteresting  11 місяців тому +565

      … and this is why I’m not a fire fighter. You, however, are and you have my utmost respect. Tez

    • @VOID_GENESIS
      @VOID_GENESIS 11 місяців тому +109

      Yeah the hose alone could be a Jetpack (I’ve watched little rascals, I know everything)

    • @БранимирМилошевић
      @БранимирМилошевић 11 місяців тому +74

      Imagine if the hose and the jet pack were synced to provide exact counterforces in propulsion - again, pretty outlandish and unlikely.

    • @Bitmaker64
      @Bitmaker64 11 місяців тому +24

      @@БранимирМилошевић I think you would just be crushed by the forces at this point.

    • @The38alt
      @The38alt 11 місяців тому +15

      Man firefighters are tough. I had my firefighter training in 2019 and I found myself tired a lot of the time but had to keep going carrying 2 tanks, gear and mask while trying to hold down a hose lol. Thank you for looking after us

  • @Snorlax108
    @Snorlax108 11 місяців тому +983

    Its interesting how they drew so much about us going underwater but not outer space

    • @Sailor11Sedna
      @Sailor11Sedna 9 місяців тому +26

      We’ve done some of both. Neither with the frequency or caution I would like.

    • @nez9751
      @nez9751 8 місяців тому +39

      Yeah. But at that time they thought they had conquered the oceans but not the skies. The intensive breeding of chickens is a bit sad, because it’s correct n a way
      But they did get so many things right…. Sort of

    • @megapro125
      @megapro125 8 місяців тому +30

      @@Sailor11Sedna they certainly didn't predict people would be using a cheap wireless controller to navigate some ghetto rigged uncertified deep sea submarine.

    • @ewetoob1924
      @ewetoob1924 8 місяців тому +14

      Space was passe. Jules Verne wrote "From the Earth to the Moon" in 1865. By 1899 the interesting frontiers were air travel and and underwater.

    • @HENRIDuRoy
      @HENRIDuRoy 8 місяців тому

      What is about drones... human flying

  • @brick6347
    @brick6347 Рік тому +4451

    Although 1899 seems like an awfully long time ago, it really isn't. A ten year old child staring at those pictures could well have lived into the 1990s, and a few even into the 2000s (the last person born in 1900 died in 2017). It's quite possible, though perhaps unlikely, that one or two of them used UA-cam. It also makes me wonder how much of it is self fulfilling prophes. Seeing those wild predictions in 1899 might have inspired some of those kids to go and make them true, so they came true. Much like kids in the 1960s who grew up watching Star Trek ended up making flipphones in the 90s.

    • @verynearlyinteresting
      @verynearlyinteresting  Рік тому +422

      Brilliant observation and comment!

    • @leodf1
      @leodf1 Рік тому +164

      Great point. And you don't have to start exactly when the cards were released. They would easily have stayed current and collected for a decade or so. A ten year old in 1915 say, could certainly have admired them and seen the millenium and everything come true...

    • @nathanaelsmith4251
      @nathanaelsmith4251 Рік тому +298

      I often think about my Grandpa who was born in 1890. He was 13 when the Wright brothers first flew and in his 30s the first time he saw an airplane. Yet he watched on a color television as Neil Armstrong walked on the moon! He went from everyone traveling by horse and wagon on dirt roads to driving on interstates!

    • @timweather3847
      @timweather3847 Рік тому +126

      My father was born in 1891 (OK, he was knocking on a bit when he fathered me!), but though he lived into his 80s he would find the sort of technology that I now use utterly incomprehensible.

    • @treadingtheboards2875
      @treadingtheboards2875 Рік тому +160

      In some ways, time is changeable to a certain degree. I was born in 1945, in 1955, 10 year old me thought the year 2023 was so far into the future as to be almost unreachable. Now in 2023, I look at 1955 as being only yesterday.

  • @spidermaninky
    @spidermaninky 11 місяців тому +452

    One correction I would make is that speech to text actually was a thing in the year 2000. Dragon dictation software was released in 1995, and printers obviously already existed at that point.

    • @UL439
      @UL439 11 місяців тому +40

      Also, I bought a Roomba vacuum cleaner in early 2000s

    • @Amos_Lee
      @Amos_Lee 11 місяців тому +3

      I had DNS too back then

    • @aarong19
      @aarong19 11 місяців тому +8

      @@UL439yep, they’ve been around since the late 90s

    • @Danielle_1234
      @Danielle_1234 11 місяців тому +11

      Yeah. You could do speech to text in the 1980s too. In 2001 I used speech to text to write essays for school, because i thought it would be easier to do it that way. It wasn't.

    • @soulcafetv
      @soulcafetv 10 місяців тому +5

      alot OF WHAT HE SAID WAS 2023 PREDATED 2000

  • @raffiart5121
    @raffiart5121 9 місяців тому +538

    It’s amazing how they were obsessed with individual flying machines and spending time under water!

    • @juliantheivysaur3137
      @juliantheivysaur3137 8 місяців тому +28

      Makes me wonder if affordable commercial space travel in the year 2100 is realistic or if it's an unrealistic dream.

    • @williamdiffin28
      @williamdiffin28 8 місяців тому +4

      That's just the French for you.

    • @GreatRaijin
      @GreatRaijin 8 місяців тому +19

      We are obsessed with discovering and exploring new places, people 100 years ago thought we would spend all our time underwater and in the skies, now that we can explore both, we're talking about colonizing space and other planets in the future, who knows where humanity where go in the far future

    • @bobjacobson858
      @bobjacobson858 8 місяців тому

      Some people are "underwater" today, but in a different sense--mostly having to do with autos and perhaps some other purchases.

    • @kennethflaming8606
      @kennethflaming8606 8 місяців тому +1

      @@juliantheivysaur3137 If ww3 happends , and it doesn"t go nuclear. technology will skyrocket to the point i think it will be doable around 2070-2080

  • @goldenskeptic6309
    @goldenskeptic6309 Рік тому +293

    It's amazing how many actual concepts they got correct.

    • @williambrandondavis6897
      @williambrandondavis6897 Рік тому +16

      If you study history it is not so amazing. All the things depicted were pretty common knowledge in 1900. Have you never read H.G. Wells or Jules Vern. The book "the time Machine" was first published in 1895 and the book "10,000 leagues under the sea" was first published in 1870. None of that was new concepts by 1900.

    • @craftah
      @craftah 11 місяців тому +23

      @@williambrandondavis6897 its still amazing cause these stuff didnt exist back then dude

    • @Narwhal12
      @Narwhal12 11 місяців тому +4

      @@williambrandondavis6897That isn’t the point

    • @tek87
      @tek87 7 місяців тому +1

      A lot of it was logical expansions on what already existed.

    • @killerkraut9179
      @killerkraut9179 7 місяців тому

      I think the war and military stuff is often underestimated!
      Modern war helicopters are much more powerfull!

  • @leodf1
    @leodf1 Рік тому +999

    02:40 The teacher doesn't have to present the lecture, he simply lets the students listen to the books. That's audio books, which we've had for a while and perfectly accurate. 06:15 Modern tractors and harvesting vehicles can process a field guided by GPS, without driver intervention. 07:00 I remember the Electrolux Trilobite robot vaccum cleaners came out in the mid 90's. 07:30 Speech to text transcription has been around a while. I had DragonDictate software in the 90's. 07:50 Internet communicaiton is clearly suggested. You can see they are in some kind of communcation room with phone lines on the wall. 08:50 'Electric rollerblades' are most definitelly a thing. The hoverboards and segways that were trendy these past years.
    The fixation with flying personal transport persists to this day, with every futuristic movie having levitating cars. Thanks for the video

    • @verynearlyinteresting
      @verynearlyinteresting  Рік тому +104

      Great comment. Thanks so much, Tez 😊

    • @mariateresamondragon5850
      @mariateresamondragon5850 Рік тому +32

      I think the couple listening to the news (at about 9:00) is more like radio or TV, so from the mid-century, than anything newer.

    • @Vojtaniz01
      @Vojtaniz01 Рік тому +6

      @@mariateresamondragon5850 Even earlier. In Czechia, we have just celebrated 100th anniversary of the radio this year.

    • @stainlesssteelfox1
      @stainlesssteelfox1 Рік тому +10

      For that matter, personal flight is closer than it's ever been before. Manned drones are a thing, if not yet commercially available, and Gravity seems to have cracked a jetpack design that has practical applications.

    • @canadianman000
      @canadianman000 Рік тому +13

      At 9:30 the flyers with engines strapped to their backs is absolutely a thing. Powered gliders, Ultra-lights, and Para-Motors all bare a great likeness.

  • @mnnrandom8279
    @mnnrandom8279 8 місяців тому +1068

    Biggest inaccuracy: They though people would still wear clothes that covered a legitimate amount of their body. Even when swimming.

    • @alichefortune862
      @alichefortune862 8 місяців тому +30

      😂😂😂

    • @thedbcooperforum
      @thedbcooperforum 8 місяців тому +34

      They couldn't get past there own time..100 years later and still using exterior belts and gears, large rivits..

    • @Allen-ps6bx
      @Allen-ps6bx 8 місяців тому +9

      ​@@thedbcooperforum their not there.

    • @PaulBorobia1619
      @PaulBorobia1619 8 місяців тому +12

      Most distorted part of us now

    • @thedbcooperforum
      @thedbcooperforum 8 місяців тому +15

      @@Allen-ps6bx Eye sea what ewe mean butt don't care as much as ewe wood..

  • @Lopyj
    @Lopyj 11 місяців тому +261

    My Grandma was born in 1899... she liked to tell me stories from her childhood when I was a kid - for example, that they did not have electricity in the house... although they were not poor, but hardly someone did have that in those days in her small town.
    Totally different times. She died in 1981... and saw so much happening through her liefe, technical inventions, two world wars...

  • @sm5574
    @sm5574 Рік тому +988

    It's extremely difficult to predict disruptive technology, such as computers, video screens, etc., so I'm not surprised all of their futuristic gadgets were either mechanical or electric. I'm surprised they didn't predict wireless phones, though. It's a natural expansion of the telephone, even if the technology is very different.
    Great video!

    • @verynearlyinteresting
      @verynearlyinteresting  Рік тому +38

      Good point and thank you. Tez

    • @swagaw3some546
      @swagaw3some546 11 місяців тому +76

      At the time where these were made radio hadn't been invented yet they were off by two years, but I bet if they had radio they would have everything wireless

    • @tommykebschull9439
      @tommykebschull9439 11 місяців тому

      The transistor wasn’t invented until much later. I’m not sure any scientists at the time believed that it was possible to do. I don’t think radio was even invented yet.

    • @Dinmc123
      @Dinmc123 11 місяців тому +1

      I mean the purpose of the invention which was imagined in 1900 is still similiar to our tech

    • @miniverse2002
      @miniverse2002 11 місяців тому +5

      It's interesting because our own predictions of the future is usually based around the use of our own "background" tech as well. Who knows if something just as disruptive is around the corner that can't really be described as a run-of-the-mill computer.

  • @walterishere5864
    @walterishere5864 11 місяців тому +75

    I guess 1899's version of going to space is to go into the oceans...

    • @jerm7151
      @jerm7151 7 місяців тому +9

      Great viewpoint. Seems like the possibility of space travel was out of sight at that time.

  • @szithaanu9934
    @szithaanu9934 Рік тому +788

    It's interesting that they could imagine such activities relatively accurately, but couldn't comprehend the technology beyond what they had available to them.
    Makes you wonder could we even begin to fathom what technology will be available 100 years from now.

    • @MrChristianDT
      @MrChristianDT Рік тому +85

      It's hard for me to imagine much more innovation, aside from continued research into AI & Space exploration. Maybe the lab grown meat thing might end up leading to innovations in direct cloning?

    • @jsl151850b
      @jsl151850b Рік тому +42

      I've read several Sci-Fi magazines from the 30s and 40s. Except for Positronic Robots no one imagined the TRANSISTOR!!

    • @srellison561
      @srellison561 Рік тому

      @@jsl151850b Or solid state technology in general.

    • @jarikinnunen1718
      @jarikinnunen1718 Рік тому

      Many inventions are born by accident. Teflon was born from an attempt to make super glue and penicillin, when a badly managed laboratory forgot the samples, left them on the table for too long to become contaminated with mold. The American continents were found in an attempt to find a shortcut to India. The Indians got their name from that mistake.

    • @TheBeastCH
      @TheBeastCH Рік тому +20

      We don't have jetpacks and aren't riding giant fish, but they still got a couple basic ideas right. Sci Fi from the 1970s, such as Star Wars has started to look weird. Those pictures look even weirder. At some point, the predictions made in movies like Interstellar or series like The Expanse will look just as weird to people in the future. Even when we do get stuff right. (like the french artists got airborne warfare right)

  • @CatNolara
    @CatNolara Рік тому +1446

    That was really fascinating. I wish I could just invite people from 1899 to the world of today, they'd propably be speechless. But also makes you think about what's to come in the next 100 years, seeing recent developments a lot of SciFi wasn't that far off after all with how VR and AI tech is coming along.

    • @verynearlyinteresting
      @verynearlyinteresting  Рік тому +66

      Totally agree!

    • @Navra-sc2ws
      @Navra-sc2ws 11 місяців тому +12

      Yeah, nowaday human already face stagnation in their civilization development.

    • @AnonymousFohYOU
      @AnonymousFohYOU 11 місяців тому +69

      The last person born in 1900 died in 2017, so a few of them did see past the year 2000

    • @YayRaven
      @YayRaven 11 місяців тому +6

      And it’s coming at a fast pace now! Our lives are no longer private and it’s getting worse. I share a personal text. I see ads on UA-cam in relation to the contents of the text. I realise the only way to have any privacy is to send snail mail provided the receiver doesn’t take a photo or scan it into a device. Photos with text can be read word for word now even on my iPhone. I can highlight and copy text included on photos.

    • @Lazare7782
      @Lazare7782 11 місяців тому

      @@YayRavengo take your schizo pills, that isn’t real

  • @NickAndriadze
    @NickAndriadze 11 місяців тому +58

    It is genuinely insane to me how correct they were about areal battles and gigantic steampunk looking airships that the world soon knew as Zeppelins. In fact, the airship predictions weren't predicting the 2000s, they were predicting 1920s and 30s, because Zeppelins very soon went out of fashion and the airplanes took over.

  • @mysteryplayz9340
    @mysteryplayz9340 11 місяців тому +341

    5:20 hell naw that is an automated chicken farm from minecraft

    • @someoneelse1534
      @someoneelse1534 10 місяців тому +37

      They didn’t know how right they were

    • @mathelgar
      @mathelgar 8 місяців тому +9

      holy shit

    • @GreatRaijin
      @GreatRaijin 8 місяців тому +7

      So what youre saying is they get half pts

  • @taytay4458
    @taytay4458 11 місяців тому +324

    The Roomba was released in 2002, so the autonomous cleaning machine prediction was actually spot-on!

    • @aa1bb2cc3dd4
      @aa1bb2cc3dd4 8 місяців тому

      dont forget about the vacuum cleaner. This woman was PULLING and controlling the device, which was the vacuum cleaner invented in 1901. They predicted a device made just 2 years later.

    • @ysmith494
      @ysmith494 8 місяців тому

      Yep, I had one of the first models.

    • @mrmichrom8553
      @mrmichrom8553 8 місяців тому +5

      Also speech recognition program Dragon Naturally Speaking was releasen in 1997

    • @ConnanTheCivilized
      @ConnanTheCivilized 8 місяців тому +4

      @@mrmichrom8553Yep. I didn’t want to be constantly spamming “Well, actually….” so thank you.

    • @skatertrix411
      @skatertrix411 7 місяців тому

      No, two years earlier would’ve been “spot on”

  • @VictoriaTime
    @VictoriaTime 8 місяців тому +257

    It is ironic how basically every war invention was spot on.

    • @crankychris2
      @crankychris2 7 місяців тому +10

      but few of the peace inventions...

    • @rafsan1578
      @rafsan1578 6 місяців тому +1

      Except nuclear weapons

    • @RESIST_DIGITAL_ID_UK
      @RESIST_DIGITAL_ID_UK 6 місяців тому +5

      Yeah but you have to understand that war planes and tanks were only invented about a decade or so after 1899 so those predictions were a lot closer in time and therefore more feasible.

    • @drnkwiscnsibly
      @drnkwiscnsibly 5 місяців тому +5

      Nothing speeds up the advancement of technology like war does

    • @nicodesmidt4034
      @nicodesmidt4034 3 місяці тому +1

      @@drnkwiscnsibly sadly

  • @Magicwillnz
    @Magicwillnz 11 місяців тому +397

    The most remarkable book of the era was Paris in the 20th Century by Jules Verne, written in 1860. Verne was remarkable close not only in terms of technology (he predicted the Internet amazingly accurately) but also a media obsessed culture that puts money over every other consideration. One of the most prescient books ever written.

    • @aritrachowdhury5357
      @aritrachowdhury5357 11 місяців тому +19

      only that vern was was incorrect about the source of power and that was also natural for in his time no one could have thought about the technology or even the basic science behind the splitting of an atomic nucleus by fission can convert mass into energy or fusion of lighter nucleus can be even more efficient when made possible in near future . as a side note i would like to add that coversion of sunlight into electricity directy through multijunction solar cells and storing the excess energy by chemical reactions via flow cells or as hydrogen or superconductor coils and making the grids joined worldwide as predicted by vern in his days may not also be a very far off idea .

    • @johnhoney5089
      @johnhoney5089 11 місяців тому +10

      Credit must also be given to the works of Albert Robida, who wrote a trilogy of futuristic novels at the time (and wrote 520 illustrations for the futuristic novel La Guerre Infernale).
      Among his predictions was WW2 (down to Japan vs America and Britain vs Germany), flat-screen TVs, tanks, 25/7 news, social advancement of women, pollution, etc.

    • @robokill387
      @robokill387 11 місяців тому +2

      Part of that is that Paris in the 19th century was already those things.

    • @idontevenhaveapla7224
      @idontevenhaveapla7224 11 місяців тому +1

      Pretty sure they also put money above every other consideration tho

    • @achangedman20
      @achangedman20 11 місяців тому +1

      @idonrevenhaveapla7224 ahh, OP has a red rose as his profile pic

  • @ahoj7720
    @ahoj7720 Рік тому +358

    Those were drawn in France. At that time, the trauma of the defeat of 1871 to the Prussians was part of the popular state of mind. This explains the number of war machines in the series (on some of them the French flag is clearly on display).

    • @DieFlabbergast
      @DieFlabbergast 11 місяців тому

      "Trauma"? Nearly thirty years before? Come on! War was on EVERYONE's mind at the end of the 19th century: and it came true only 15 years later.

    • @edwardspencer9397
      @edwardspencer9397 11 місяців тому +14

      Please remember that air taxis and self powered human flight was possible since a long time. Just that we do not have the infrastructure, the money and the logistical support to make this possible yet on a commerical scale.

    • @jaysonraphaelmurdock8812
      @jaysonraphaelmurdock8812 11 місяців тому +2

      Frogs and Jerrys

    • @VOID_GENESIS
      @VOID_GENESIS 11 місяців тому +2

      Yeah there are helicopter taxis and people own mechanisms where they can just fly

    • @cpp3221
      @cpp3221 11 місяців тому +1

      @@88heiling And then we cooked them, but they cooked us, but then...
      It kinda persist to this day through some competition in the EU, but at least, we're not bombing each other to oblivion.

  • @Kokonatsunasanndo
    @Kokonatsunasanndo 11 місяців тому +13

    This video made my night. It shows how much creativity people had/have.

  • @an8-bitbatty907
    @an8-bitbatty907 11 місяців тому +745

    I wouldn't mind seeing a story or world with a plot based off of these artist depictions, like an alternate Modern year 2,000

    • @verynearlyinteresting
      @verynearlyinteresting  11 місяців тому +54

      Wouldn’t that be great!?

    • @themr_wilson
      @themr_wilson 11 місяців тому +56

      You can, it's steampunk

    • @_rat_5758
      @_rat_5758 11 місяців тому +1

      Woah

    • @johnhoney5089
      @johnhoney5089 11 місяців тому +18

      That's basically the steampunk genre. Modern Hollywood won't typically touch it, but Japanese studios have a number of times (such as Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water).
      Outside of movies there have been many books of the genre.

    • @LasVegasDashie
      @LasVegasDashie 11 місяців тому

      @@johnhoney5089you’ve also got Laputa: Castle in the sky. The movie features military tank trains, AND airships.

  • @CassieLopez
    @CassieLopez Рік тому +177

    Love the Victorian idea of the Roomba! And at 8:47 with the electric roller blades, I'm glad to see they included a picture of a guy falling flat on his face. Technology improves, but a klutz is still a klutz! Very fun episode -- thank you!

    • @verynearlyinteresting
      @verynearlyinteresting  Рік тому +10

      Yeah I liked that bit too hahaha

    • @alphagt62
      @alphagt62 Рік тому +12

      There are electric skate boards, even off road models, so it wasn’t far off.

    • @vonnikon
      @vonnikon Рік тому +3

      ​@verynearlyinteresting sales of the first robotic vacuum cleaner (Electrolux Trilobite) started in 2001. And actually demonstrated as a prototype back in 1996.
      The iRobot Roomba was launched in 2002.
      I would say they got this prediction spot on!

    • @MikeBarbarossa
      @MikeBarbarossa 11 місяців тому +1

      @@alphagt62 Yeah those looked more like spilt 2 feet skateboards than rollerblades they were pretty big

  • @thewr0ngchild
    @thewr0ngchild 10 місяців тому +17

    Retrofuturism is fascinating!. We should do the same thing today. Could even be a public competition to have your name and artwork put in a time capsule for people in the year 3000 to learn about our crazy ideas of what their time would be like.

    • @GneissAlucard
      @GneissAlucard 5 місяців тому

      We already did. It's called Star Trek and Star Wars

  • @LendriMujina
    @LendriMujina 11 місяців тому +273

    I imagine the kind of people who made these would have been ecstatic if they got a chance to see what we'd actually accomplished in that time.

    • @impostorsyndrome1350
      @impostorsyndrome1350 11 місяців тому

      Yeah 2 world wars amd a bunch of idiots after them

    • @RobotsandMonsters
      @RobotsandMonsters 9 місяців тому +11

      Just watch their reaction when they see tampons in the men's room 😂

    • @Sailor11Sedna
      @Sailor11Sedna 9 місяців тому +4

      Even the soap dispenser would blow their minds. “See, you put your hand here, and it breaks the laser beam-“ “It does WHAT?!” “This soap is liquid!” “Help, there’s a man in this toilet!”

    • @DeathracerXD
      @DeathracerXD 9 місяців тому +4

      @@RobotsandMonstersthey wouldnt care

    • @Profeshinal
      @Profeshinal 9 місяців тому +5

      ⁠@@Sailor11Sedna Yeah, kinda crazy to think how much insane technology we just take for granted.

  • @twylanaythias
    @twylanaythias Рік тому +106

    It's worth noting that these predictions were all from a technological standpoint - still a 19th Century society (even to the point of women playing underwater croquet wearing a full dress with petticoats). Or with the school... They basically predicted Skype/Zoom meetings, but still expected schooling to be on-location. Likewise with the theatre... Essentially the old AdLib/Trackers from the 1980s yet as a live performance. And while we don't have outside verandas on RVs (and they don't travel anywhere near so slowly), most modern Class A motor homes have comparable views from within and you can do everything you could do in a house while it's on the go.
    As a side note: We may not have ever had radium fireplaces, but around 20% of US electricity (largely used for AC and heating in homes) is supplied by nuclear reactors. So you kinda have to give them at least partial credit in that regard.

  • @EricRomeoCooper
    @EricRomeoCooper 9 місяців тому +26

    This is probably one of the best videos overall on youtube. From the info to the delivery.

  • @radroy92
    @radroy92 Рік тому +159

    In 1990, the company Dragon released Dragon Dictate which was the world's first voice recognition system for consumers. In 1997, they improved it and developed Dragon NaturallySpeaking. With this solutions users could speak 100 words per minute. In 1996, the first voice activated portal (VAL) was made by BellSouth.

    • @alphagt62
      @alphagt62 Рік тому +17

      I was going to say the same thing. The Roomba vacuum goes back a ways as well, the newer ones are much better, but they did exist.

    • @AndyZach
      @AndyZach Рік тому +11

      My disabled daughter was using Dragon Dictate in the 90s.

    • @new-lviv
      @new-lviv Рік тому +7

      @DrZook You are inside of this system. Voice recognition is built in any phone. UA-cam has a microphone on top.

    • @smallhelmonabigship3524
      @smallhelmonabigship3524 Рік тому +4

      @DrZook I used to use Dragon Naturally speaking. It was far from perfect but it was faster than typing. At least for me it was. You just had to go back and correct the errors in the text.

    • @snarkfinder2621
      @snarkfinder2621 Рік тому +3

      And in 2020, I was still not able to get any speech recognition system to understand me, even if i speak slowly. I haven't tried since then.

  • @IsaacFNghost
    @IsaacFNghost 11 місяців тому +97

    Its so cool to observe these paintings. It’s like seeing into the minds of these gentlemen over 120 years later. Wonder what theyed say if they could see us looking at their paintings from little handheld devices all over the world nowadays

    • @troybaxter
      @troybaxter 11 місяців тому +10

      If I knew someone 100 years in the future was looking at a drawing I made, I would find it really cool.

    • @User-jr7vf
      @User-jr7vf 10 місяців тому +1

      @@troybaxter would you still find it cool even if you had gotten everything wrong. I would be very shy at best.

    • @troybaxter
      @troybaxter 10 місяців тому +4

      @@User-jr7vf not at all. The fact that they get to see my own beliefs of how I visualize the future would make me feel honored. What I wrote down is just how I saw the world's direction in my life. There is no shame in that because I know that the ultimate path the world goes down is something I just don't know and never will know about.

    • @Trobtwillis
      @Trobtwillis 9 місяців тому +1

      @typicalplayer9308
      I'm watching this on my Android, and I was just thinking that too.
      😊📱

  • @Infinite160
    @Infinite160 11 місяців тому +5

    Surprised how close some of them where. It be pretty much impossible to predict the Internet 120 years ago and how entwined and dependent modern society is on it. So Kudos to them. Really great video btw!

  • @CSLucasEpic
    @CSLucasEpic 11 місяців тому +126

    They were not the only ones. In Tsarist Russia, in the year 1900, an artist did several pictures showing how the world would be in the future. They depict some very interesting things, like giant airships, monorail trains, and also motorized sled vehicles for snow roads (which is accurate and also makes sense considering how cold Russia is)

    • @User-jr7vf
      @User-jr7vf 10 місяців тому +3

      Yea, but I'm afraid the hate against Russia will prevent them from showing work of Russian artists here on YT. Also, Americans like to promote themselves even when they are not the ones who invented something.

  • @ClasherofWorlds
    @ClasherofWorlds 11 місяців тому +102

    it is pretty cool that they thought about a lot of stuff like sea life because back then, the sea to them would have been what space is to us today in its potential for the future. If we were to make a list of predictions for 100 or more years into the future, a lot of it would probably be space related. But who knows, just like how sea life didn't really develop, maybe something else other than outer space would become a bigger topic, just like how people in 1899 thought the sea was the big topic.

    • @sawedoffshotgun8462
      @sawedoffshotgun8462 11 місяців тому +7

      Good point.

    • @fishyfinthing8854
      @fishyfinthing8854 11 місяців тому +3

      It was a big topic when they had a few centuries discovered the world by sea travel. So they thought going under sea would be the closer thing than reaching out for planets much father away.

    • @sequillawilliams8809
      @sequillawilliams8809 8 місяців тому

      I think it's going to switch places they thought the sea would be a big thing but it turned out to be space and we think space is going to be a big thing but it may turn out to be the sea

  • @comdam
    @comdam 6 місяців тому +24

    we dont dress as nice as they used to

  • @stevipedia
    @stevipedia 11 місяців тому +561

    If WWI never happened, then the advancement of technology and culture would have taken a radically different route, especially the clothing. After all, clothing is where art, history, and culture all intersect. The aftermath effects of WWI on those three aspects of civilization was earth-shatteringly profound. A fun little theory that sadly could never be tested would be to think about how the "retrospective grading for accuracy" of these images would be different if WWI never happened. Perhaps more of the images would have been accurate (or not), especially the clothing lol.
    I love the late 19th century leading up to 1914. Such an overwhelmingly creative time full of optimism for the future. WWI was the greatest tragedy to ever hit the 20th century (considering the events that it caused afterwards like WWII).
    Very Nearly Interesting, this is a great video. Thank you for showing us this gem of history. That "like" button was definitely pressed.

    • @CaribbeanWarrior85
      @CaribbeanWarrior85 11 місяців тому +8

      look at the nazis they invented the first fighter jets,assault rifles,fanta,adidas alot of stuff

    • @TheRecklessBravery
      @TheRecklessBravery 11 місяців тому +27

      The bright side that now after that , war is considered as the worst sin possible.

    • @bennynagon9322
      @bennynagon9322 11 місяців тому +3

      @@TheRecklessBraveryit all depends on where really. In Europe and USA yes, to start a war in a different country? Not so much

    • @ravivyas7532
      @ravivyas7532 11 місяців тому +13

      As an Indian world wars were boon. Those wars among imperialist countries led to the freedom of India. Like they say in every religion everything happens for a cause. Be it invention of nuclear weapon or modern day terrorism.

    • @joshanderson9391
      @joshanderson9391 11 місяців тому +2

      @@TheRecklessBraveryWhat world are you living in lol. That’s not close to being true

  • @MrEsMysteriesMagicks
    @MrEsMysteriesMagicks Рік тому +51

    The one about the mail is actually accurate to a degree. Yes, we still have people walking the beat, so to speak, to make the final delivery, but an awful lot of mail travels by air between cities if the distance is great enough to warrant it.

  • @joaofernandeszk
    @joaofernandeszk 9 місяців тому +17

    I know people are giving a lot of credit but the funny thing to me is how incredibly "incorrect" all of them were on a design but also functionality perspective. This actually shows me that we're quite unable to predict future inventions.
    All the inventions are somehow all related to products that they have, but automizing those, instead of creating new devices for such tasks, pretty incredible video!

    • @castonyoung7514
      @castonyoung7514 8 місяців тому +1

      I think it is safe to say that some if not all of the artists didn't really take the job too seriously, (like even if someone thought that we could put information into brains by 2000, they wouldn't think that you could just dump the books into the machine). But that may be because of the impossibility of the task.

  • @iqbal_pradana
    @iqbal_pradana 11 місяців тому +133

    1:14 camera beauty filter
    2:39 audio book
    3:39 digital audio samples
    4:12 our personal data already in the cloud
    6:29 Sketchup & Autocad

  • @NinjaNezumi
    @NinjaNezumi Рік тому +12

    4:31 actually American police bikes do have riot shield compatibility, and wind shields/wind breakers that are bullet proof. So it is almost right on.

  • @alanw2687
    @alanw2687 8 місяців тому +9

    The most amazing thing is that people from year 1899 predicted live video call

  • @josephb8268
    @josephb8268 11 місяців тому +14

    7:08 The first robot vacuum was invented in 1996. I will give them that one.

  • @angrycatowner
    @angrycatowner Рік тому +37

    Speech to text was around in year 2000. Nuance Communications' Naturally Speaking Dragon was first released in June 1997. It was the first commercially available speach to text software for home computers. An early version of the same software was initially produced way back in 1982.

    • @henrykujawa4427
      @henrykujawa4427 11 місяців тому +3

      I had a friend in Wales who lost his sight. The last 10 years or so before he passed away, we kept in touch by e-mail. He had software he could speak into, and that would also generate a voice from text. I know our e-mails meant even more to him than before in those years.

  • @Trobtwillis
    @Trobtwillis 9 місяців тому +3

    I ❤ this! The predictions were a glorious blend of accuracy & fantasy.
    They nailed factory farms, robotics, video conferencing, mechanized music, astronomical telescopy, microbiological microscopy, phonography, audiobooks, housekeeping machines, nuclear energy, dictation machines with speech-to-text, airmail, aerial warfare💔 with blimps, helicopters, & airplanes, amphibious flight, double-decker buses, mobile homes, electric trains, motorized foot transport, etc.

  • @goldbullet50
    @goldbullet50 11 місяців тому +11

    I love your narration and the background music. Gives very cozy and positive vibes.

  • @jeffarmstrong1308
    @jeffarmstrong1308 Рік тому +51

    The thing I immediately noticed in the various undersea scenarios (eg the croquet game at 1:42 and 2:32) was the use of something resembling SCUBA invented by Jacques Cousteau in 1942 although the term itself was coined in a 1952 patent.

    • @verynearlyinteresting
      @verynearlyinteresting  Рік тому +6

      Oh yes, good point Jeff.

    • @whitewolf3051
      @whitewolf3051 Рік тому +1

      Though the predictions of any of the underwater activities is impossible. That being how the human body acts and behaves underwater. None of those are possible in the depth of the ocean floor. We *could* ride large enough fish, dolphins, turtles *if* it’s allowed, but that’s near or at the surface, not the the bottom.

    • @paulkennedy8701
      @paulkennedy8701 Рік тому +2

      ​@@whitewolf3051
      The "ocean floor" could be at any depth. I imagined them to be quite near the surface. For one thing you would need adequate light from the surface to see the jockeys and croquet balls.

    • @whitewolf3051
      @whitewolf3051 Рік тому

      @@paulkennedy8701 That still means they're too deep for any of the activities, save riding large fish or dolphins, for them to do. Water and buoyancy of some objects, or lack of with others alone are factors.

    • @dennismccarty7728
      @dennismccarty7728 11 місяців тому

      self containd under water breathing apperates scuba.

  • @CarswithNash
    @CarswithNash 8 місяців тому +2

    Cool pictures but lots of inaccuracies in the narration that a few minutes of research could have solved. Like robotic vacuums were definitely a thing in the year 2000.

  • @AmbiguouslyGray
    @AmbiguouslyGray Рік тому +33

    Speech to Text has been around in some fashion way longer than you think. First accomplished in the 50's, I personally witnessed it, as more novelty than anything, in the 80's on the (Commodore 64) and became more commercially viable in the 90's, but simply didn't have the speed or accuracy to keep up with your average secretary until recent decades.

    • @deadturret4049
      @deadturret4049 Рік тому

      ViaVoice from 1997 was actually surprisingly fast and effective.

  • @marvindebot3264
    @marvindebot3264 11 місяців тому +14

    A couple of corrections: Electrolux introduced the first robotic vacuum cleaner, the Electrolux Trilobite in 1996.
    The first version of Dragon Naturally Speaking was released in 1997 so speech-to-text also existed by 2000.

  • @TheXev
    @TheXev 8 місяців тому +2

    7:39 No, this prediction was correct. Dragon NaturallySpeaking was already available and sold by the year 1997, and was the first voice dictation software available to the public on PC.

  • @hansoak3664
    @hansoak3664 Рік тому +108

    The "gadget" is a wax cylinder; a common recording medium of the day. So, receiving morning voicemails on the common recording media of the day, silicone memory today, is accurate.
    Frankly, I'm shocked that the channel didn't realize that was the common wax cylinder recording media from the time. 🧐

    • @JillC
      @JillC 11 місяців тому +4

      3:55 Yes, records used to be cylinders. Not a gadget! Haha. Before my day, but I still knew it!

    • @hansoak3664
      @hansoak3664 11 місяців тому

      @@JillC 🙂

    • @tresenie
      @tresenie 11 місяців тому +1

      I know it from the series Allo allo but i understand how many people wouldn't know it.

    • @hansoak3664
      @hansoak3664 11 місяців тому +2

      @@tresenie I saw them in operation firsthand but I of course don't expect everyone to know. However, the video should have had a modicum of research before its production. I'm trying not to be too critical but I thought that was basic knowledge for a video of this topic.

    • @hansoak3664
      @hansoak3664 11 місяців тому

      @@tresenie "Allo 'Allo!" was an awesome sitcom; even for a lowly onion seller such as me. 🙂

  • @jochenstacker7448
    @jochenstacker7448 11 місяців тому +20

    Actually, speech to text is correct for the year 2000. IBM's Via Voice came out in 1997 and was a speech to text program, so the prediction is spot on.
    What I find amazing is that there are still people alive who would have known someone who was alive in the year 1900 and that this would not be uncommon.
    If someone is 80 years old today, they would have been 10 years old in 1953. If they met someone in 1953 who was 80 years old then, that person would have been born in 1873. So we still have quite a direct link to those days.
    I'm 53 and I have certainly known people who were born in the 1800s, I would have met them in the 70s and 80s as a child, so it's far closer than we think.

  • @GamePlayShare
    @GamePlayShare 7 місяців тому +2

    Speech to text was already existing for everyone before 2000.

  • @chirkankshitbulani4342
    @chirkankshitbulani4342 11 місяців тому +25

    Okay, so I am listing my observations regarding the pictures. First, almost every military application they envisioned has come true, showing how humans realise our military needs by any means possible. While innovations like the worldwide web have been a boon for civilians as well, it's disheartening that we don't really innovate unless the incentive is killing another person. Secondly, many of the observations by those artists have been off the mark in 2000, but many times spot on in 2023. It's no surprise that the internet is called the 4th age revolution, where progress has been made faster than anyone could imagine. And it seems scary as to how far we could go. Talking about AI, accepting new technologies is not hard anymore, as AI as technology was just restricted by its perfection and not by its adoption. Once the technology is perfect, unlike before, humans accept it more freely in this era.

    • @verynearlyinteresting
      @verynearlyinteresting  11 місяців тому +1

      Wow that’s a great summary

    • @GodofToast
      @GodofToast 11 місяців тому

      It’s interesting. Another example is with guns
      Guns and gunpowder had existed in Europe since the 13th century but weren’t particularly deadly compared to what already existed for a long time. Even so, generals throughout the 14th and 15th centuries saw potential in gunpowder and gradually adopted it despite this. It developed and well the rest is history

    • @Jerotero
      @Jerotero 8 місяців тому +1

      Instead of saying humans only innovate to kill I think a better phrasing would be most humans innovate in order to make more money. Not every invention has had bad intentions there's always going to be someone out there that desires more power.

  • @SonicStealth
    @SonicStealth Рік тому +64

    I find it interesting that at that time they were probably starting to investigate the seas and thought we'd be living there, and since the late 60/70s we've all been imagining how we'd live on the moon or other planets, since the moon landings. Very interesting to see how we've all had a desire to be able to fly ourselves, maybe that's why superhero movies are popular, because it's a built in trait of ours. What else is interesting is the planes they depict, much more advanced than the Wright brothers but using the propeller a decade before their first flight, but then you look at old sci-fi films and the technology that's happened after. Great video 👍

    • @verynearlyinteresting
      @verynearlyinteresting  Рік тому

      Great points there @SonicStealth. I really enjoyed reading that, Tez 😊

    • @carlosadiaz
      @carlosadiaz Рік тому +5

      I think the interest in living underwater has to do with Jules Verne's "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea," which was published in 1870.
      Verne, of course, is a Frenchman.

  • @noremac7216
    @noremac7216 11 місяців тому +13

    2:37 nah they just casually predicted modern hentai

  • @montecorbit8280
    @montecorbit8280 Рік тому +6

    At 7:41
    Speech dictation....
    You said they were off for the year 2000, I seem to remember Dragon Dictate another software like that being available in late 1990s....so "spot on" for that too.

  • @jessehinman8340
    @jessehinman8340 11 місяців тому +8

    We already have drone crop harvesters that can either be remote controlled or set to follow a programmed path using GPS. 6:22

  • @_Doctor_14
    @_Doctor_14 5 місяців тому +2

    These are the issues we face when we try to predict the future. Some predictions are correct, but we see them with our current fashion in mind. Those people back then thought that we would have automatic instruments, but we don't need them, we have the internet. The clothes are also different. They didn't know our fashion.

  • @pimpozza
    @pimpozza 11 місяців тому +7

    Fascinating video! Really enjoyed it.. and congrats on the viewings, Tez.. nearly 400k! 👏

  • @davestorm6718
    @davestorm6718 Рік тому +22

    We had commercial speech to text in 1997 - I used it myself (Dragon Naturally Speaking) and it was pretty darn good. It was in research in the late 1980s.
    3D printing was invented in the 1960s and was used in some industries in the late 1980s (GE) - it was absurdly expensive.
    They had a vacuum attachment for cutting hair in the 1970s - so some of that came true

    • @MementoMoriGrizzly
      @MementoMoriGrizzly 11 місяців тому

      Machine learning also goes as back as 1956 with the Logic Theorist.

  • @alonsolopez3541
    @alonsolopez3541 5 місяців тому +2

    People in 1899 really thought we’d be obsessed with being underwater

  • @josearellano203
    @josearellano203 11 місяців тому +18

    It's astounding how there have been predictions of these to have come true and a few that are coming up. And they didn't imagine passenger planes, which are comfortable.

  • @MysticMike
    @MysticMike Рік тому +7

    @7:27 The text to speak being not available in 2000 but is by 2023 would be incorrect. Dragon Naturally Speaking was a PC program released in June 1997 that did voice to text. There could be others but that is one I do know of.

  • @Speyde
    @Speyde 6 місяців тому +5

    They really liked it underwater

  • @s.deegan3740
    @s.deegan3740 11 місяців тому +19

    The 'voicemails' guy, I have an alternative idea as to what is being depicted:
    The guy walking past the door is a mailman on a foot route. The structure we're seeing inside of is actually a private residence. The woman who just received the wax cylinder from the mailman is now handing it to her husband, who sits at the family cylinder player in what looks like a living room.
    None of the technology shown in this particular ones didn't exist at that time. But I do think a few implications are being made here, mainly socioeconomic ones:
    In a.d. 2000,
    every household will have a cylinder player in it, which will lead to
    In a.d. 2000,
    everyone sending cylinders thru the postal service as a common way of communicating.
    Another great video man. You are such a delight, please keep it up!

  • @didgedoo9679
    @didgedoo9679 Рік тому +32

    Funny how they thought we'd still be in victorian fashion 😂 really enjoyed this thankyou x

    • @verynearlyinteresting
      @verynearlyinteresting  Рік тому +9

      They didn't think about updating the clothes did they?? Thank you so much for commenting. Tez :)

  • @Poundz978
    @Poundz978 8 місяців тому +2

    Speech to text was around in the 90’s… I remember I bought a “dragon speak” headset that would translate words into text but after a quick voice training session

  • @ANDYMCNET
    @ANDYMCNET Рік тому +7

    I do believe the gadget @ 3:55 is a Wax Tube Phonograph cylinder, google tells me they were available in 1889 so I think that was one, shown again in another painting @ 9:00

  • @kennyalwaysdies1
    @kennyalwaysdies1 11 місяців тому +77

    I like to imagine an alternate timeline where modern technology is like these paintings instead of what we have now.

    • @Cat-Daddy
      @Cat-Daddy 8 місяців тому +7

      that's called steampunk my dude

    • @General_Belu
      @General_Belu 8 місяців тому +1

      @@Cat-Daddy Except there isn’t as much steam here.

    • @kassaken6521
      @kassaken6521 7 місяців тому

      ​​@@Cat-Daddy Nah, more like retro futurism. The idea of the future being imagined by a previous era being made a reality. Fallout series and bioshock games come to mind.

    • @juniorchavesopicassodeyahu988
      @juniorchavesopicassodeyahu988 7 місяців тому +1

      @@Cat-Daddy It sounds as if we are in an alternate reality 1880s where technology steam is far more advanced than reality

  • @Rad4thewin
    @Rad4thewin 11 місяців тому +3

    I love the presenting I love your persona I love the background music I love the silly comments!! It just reminds of tv programs growing up! You’re the best (: best wishes

    • @verynearlyinteresting
      @verynearlyinteresting  11 місяців тому

      Ah thanks so much, what a lovely thing to say. I’m so delighted to read this comment, how nice of you. Tez 😊

  • @TopFix
    @TopFix 11 місяців тому +60

    I just find it interesting how even though the plane wasn't invented yet (in the U.S), they envisioned it (in France) as not only being a working thing, but eventually common.

    • @johnhoney5089
      @johnhoney5089 11 місяців тому +2

      Because gliders had been around since the 1850's, and France & Germany were in a race to invent the airplane for themselves since then.
      The first successful glider was built by the "father of aerodynamics" George Cayley in the 1850's, of which his servant and a local child got to ride in.
      Afterwards Otto Lillienthal perfected gliders and in the process created the world's first aircraft company, and other aspiring aviators were influenced by him. Sadly he died in 1896 when one of his gliders stalled, which for a time discouraged inventors in Europe.
      I had read an 80's book, "The Road to Kitty Hawk" that covers that whole timeline of events in greater detail. I'd recommend it, it details the Wright Brothers themselves as well as various pioneers and gliders who came before.
      Many at the time thought that sticking an engine on these gliders would result in an airplane, to diminished results when Hiram Maxim (inventor of machine guns) tried to build something like that for himself.

    • @cnitevedi4832
      @cnitevedi4832 11 місяців тому +2

      what is interesting is that they predicted propeller in front

    • @johnhoney5089
      @johnhoney5089 11 місяців тому +3

      @@cnitevedi4832 That was less of a prediction, as inventors at the time were already starting to put propellers on their attempts at aircraft.
      The problem was that their propellers were modelled after those of boats, making them less effective at propulsion in the air. This would be solved by the Wright Brothers when they tested their own in a wind tunnel.

  • @ProximaCentauri97
    @ProximaCentauri97 11 місяців тому +8

    for a new channel, your editing is amazing!

  • @someguy4911
    @someguy4911 6 місяців тому +2

    I remember back in the early 1990s I came across a book that was published in 1993 which was a compilation of essays written at the 1893 World's Fair. At the World's Fair, they put out a question to various people from many backgrounds like scientists, teachers, economists, etc. stating what will the world be like in 100 years from now (1993)? Just like this video, it was interesting reading how some essays were way off and others were spot on. I remember one essay stating the main mode of transportation in 1993 will be hot air balloons. Another essay actually described television in detail. I remember that essay stating people in 1993 will be able to sit in the comfort of their own home watching an opera displayed in a box.

    • @JayKarpwick
      @JayKarpwick 4 місяці тому

      About 15 years ago I stumbled on a post of a 1929 film that described the World of 2000. Among the things it described:
      > A united Europe
      > Offices with screens that let people hold teleconferences.
      > Wall displays of news and weather forecasts.
      > Desks with built-in communication and writing surfaces.
      They did get a number of BIG things wrong like "no more wars", but still ...
      Unfortunately I've never been able to find the film again despite repeated searches.

  • @keithwalmsley1830
    @keithwalmsley1830 Рік тому +19

    Fascinating stuff, not bad for their age, to be honest when I was growing up in the 70's and 80's if someone had asked me to predict 2023 I'd have said we'd be holidaying on Mars and going to school by jet-pack on the Moon or something, how wrong could you be!!! Suppose AI and computing has been the biggest thing they couldn't even of conceived of, just as there will be stuff in 2123 we cannot even conceive now. Keep up the great work Tez ✌

    • @verynearlyinteresting
      @verynearlyinteresting  Рік тому +1

      Same here exactly!!!!! What on earth will 2123 be like 🤯. Thanks so much for commenting, much appreciated. Tez

    • @MrChristianDT
      @MrChristianDT Рік тому +1

      It's not that they couldn't convince of AI, inasmuch as they automatically assumed robots instead of programs. It's sort of the same folly as the automatic orchestra in this video, instead of making one machine that can just reproduce all those sounds.

    • @MickeyMousePark
      @MickeyMousePark Рік тому +1

      " if someone had asked me to predict 2023 I'd have said we'd be holidaying on Mars and going to school by jet-pack on the Moon or something, how wrong could you be!!! "
      Flying cars??????

    • @MummaBear
      @MummaBear Рік тому +2

      Where the hoverboard*😅

    • @chatteyj
      @chatteyj Рік тому +1

      For a school project in the eighties on space I wrote a story about flying to the moon as a tourist in 2050 with my dad as I said by then trips to the moon were commonplace. I don't think that is totally unfeasible. The space craft did however crash land on the moon after a malfunction. 😂

  • @t-mar9275
    @t-mar9275 Рік тому +46

    Stylistically, these look like they could have all been done by a single artist, rather than various artists.

    • @noiselabproject9659
      @noiselabproject9659 11 місяців тому +2

      I guess that they probably were after he had been feed by the ideas of others perhaps

    • @carlin3297
      @carlin3297 11 місяців тому +3

      This is slightly before the 20th century when our modern Idea of many different art styles arose. Around this time you stuck to the ways the art schools thaught you or you would be considered a bad artist.

    • @t-mar9275
      @t-mar9275 11 місяців тому +3

      Since my original post I've done some research on the subject cards and they are all attributed to one freelance commercial artist, Jean-Marc Côté.

    • @TopFix
      @TopFix 11 місяців тому +1

      @@t-mar9275 I feel as though the artist was one person, but the collection of ideas were from a group of people.

  • @FunnyTerrierPuppy-un8xq
    @FunnyTerrierPuppy-un8xq 11 місяців тому +6

    The robot slave catcher schematics section was big crazy

  • @Ponlets
    @Ponlets Рік тому +9

    actually text to speech has been in the business sector from the early 90s though it did not see regular use in peoples homes until the very early 2000s (for example Dragon Naturally Speaking)

  • @ghood7445
    @ghood7445 Рік тому +5

    Really great we got to see these predictions via beautiful drawings. Good level of accuracy in the predictions too!

  • @habitpunk
    @habitpunk 11 місяців тому +3

    1.3 million views!! Wow. I've been hoping your videos get some success and really made up for you. That's amazing.

    • @verynearlyinteresting
      @verynearlyinteresting  11 місяців тому

      I know 😵‍💫😵‍💫. How mad is that?? It’s thanks to people like you that support the channel that’s made it happen, without a doubt. Tez 😊

    • @habitpunk
      @habitpunk 11 місяців тому

      @verynearlyinteresting it's inspired me to get to work on my videos. Got at least 10 crackers in my head haha!! Looks like your having fun too! Good on you.

  • @Jon651
    @Jon651 Рік тому +8

    Time to go back and re-read some classic Jules Verne where his future is our present-day! I would recommend stories such as "In The Year 2889" and "Paris In The 20th Century" and you will recognize an amazing number of things we take for granted - but I'm not going to spoil any of it because it seems just too prescient when you read about them in Verne's tomes.

  • @reaganmonkey8
    @reaganmonkey8 Рік тому +7

    7:49 In the video call, he has a telephone, but where is hers? She can't hear or speak to him.

  • @donutello_
    @donutello_ 5 місяців тому +1

    this feels like a video posted from 2010. Not in a bad way, I feel very nostalgic. I miss when videos were made like this

  • @whytebearconcepts
    @whytebearconcepts Рік тому +8

    3:55 Is a wax Phonograph cylinder, this actually existed in the late 1800's and several still exist. The oldest is from 1888, Arthur Sullivan's "The Lost Cord". In the early 1900's the material was changed to a sort of celluloid, which lasted longer and had better sound.

    • @urbangorilla33
      @urbangorilla33 Рік тому

      I noticed that too. So not really a prediction, just an extension of a current idrea.

  • @brandoku7003
    @brandoku7003 11 місяців тому +32

    The roomba first came out in 2002 so that one was pretty accurate, speech to text became a thing in 1996, I'd say both those were basically spot on with their predictions. We do have electric roller blades and there have been drones developed for fighting fires. The video was pretty good and interesting but these were a few of the things I caught when watching.

    • @troybaxter
      @troybaxter 11 місяців тому +2

      Also, some of the technology occurred well before 2000s. Like in the case of the radio one. That became a standard part of the house for decades, and it is still a part of our cars today. Plus, TVs and Computers are just improvements to that technology.

    • @marcotrosi
      @marcotrosi 10 місяців тому

      I agree, and also for me 2000 and 2023 is the same. I don't think they meant exactly the year 2000 without any deviation. Being off by a few years for such predictions is nothing.

  • @StudleyDuderight
    @StudleyDuderight 8 місяців тому +1

    -Some of the more advanced predictions, like speech-to-text, came true well before the year 2000.
    -We don't have powered skates for very similar reasons the powered pogo was banned.
    -They weren't far off the mark with airmail. Replace the aircraft with a telecom tower, the mailman with a radio signal, and the mail with a mobile device.
    -Jetpack technology is still at least 20 years away from being reliable enough for common use. It'll take even longer for humanity ready for that though.

  • @jfilesgraphics
    @jfilesgraphics 11 місяців тому +5

    I love stuff like this. Folks in the past sharing visions of the future. Quite a few things were spot on. I did notice how they have quite an affection for aquatic activity.

  • @jonasaman9104
    @jonasaman9104 Рік тому +8

    "They predicted electric trains" Not hard to do 1899! 6:44
    The first electric passenger train was presented by Werner von Siemens at Berlin in 1879.
    The first electric railway in Great Britain was Volk's Electric Railway in Brighton, a pleasure railway, which opened in 1883, still functioning to this day.
    The City & South London Railway (C&SLR) was the first deep-level electric tube railway. It opened in 1890, initially running between suburban Stockwell, south of the River Thames, and King William Street, near Bank on the northern side of London Bridge.

  • @Katariaaa-z9j
    @Katariaaa-z9j 9 місяців тому +4

    Hey!! Loved the video!! Great commentary!! Amazing music and music choice!!! Keep it up!!! 😁😁😁😄😄

  • @glennchampion2074
    @glennchampion2074 Рік тому +12

    5:28 looks conspicuously like a helicopter to me...

    • @Klp-13
      @Klp-13 11 місяців тому

      Chinese spy balloon

  • @Zardman7
    @Zardman7 Рік тому +6

    3:40 they got that one right, accurately describing the theater organ

  • @ian0903
    @ian0903 6 місяців тому +4

    The one thing that everyone failed to predict (from 19th century drawings to movies in the 1980s) and is yet the center of many of our lives today is the smartphone. It’s amazing how literally nobody could predict it.

  • @Xenoyer
    @Xenoyer Рік тому +39

    I doubt you would want to try flying with a fire hose. Even if you could get it off the ground with a jetpack, which I doubt because it would weigh a lot due to the thing being filled with water, but also the pressure of the water coming out of the hose would whip them about, crashing them into light poles and buildings. If anyone wants to try it, please let us know. I would like to see that.

    • @algeborusas2775
      @algeborusas2775 Рік тому +1

      It needed a flying water tank.

    • @MrYfrank14
      @MrYfrank14 Рік тому +3

      Theoretically it would be possible. But the real problem is jet packs have a ridiculously short run time. They are only usful in James Bond movies

    • @carlcushmanhybels8159
      @carlcushmanhybels8159 Рік тому +1

      @@MrYfrank14 Yes, that's the big catch with jet packs. That and avoiding burning your butt! Plus there's the truth lots of power is needed to lift and fly a human. That means more weight. More weight needs more power... (This is the conundrum that lead Robert Goddard to invent liquid fueled rockets: For efficient power and control. ) Solid rockets are basically on/off.

    • @Xenoyer
      @Xenoyer Рік тому +1

      @@MrYfrank14, the water from the hose would act like a rocket nozzle. There would have to be an equal and opposite force to keep the welder of the water-filled heavy hose steady and in place. Water weighs 8 pounds per gallon. So add up the water's weight by calculating the hose's length and diameter. Your jetpack would have to be powerful indeed to lift the water, the hose, and the person, and counteract the force of the water coming out of the hose. I agree, it is theoretically possible.

    • @MrYfrank14
      @MrYfrank14 Рік тому +1

      @Xenoyer - mythbusters lifted a car with firehoses.
      I do not think the question is, is it possible. I think the question is, would there be a benefit to it.
      The jet pack would probably be the size of a firetruck, and at that point, you should just attach a hose to a helicopter.

  • @stephaniec3619
    @stephaniec3619 Рік тому +11

    How do you find all of these great topics?! This was a very interesting (very nearly) video. I love your content and am always excited for the next video! Thanks for sharing this one!

  • @erik1993
    @erik1993 Місяць тому +3

    How people in 2024 imagined the year 3000: just watch idiocracy

  • @scoshgg
    @scoshgg 11 місяців тому +7

    5:47 traffic stop in mid air 💀

  • @sturmovik1274
    @sturmovik1274 Рік тому +5

    11:24 Apparently they also envisioned imminent air crashes.

  • @MarcusZepeda
    @MarcusZepeda 5 місяців тому +1

    I love your videos so much. This video is very educational and entertaining. I'm learning to be a fashion historian. and they did get one thing right is the clothing being the same. because some people now still dress like how they did in the 19th century but now in 2024 and it's really cool

  • @robertgraybeard3750
    @robertgraybeard3750 Рік тому +6

    04:10 the late Victorians imagined us spending a lot of time in the air. Well . . . at any give moment over a million people are in commercial airliners with quite a few of them on multi-hour intercontinental flights even trans Pacific flights.

  • @DeltaMikeTorrevieja
    @DeltaMikeTorrevieja Рік тому +7

    Tez, you shoukd do a follow-up video of predictions from yourself and your viewers for 10, 25, 50 and 100 years from now.
    Future generations will forget about them and hopefully rediscover them later.
    Future Tezs (or is it Tezes) can make their own videos immortalising you.

    • @verynearlyinteresting
      @verynearlyinteresting  Рік тому +2

      Hi DM! Hope you're well. And yes what a good idea haha!!!!

    • @DeltaMikeTorrevieja
      @DeltaMikeTorrevieja Рік тому

      @@verynearlyinteresting I see you avoided the conundrum of how to pluralise Tez.
      Interesting. Very nearly, at least. Lol 😂

  • @michellevieiracordeiro
    @michellevieiracordeiro 5 місяців тому +2

    What was the obsession with being underwater, bro wanted to be Aquaman

  • @gluffoful
    @gluffoful 11 місяців тому +5

    Speech-to-text and robotic vacuum cleaners certainly existed before the year 2000. I remember using Microsoft´s speech-to-text with a Soundblaster card on my 386 in the early 1990s. And Electrolux demonstrated the "Trilobite" robotic vacuum cleaner in 1996.