Interesting articles, February 2026

The U.S. and Israel have assembled a massive air and naval strike force in the Middle East and have attacked Iran. The fighting is ongoing as of this writing.
https://www.cnn.com/world/live-news/israel-iran-attack-02-28-26-hnk-intl
https://www.twz.com/news-features/final-pieces-moving-into-place-for-potential-attack-on-iran
https://www.wsj.com/world/middle-east/in-a-first-u-s-deploys-combat-jets-to-israel-for-potential-wartime-mission-in-iran-c739d870

Here’s incredible footage of an intercepted Iranian missile crashing to the ground in Qatar.
https://youtu.be/VDk5cPwTPKY?si=M5yNX_1UMz4BsMeW

‘Iran strikes threaten to deplete US weapons supplies — and put American troops at risk’
https://www.politico.com/news/2026/02/25/iran-weapons-trump-troops-defense-00797801

Colombia has a large population of recently discharged soldiers who have become mercenaries in Ukraine and other conflict zones because they can’t find jobs at home.
https://www.economist.com/the-americas/2026/02/04/why-so-many-colombians-fight-in-foreign-wars

‘Russia killed opposition leader Alexei Navalny using dart frog toxin, UK says’
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cwyk4lz4e3eo

A Norwegian scientist built one of the hypothesized microwave weapons responsible for “Havana syndrome,” fired it at his head, and now has the syndrome. The U.S. government also secretly bought a similar microwave weapon on the black market from an undisclosed country and found Russian components inside of it.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2026/02/14/havana-syndrome-cia-norway-experiment/

The expiration of the New START treaty between Russia and America will free the U.S. to quickly beef up its nuclear arsenal.
https://www.twz.com/air/usaf-ready-to-make-all-b-52s-nuclear-capable-load-icbms-with-multiple-warheads-if-directed

One reason the U.S. has so many nuclear weapons is it must be prepared for a war where Russia and China are both against us, and our allies offer little help. Now that China is expanding its nuclear arsenal, the U.S. will need to do the same. The 40-year trend of nuclear disarmament is over.
https://www.economist.com/international/2026/02/03/america-risks-a-nuclear-arms-race-with-china

Russia is using an intermediate-range ballistic missile against Ukraine that it illegally developed 10 years ago. During his first term, Trump withdrew the U.S. from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty because U.S. intelligence had discovered Russia had the treaty-banned missile. It can carry conventional or nuclear warheads.
https://www.reuters.com/business/aerospace-defense/ukraine-images-indicate-russia-used-missile-heart-nuclear-pact-collapse-2026-02-26/

Early Soviet warships were low-tech and full of design flaws.
https://youtu.be/1CWLrpYGKVE?si=v_MxRhIH1iF8J_kc

A Chinese video generator has made waves after it was used to make a real-looking CGI clip of Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt fighting in a movie. It’s yet another milestone on the road to personalized entertainment content.
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/business/business-news/mpa-cease-and-desist-bytedance-seedance-2-0-1236510957/

Here’s an incredible Seedance 2 CGI video of Neo and Agent Smith fighting.
https://youtu.be/c00ZNn9v01o?si=UIBMePPDAzSeuplM

Elon Musk is in legal trouble in France for allowing Grok to undress images of people (mostly women).
https://apnews.com/article/france-x-investigation-seach-elon-musk-1116be84d84201011219086ecfd4e0bc

‘It is impossible to draw meaningful conclusions from METR’s Long Tasks benchmark — in particular once one realizes that its numerous flaws are probably compounding in unpredictable ways.’
https://www.transformernews.ai/p/against-the-metr-graph-coding-capabilities-software-jobs-task-ai

A few X posts about AI:

McKinsey agrees with me that AI will make capitalism more efficient and cutthroat than ever.
https://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/quantumblack/our-insights/the-automation-curve-in-agentic-commerce

The Atlas robot can now do somersaults. I like that they showed some of the outtakes.
https://youtu.be/UNorxwlZlFk?si=MFEt7uM72a4iU1Ik

“An LLM-controlled robot dog saw us press its shutdown button, and the LLM rewrote the robot’s code so it could stay on.”
https://palisaderesearch.org/blog/shutdown-resistance-on-robots

The 2026 Spring Festival Gala by China Media Group featured an incredible, choreographed robot dance performance.
https://youtu.be/mUmlv814aJo?si=37YQ1QT8YhE5_B_g

Rodney Brooks issues his yearly technology predictions. He says LLMs will not lead to AGI, and that the LLM era of what I call “Fake AI” will last at least 10 more years. Also, humanoid robots have also been oversold the the media and are still too dangerous and limited for use in the real world.
https://rodneybrooks.com/predictions-scorecard-2026-january-01/

‘Amazon shelves Blue Jay warehouse robot’
https://www.foxnews.com/tech/amazon-shelves-blue-jay-warehouse-robot

Twitter founder Jack Dorsey just laid off 40% of his staff at his new tech company, “Block,” because AI made them redundant.
https://apnews.com/article/block-dorsey-layoffs-ai-jobs-18e00a0b278977b0a87893f55e3db7bb

The “AI 2027” report was published last April and predicted AGI would be created by 2028. Now that a whole nine months have passed, the authors have been able to compare actual tech developments with what they predicted, and unsurprisingly, things are moving slower than they hoped, so they have bumped their date for the rise of AGI to “mid-2028 to mid-2030.” I think it’s wise to accept the upper bound.

I wonder if, after another nine months of slower-than-hoped tech progress, they will push back their big prediction again. Ultimately, and in spite of its apparently rigorous methodology, the “AI 2027” report might turn out to have been useless.
https://blog.ai-futures.org/p/grading-ai-2027s-2025-predictions

A wonderful essay that contains ideas I’ve written about on this blog: “Post-AGI Economics As If Nothing Ever Happens”
https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/fL7g3fuMQLssbHd6Y/post-agi-economics-as-if-nothing-ever-happens

This essay, “The 2028 Global Intelligence Crisis”, predicted dire economic impacts from AI by 2028, and actually caused a measurable drop in global stock markets. It’s funny because all of the essay’s core ideas are predictions I made years ago, and shared here. If only more people listened to me!
https://www.citriniresearch.com/p/2028gic

Here’s are two counterpoints to the essay:
https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2026/02/is-there-an-aggregate-demand-problem-in-an-agi-world.html
https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2026/02/25/a-viral-research-note-on-ai-gets-its-economics-wrong

Sam Altman made a controversial yet entirely factual statement that downplayed the energy requirements of data centers by pointing out the vast energy required to support one human into adulthood. This is a very good point. As Noam Chomsky famously observed and other scientists expanded upon, the human brain comes hardwired with many algorithms for intelligent thinking that only came into existence over tens of millennia of evolution. In fact, it probably actually the product of millions of years of evolution that began with our pre-human ancestors first diverging from other mammals.
https://www.facebook.com/reel/931074852795152

Elon Musk is making huge, risky bets on household robots, autonomous taxis, near-term sharp improvement in AI, and data centers in space. He’s having to marshal all of his already vast resources to give it a shot.
https://www.economist.com/business/2026/02/04/elon-musk-is-betting-his-business-empire-on-ai

Anthropic is refusing the Department of War’s demand to let it use its AI systems for mass surveillance and autonomous weapons. I like how the head of the company acknowledges that the U.S. will SOMEDAY need a fully autonomous army to defend itself. As in every other realm of endeavor (business, art, whatever), AGI and robots will render humans obsolete, and any organization that wants to stay competitive will need to switch to machines. His important caveat is that the machines aren’t smart enough to do it yet, and so can’t be trusted.

‘Partially autonomous weapons, like those used today in Ukraine, are vital to the defense of democracy. Even fully autonomous weapons (those that take humans out of the loop entirely and automate selecting and engaging targets) may prove critical for our national defense. But today, frontier AI systems are simply not reliable enough to power fully autonomous weapons.’
https://www.anthropic.com/news/statement-department-of-war

‘Pennsylvania State Police were stymied in their investigation into the violent rape of a woman in 2016 on a remote cul-de-sac outside Milton, a small community in the center of the state. With no clear leads, police obtained a warrant directing Google to disclose accounts that searched for the victim’s name or address over the week when she was attacked.’
https://apnews.com/article/google-reverse-keyword-search-privacy-c5a0bc6f3790213f92e78aae720d2379

‘Women were significantly more likely to focus on areas where danger could lurk, including unlit areas, potential hiding spots and places where they might be trapped, often off to the side of their path.’
https://www.deseret.com/2024/2/7/24065126/byu-study-gender-difference-night-time-walking-jogging-vigilance/

‘There is an unfortunate bias against attractive people. It stems from the belief that their looks allow them to glide through life and provides them with opportunities that average-looking people don’t have. The doctors I knew were always curious when meeting a good-looking sales rep: Is there any substance behind the pretty face?’
https://medicalsalestraining.com/the-risk-and-myth-of-the-good-looking-sales-rep-in-medical-sales/

More evidence that marijuana inflames some kinds of latent mental illnesses.
https://www.npr.org/2026/02/21/nx-s1-5719338/cannabis-marijuana-weed-teens-psychosis-jama

A small advance towards being able to freeze and thaw out human brains without destroying them has been made.
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.01.28.702375v1

Musings 11

An AGI Dyson Swarm will have problems synchronizing its satellites thanks to light speed latency, and this will have major implications for its intelligence and consciousness. A Dyson Swarm is a vast cloud of solar-powered satellites that surround a star in a spherical formation. Each satellite converts light into electricity and then uses it for various tasks. Doubtless, a Swarm would be comprised of many types of satellites that are specialized for different functions, like data processing, communications, or manufacturing space ships. The radius of the Swarm would need to be enormous since the satellites would melt or at least run inefficiently if too close to the star. A radius equal to the Earth’s distance from the Sun, 1 astronomical unit (AU), isn’t unreasonable.

The satellites responsible for data processing will be distributed and will need to communicate with each other, just as the neurons in your brain need to send electrochemical signals to their neighbors to collectively produce intelligent thought. However, if the Swarm has a 1 AU radius, then it will take 17 minutes for a light-speed signal to travel from one end of it to the other, plus another 17 minutes to get any response. While acknowledging the existence of lag within the human brain (e.g. – scientists have measured how long it takes for signals to travel across the brain, and you instinctively understand that it takes time to think to arrive at a solution to a problem), this will be much different: Consider what the processing speeds will be on the futuristic computers emplaced in each satellite. Each computer will be “thinking” so fast that their subjective experience of time will probably be more drawn-out than it is for humans, making a 17-minute communication lag feel like an eternity.

It occurs to me that this discordance would either prevent a Dyson Swarm from having a unitary, coherent consciousness, or give rise to a consciousness that would be very alien from our own (this compounds upon whatever fundamental alienness there is to machine consciousness compared to human). In the former case, it would ensure the Dyson Swarm were comprised of many AGI individuals.

A future step in tech-enhanced human evolution will be dividing our consciousnesses into many directions at once, in turn allowing one person to control multiple bodies simultaneously. One consequence of this is that you’d be able to have sex with yourself.

Autonomous cars will help people easily earn side cash delivering packages. Right after you get into a car and enter your destination, the car’s computer will be able to determine if anyone needs a package delivered from one point to another along your intended route. It would instantly tell you if there were any opportunities to transport packages (or people) for profit and let you decide whether it was worth it. 

There will also be autonomous cars not designed to carry humans. For example, imagine something smaller than a SmartCar that lacks a steering wheel or seats and is solely designed to deliver food. It might just have one or two little doors that would pop open so a customer could reach inside to get their order.

Thanks to better reaction speeds, machines will be able to drive cars safely under conditions that many humans couldn’t handle. For example, autonomous cars could drive at high speeds while separated from each other by only a few feet. They would coordinate their movements so none of them changed velocity without giving the others time to react. This would allow vehicles to pack together more densely, effectively increasing the capacities of existing roadways.

The losers of the autonomous car revolution include:

  1. Car insurance companies. Fewer accidents means less need for insurance. The industry will be forced to consolidate and to focus more on selling other products, like homeowners insurance (though if everyone also has a robot butler that can put out fires and fix major plumbing leaks, demand for that type of insurance also drops).
  2. Traffic police
  3. Local governments that get revenue from red light cameras, speed cameras, and ticketing drivers for infractions.  
  4. Home movers. In the future, you might pay some local guys off Craigslist to load your furniture and other belongings into an autonomous truck, then it would drive itself to the destination, where you’d pay a second group of local guys to unload it. Moving a full house worth of stuff halfway across America can easily cost $10,000 today. The system I described might cut that down by 70-80%. 
  5. The car moving industry (e.g. – someone else drives your car across country for you because you moved) will also die out once cars are autonomous.
  6. Owners of large parking lots, particularly around airports.

If intelligent aliens are visiting Earth, one way they would monitor us is with machines that are the size and shape of insects. It might be that there’s an alien database of DNA from every human who has ever lived, compiled thanks to billions of robot mosquitoes sucking blood from people while they slept. Maybe they’ve got DNA from a beloved pet you had as a child. And depending on how long the aliens have been here, there might even be samples of DNA from extinct species like dinosaurs.

If, generally speaking, consumer technologies and AI will increasingly focus on satisfying individual preferences (e.g. – virtual reality game where you’re the only player and you’re always #1), then why should it extend to the foods and drinks you consume? Continuous surveillance will allow your personal assistant AI to quickly learn your food and drink preferences. Once robot chefs are everywhere, you’ll be able to have your exact favorite meal or sandwich you remember from your childhood anytime. Even if you went into a restaurant or someone else’s house, it would be a simple matter for you to transmit your recipe to the robot chef who was there and have it make something for you, perfectly.

A small step towards this future can be seen in the newer restaurant soda machines that can mix dozens of syrups to make hundreds of kinds of drinks.

With better knowledge of how the human flavor palate works (there is probably some genetic component to this), machines could go a step farther by tweaking your favorite recipes in ways that will make them taste even better, and by recommending new foods and drinks you wouldn’t have tried but will probably love.

Interesting articles, January 2026

In an extraordinary, daring, and lucky operation, U.S. special forces disabled Venezuela’s air defenses, captured President Maduro and his wife, and transported them to the U.S. to face drug trafficking charges.
https://www.cfr.org/articles/guide-maduros-capture-and-venezuelas-uncertain-future

Some of the combat was captured on video.
https://youtu.be/OHPdwD69ofM?si=md3JDl9vY3TUhuz3

The Venezuelans failed to set up their new Russian antiaircraft system before the U.S. attack.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/12/world/americas/venezuela-russian-weapons-fail.html

The EA-18Gs jets I mentioned last month helped disable Venezuelan air defenses during the attack.
https://www.janes.com/osint-insights/defence-news/security/ea-18gs-helped-disable-venezuelan-air-defences-during-us-attack

Trump claimed a “discombobulator” weapon was used to disable enemy electronics during the raid.
https://nypost.com/2026/01/24/us-news/trump-reveals-to-the-post-secret-discombobulator-weapon-was-crucial-to-venezuelan-raid-on-maduro/

Shortly after the Venezuelan operation, President Trump nearly ordered airstrikes on Iran, which is in the grips of economic catastrophe and civil unrest. He relented, allegedly after pressure from his generals and from other Middle East leaders.
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/white-house/israeli-arab-officials-privately-suggested-us-hold-iran-strikes-rcna253718

The strike might have been called off merely to give U.S. more time to move military forces close to Iran.
https://www.twz.com/news-features/signs-emerge-of-u-s-navy-air-force-push-to-middle-east

Iran’s Supreme Leader admitted his security forces had killed thousands of protesters during the unrest.
https://www.cnn.com/2026/01/17/middleeast/iran-supreme-leader-khamenei-protests-criminal-trump-intl-latam

As the Ukraine War enters its fourth year, both sides are far apart from agreeing to a peace treaty and, in spite of the heavy losses, both are also willing and able to continue fighting indefinitely, even as both are forced to scale back operations due to worsening equipment shortages. No diplomatic or military breakthrough is on the horizon.
https://youtu.be/E8n1I41PL-k?si=9dhm8MuH9RsQfaD_

This is from 13 months ago. Russia hasn’t had a “hard landing,” but it’s gotten much closer. During 2025, GDP growth turned anemic, inflation soared, and the Ukraine War started consuming half of the federal budget.

‘The combination of a declining currency and a ballooning budget deficit has led to talk of a hard landing for the Russian economy in 2025. After two years of strong growth, which has confounded many analysts’ gloomy predictions, the pace of expansion will slow sharply. The economic bill for the war is at last coming due. It could be a big one’
https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2024/12/01/russias-plunging-currency-spells-trouble-for-its-war-effort

Ukraine is incorporating engines from crashed Russian drones to their own drones that are sent to attack Russia.
https://militarnyi.com/uk/news/v-ukrayini-zajnyalysya-restavratsiyeyu-dvyguniv-shahediv-dlya-vlasnyh-droniv/

Russia’s stockpiles of (relatively) modern tanks–T-72Bs and T-80s–have been exhausted: only 329 of them remain in its tank depots, and they are all probably so worn-out that they can only be stripped for spare parts.
https://youtu.be/wCeAW_KWcWQ?si=UgPP0Dzuk8QhAGee

Russian troops surrendered to a Ukrainian ground combat drone. This is believed to be the first time in history such a thing happened.
https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/38049840/troops-surrender-robot-cowering-russians-ukrainian-drone/

China is experimenting with containerized weapon and radar modules that could be quickly installed on civilian ships. During a war with us, they could use the modules to turn hundreds of their merchant ships into crappy warships that could fire missiles to strike our planes or ships. The conversions would be done inland in safe ports, and the ships would sail down rivers to the Pacific. The problem is, these ad hoc radar and missile platforms would be slow and would still need dozens of crewmen apiece. In other words, they would be easy targets but still expensive enough to not be completely throwaway. Time will be needed to assess the concept’s viability.
https://youtu.be/wyvJF9fmo0g?si=isak9eMagvQtYBK4

China ordered 1,400 of its sailing boats to form into a “wall” in the South China Sea that was 200 miles long and several miles deep. The exercise may be practice for a blockade of Taiwan.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2026/01/16/world/asia/china-ships-fishing-militia-blockade.html

From 2023:

‘A four-star Air Force general sent a memo on Friday to the officers he commands that predicts the U.S. will be at war with China in two years and tells them to get ready to prep by firing “a clip” at a target, and “aim for the head.”

In the memo sent Friday and obtained by NBC News, Gen. Mike Minihan, head of Air Mobility Command, said, “I hope I am wrong. My gut tells me will fight in 2025.”

Air Mobility Command has nearly 50,000 service members and nearly 500 planes and is responsible for transport and refueling.

Minihan said in the memo that because both Taiwan and the U.S. will have presidential elections in 2024, the U.S. will be “distracted,” and Chinese President Xi Jinping will have an opportunity to move on Taiwan.’
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/national-security/us-air-force-general-predicts-war-china-2025-memo-rcna67967

From 2019. The Chinese invasion of Taiwan is forever “just a few years from now”:

‘A former Japanese military officer recently made waves after saying he believes China plans to invade and annex Taiwan by 2025 and Okinawa by 2045.

The comments by retired Lt. Gen. Kunio Orita, a 35-year veteran of the Japan Air Self-Defense Force and a former commander of the 301st Tactical Fighter Squadron and 6th Air Wing, appeared last month in the English-language Taiwan News.

Orita, who retired in 2009 and is now a guest professor at Toyo Gakuen University in Tokyo, recently told Stars and Stripes he expects Beijing will attempt to expand its sphere of influence by first taking control of Taiwan and then militarizing a key disputed islet in the South China Sea.’
https://www.stripes.com/theaters/asia_pacific/retired-japanese-general-predicts-china-will-invade-taiwan-by-2025-okinawa-by-2045-1.569228

China’s military has built replicas of Taiwanese government buildings so its special forces troops can practice raids.
https://www.economist.com/china/2026/01/08/china-and-taiwan-both-see-lessons-in-americas-raid-on-venezuela

Decades of underfunding have left Britain’s military even weaker than it looks: the full commitment it could make to directly fighting in Ukraine would be 7,500 well-equipped men and a suboptimal number of tanks. An identical brigade would be held in reserve, and the two would rotate into theater every six months.

For comparison, Ukraine has at least 300,000 men fighting on its frontlines or directly supporting those units in the field.

The Royal Navy is also less able to protect power to the Falkland Islands than it was in 1982.
https://www.economist.com/britain/2026/01/13/six-months-after-a-big-review-british-defence-is-still-in-trouble

‘Naval experts and insiders debate vigorously over the right balance between large, crewed vessels and small, uncrewed ones. Critics argue that the latter are too small, short-ranged and poorly armed to make a difference in the most demanding scenarios, such as a war over Taiwan. But Bryan Clark of the Hudson Institute, a think-tank, argues that wargames and models show that there is a sweet spot: uncrewed ships with 16 to 32 missiles. Any less armament and a drone ship cannot do enough damage to a well-defended target on its own. Any more and the ship becomes too big and easy to detect, and struggles to let loose its weapons before being hit. Within that range, he says, robotic and autonomous ships could indeed “slow and disrupt a Chinese invasion”.’
https://www.economist.com/united-states/2026/01/15/a-naval-strategy-that-needs-rethinking

After the cancellation of the Constellation-class frigate, the U.S. Navy has elected to use an upgraded version of a Coast Guard frigate design. The lack of vertical launch missile launchers is its biggest downside.
https://youtu.be/9cV7Cznpvho?si=CGwv1lonzf4umXqv

‘Last New F/A-18 Aft Fuselages Built As Super Hornet Production End Approaches’
https://www.twz.com/air/last-new-f-a-18-aft-fuselages-built-as-super-hornet-production-end-approaches

Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you a Derringer handgun with built-in silencers.
https://youtu.be/1HPORxMmqUs?si=RIBMxWvnEFA_GIOU

This is excellent lecture on how guns are manufactured.
https://youtu.be/_9LJ6RPoX3g?si=eO9CkIEO_EpF6Pi_

Peter Zeihan is a bad futurist. Four years ago, he predicted that by now, the U.S. would be so disengaged from the world that it would only have four allies left: Britain, Japan, Singapore, Australia.
https://youtu.be/xD-pj6i4b8A?si=9aftU2iGRDi8HSyw&t=867

Atlantis is a 2019 Ukrainian science fiction movie set in 2025, right after the end of another war between Ukraine and Russia.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantis_(2019_film)

This website lets you overlay Meta’s planned “Hyperion” data center over different American cities so you can appreciate how gigantic it will be.
https://sherwood.news/tech/see-for-yourself-just-how-massive-metas-hyperion-data-center-is/

Claims that an LLM cracked an unsolved Erdos math problem spread quickly before being debunked.
https://x.com/ns123abc/status/2013030876683145417

Some top AI companies are now using recursive self-improvement to develop better models. Note the report’s careful refusal to use that term given its connotations.
https://cset.georgetown.edu/publication/when-ai-builds-ai/

Here’s proof of AI having a major impact in the computer coding field: visitors to the Stack Overflow website have sharply declined.
https://ppc.land/stack-overflow-traffic-collapses-as-ai-tools-reshape-how-developers-code/

From 2019

OpenAI has yet to turn a profit and is surviving off of investor faith and huge loans. The company’s fortunes could take a huge hit this year. Google’s AI products are catching up, and the company has much deeper pockets.
https://www.economist.com/leaders/2025/12/30/openais-cash-burn-will-be-one-of-the-big-bubble-questions-of-2026

‘The probable result is that OpenAI will be absorbed by Microsoft, Amazon or another cash-rich behemoth [within the next 18 months]. OpenAI’s investors would take a hit. Chipmakers and data center builders that signed deals with Mr. Altman would scramble for new customers. Social media pundits would report every detail, and frazzled investors may dump the whole A.I. sector. But an OpenAI failure wouldn’t be an indictment of A.I. It would be merely the end of the most hype-driven builder of it.’
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/13/opinion/openai-ai-bubble-financing.html

‘The $100 Billion Megadeal Between OpenAI and Nvidia Is on Ice’
https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/the-100-billion-megadeal-between-openai-and-nvidia-is-on-ice-aa3025e3?mod=mhp

Among the “Magnificent Seven” top tech stocks, only two are still performing well.
https://www.wsj.com/finance/stocks/mag-7-stocks-ai-trade-766bf561

This is a fancy essay that mostly centers around a simple point: once intelligent machines and cheap robots exist, all humans will lose their jobs and only the richest humans who already own factories, data centers, and power plants will still make money. To keep the 0.01% of humans from gradually accumulating all the wealth in the economy, the government will have to use taxes and other laws to redistribute their money to the 99.99%.
https://philiptrammell.substack.com/p/capital-in-the-22nd-century

Let’s say you make a “digital clone” of yourself–an intelligent machine that has your personality profile. Off the bat, it will be better than you since it won’t need to sleep or eat. Of course, you’ll naturally want to make tweaks to it, like having it be more patient than you or not having a mental illness you have. In that respect, it gets still better. Maybe you think of it as “the best of you.”

And if you use the clone to work on your behalf and make money for yourself, you’ll feel pressure to make more improvements to it that bolster its productivity, like giving it a higher IQ, perfect memory, and a friendlier attitude. One logical step at a time, you will make your digital “clone” into a being that only slightly resembles you, and everyone else does the same to their “clones.” The result is convergence across many domains.
https://futuristspeaker.com/artificial-intelligence/digital-clones-the-coming-transformation-that-will-remake-human-identity-by-2035/

ChatGPT says the predictions in the famous essay “AI 2027” have been mostly accurate so far. Where there are errors, they result from slight overoptimism. It’s noteworthy that one of the essay’s authors recently said he stood by the predictions, but thought they would take 1 – 2 years longer to come true.
https://chatgpt.com/share/696d48ac-c0a8-8000-ba72-ac36456ddea6

Elon Musk faced furious controversy after users of X started using the inbuilt Grok AI to undress photos of people (mostly women) and repost the results. After a few days, he restricted access to that feature. This brings a prediction of mine one step closer to reality: ‘“[By 2030] Deepfake” pornography will reach new levels of sophistication and perversion as it becomes possible to seamlessly graft the heads of real people onto still photos and videos of nude bodies that closely match the physiques of the actual people. New technology for doing this will let amateurs make high-quality deepfakes, meaning any person could be targeted.’
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-15448997/Musk-Grok-chatbot-restricts-image-generation.html

A few years ago, I predicted that humanoid robots “will be able to move their bodies in unnatural ways.” Hyundai’s new Atlas robot does so.
https://youtu.be/wR2JG_vMXHA?si=QqPY3pLNEa08fQvb
https://youtu.be/9e0SQn9uUlw?si=yB1lFccvJ7ruGnEl

‘Unitree H2 humanoid robot’s daily training: soaring kicks and mid-air spins’
https://youtu.be/IOEfVuV2chM?si=xlVtm9FZdMpGKe8V

The Unitree G1 has human-like agility and balance.
https://youtube.com/shorts/jIzrHJD9boA?si=2ESmnoX-Sp-qhq8t

‘Using a mocap suit to kick yourself in the balls with a robot is a great metaphor to close out 2025.’
https://youtu.be/v4tKGq_B6-w?si=YDjYAhfl3WGv-Agx

‘Elon Musk says Tesla will stop producing its S and X models as it shifts to making robots’
https://www.nbcnews.com/business/autos/elon-musk-says-tesla-will-stop-producing-s-x-models-shifts-making-robo-rcna256409

A Chinese company now sells the most electric cars globally. Musk’s alliance with Trump was disastrous.
https://www.nbcnews.com/business/autos/tesla-loses-title-worlds-biggest-ev-maker-sales-fall-rcna251932

These predictions about Trump’s second term are eerily accurate so far.
https://www.economist.com/briefing/2024/11/07/donald-trumps-victory-was-resounding-his-second-term-will-be-too

Fourteen out of 15 (!) of these predictions for 2025 failed to happen. The only one that came true was Trump helping to bring peace to Syria, Gaza, and Lebanon.
https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2025/01/03/15-unpredictable-scenarios-for-2025-00196309

‘California completely drought-free for 1st time in 25 years after winter storms’
https://abc7.com/post/california-has-zero-areas-dryness-first-time-25-years-following-winter-storms/18374526/

‘Landscape beneath Antarctica’s icy surface revealed in unprecedented detail’
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c9qpx2qqeq7o

It’s common for dead trees in the taiga to fall over into rivers in Alaska, Canada and Russia and to be swept into the Arctic Ocean, where they sink to the seafloor and take thousands of years (maybe tens of thousands) to decompose. To fight global warming, this scientist proposes that the countries accelerate the process by deliberately cutting down trees in those areas and dumping them into the rivers. (I thought of something like this in 2013)
https://www.nature.com/articles/s44168-025-00327-1

Consumption of seed oils could be driving the obesity epidemic.
https://x.com/trikomes/status/2001831574904684597

RFK Jr. has failed to fulfill his promise to turbocharge approvals of psychedelic drugs for as medical treatments.
https://www.politico.com/news/2026/01/28/rfk-psychedelics-medicine-veterans-mdma-ptsd-00750414

‘A person’s lifespan may be up to 55% heritable, according to new research.’
https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/longevity-genetics-play-large-role-lifespan-study-rcna256502

“Within two decades, we will have a detailed understanding of how all the regions of the human brain work.”
–Ray Kurzweil, The Singularity is Near (2005)

My future predictions (2026 iteration)

If it’s January, it means it’s time for me to update my big list of future predictions! I used the 2025 version of this document as a template, and made edits to it as needed. For the sake of transparency, I’ve indicated recently added content by bolding it, and have indicated deleted or moved content with strikethrough.

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

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

2020s

  • Better, cheaper solar panels and batteries (for grid power storage and cars) will make clean energy as cheap and as reliable as fossil fuel power for entire regions of the world, including some temperate zones. As cost “tipping points” are reached, it will make financial sense for tens of millions of private homeowners and electricity utility companies to install solar panels on their rooftops and on ground arrays, respectively. This will be the case even after government clean energy subsidies are inevitably retracted. However, a 100% transition to clean energy won’t finish in rich countries until the middle of the century, and poor countries will use dirty energy well into the second half of the century.
  • Fracking and the exploitation of tar sands in the U.S. and Canada will together ensure growth in global oil production until around 2030, at which time the installed base of clean energy and batteries will be big enough to take up the slack. There will be no global energy crisis.
  • This will be a bad decade for Russia as its overall population shrinks, its dependency ratio rises, and as low fossil fuel prices and sanctions keep hurting its economy. Russia will fall farther behind the U.S., China, and other leading countries in terms of economic, military, and technological might.
  • China’s GDP will surpass America’s, India’s population will surpass China’s, and China will never claim the glorious title of being both the richest and most populous country.
  • Improvements to smartphone cameras, mirrorless cameras, and perhaps light-field cameras will make D-SLRs obsolete. 
  • Augmented reality (AR) glasses that are much cheaper and better than the original Google Glass will make their market debuts and will find success in niche applications. Some will grant wearers superhuman visual abilities in the forms of zoom-in and night vision.
  • Virtual reality (VR) gaming will go mainstream as the devices get better and cheaper. It will stop being the sole domain of hardcore gamers willing to spend over $1,000 on hardware.
  • Vastly improved VR goggles with better graphics and no need to be plugged into desktop PCs will hit the market. They won’t display perfectly lifelike footage, but they will be much better than what we have today, and portable. 
  • “Full-immersion” audiovisual VR will be commercially available by the end of the decade. These VR devices will be capable of displaying video that is visually indistinguishable from real reality: They will have display resolutions (at least 60 pixels per degree of field of view), refresh rates, head tracking sensitivities, and wide fields of view (210 degrees wide by 150 degrees high) that together deliver a visual experience that matches or exceeds the limits of human vision. These high-end goggles won’t be truly “portable” devices because their high processing and energy requirements will probably make them bulky, give them only a few hours of battery life (or maybe none at all), or even require them to be plugged into another computer. Moreover, the tactile, olfactory, and physical movement/interaction aspects of the experience will remain underdeveloped.
  • “Deepfake” pornography will reach new levels of sophistication and perversion as it becomes possible to seamlessly graft the heads of real people onto still photos and videos of nude bodies that closely match the physiques of the actual people. New technology for doing this will let amateurs make high-quality deepfakes, meaning any person could be targeted. [Came true as of early 2026, if not earlier] It will even become possible to wear AR glasses that interpolate nude, virtual bodies over the bodies real people in the wearer’s field of view to provide a sort of fake “X-ray-vision.” The AR glasses could also be used to apply other types of visual filters that degraded real people within the field of view.
  • “Smart home”/”Wired home” technology will become mature and widespread in developed countries.
  • Video gaming will dispense with physical media, and games will be completely streamed from the internet or digitally downloaded. Business that exist just to sell game discs (Gamestop) will shut down.
  • Instead of a typical home entertainment system having a whole bunch of media discs, different media players and cable boxes, there will be one small, multipurpose box that, among other things, boosts WiFi to ensure the TV and all nearby devices can get signals at multi-Gb/s speeds.
  • Movie subtitles and the very notion of there being “foreign language films” will become obsolete. Computers will be able to perfectly translate any human language into another, to create perfect digital imitations of any human voice, and to automatically apply CGI so that the mouth movements of people in video footage matches the translated words they’re speaking. The machines will also be able to reproduce detailed aspects of an actor’s speech, such as cadence, rhythm, tone and timbre, emotion, and accent, and to convey them accurately in another language.
  • Self-driving vehicles will start hitting the roads in large numbers in rich countries. The vehicles won’t drive as efficiently as humans (a lot of hesitation and slowing down for little or no reason), but they’ll be as safe as human drivers. Long-haul trucks that ply simple highway routes will be the first category of vehicles to be fully automated. The transition will be heralded by a big company like Wal-Mart buying 5,000 self-driving tractor trailers to move goods between its distribution centers and stores. Last-mile delivery–involving weaving through side streets, cities and neighborhoods, and physically carrying packages to peoples’ doors–won’t be automated until after this decade. Self-driving, privately owned passenger cars will stay few in number and will be owned by technophiles, rich people, and taxi cab companies.
  • Thanks to improvements in battery energy density and cost, and in fast-charging technology, electric cars will become cost-competitive with gas-powered cars this decade without government subsidies, leading to their rapid adoption. Electric cars are mechanically simpler and more reliable than gas-powered ones, which will hurt the car repair industry. Many gas stations will also go bankrupt or convert to fast charging stations.
  • Quality of life for people living and working in cities and near highways will improve as more drivers switch to quieter, emissionless electric vehicles. The noise reduction will be greatest in cities and suburbs where traffic moves slowly: https://cleantechnica.com/2016/06/05/will-electric-cars-make-traffic-quieter-yes-no/
  • Most new power equipment will be battery-powered, so machines like lawn mowers, leaf blowers, and chainsaws will be much quieter and less polluting than they are today. Batteries will be energy-dense enough to compete with gasoline in these use cases, and differences in overall equipment weight and running time will be insignificant. The notion of a neighbor shattering your sense of peace and quiet with loud yard work will get increasingly alien. 
  • A machine will pass the Turing Test by the end of this decade. The milestone will attract enormous amounts of attention and will lead to several retests, some of which the machine will fail, proving that it lacks the full range of human intelligence. It will lead to debate over the Turing Test’s validity as a measure of true intelligence (Ray Kurzweil actually talked about this phenomenon of “moving the goalposts” whenever we think about how smart computers are), and many AI experts will point out the existence of decades-long skepticism in the Turing Test in their community.
  • The best AIs circa 2029 won’t be able to understand and upgrade their own source codes. They will still be narrow AIs, albeit an order of magnitude better than the ones we have today.
  • Machines will become better than humans at the vast majority of computer, card, and board games. The only exceptions will be very obscure games or recently created games that no one has bothered to program an AI to play yet. But even for those games, there will be AIs with general intelligence and learning abilities that will be “good enough” to play as well as average humans by reading the instruction manuals and teaching themselves through simulated self-play.
  • The cost of getting your genome sequenced and expertly interpreted will drop below $1,000, and enough about the human genome will have been deciphered to make the cost worth the benefit for everyone. By the end of the decade, it will be common for newborns in rich countries to have their genomes sequenced.
  • Better technology will also let pregnant women noninvasively obtain their fetuses’ DNA, at affordable cost.
  • Cheap DNA tests that can measure a person’s innate IQ and core personality traits with high accuracy will become widely available. There is the potential for this to cause social problems. 
  • At-home medical testing kits and diagnostic devices like swallowable camera-pills will become vastly better and more common.
  • Space tourism will become routine thanks to privately owned spacecraft. 
  • Marijuana will be effectively decriminalized in the U.S. Either the federal government will overturn its marijuana prohibitions, or some patchwork of state and federal bans will remain but be so weakened and lightly enforced that there will be no real government barriers to obtaining and using marijuana. 
  • By the end of this decade, photos of almost every living person will be available online (mostly on social media). Apps will exist that can scan through trillions of photos to find your doppelgangers. 
  • In 2029, the youngest Baby Boomer and the oldest Gen Xer will turn 65. 
  • Drones will be used in an attempted or successful assassination of at least one major world leader (Note: Venezuela’s Nicholas Maduro wasn’t high profile enough).

2030s

  • VR and AR goggles will become refined technologies and probably merge into a single type of lightweight device. Like smartphones today, anyone who wants the glasses in 2030 will have them. Even poor people in Africa will be able to buy them. A set of the glasses will last a day on a single charge under normal use.  
  • Augmented reality contact lenses will enter mass production and become widely available, though they won’t be as good as AR glasses and they might need remotely linked, body-worn hardware to provide them with power and data. https://www.inverse.com/article/31034-augmented-reality-contact-lenses
  • The bulky VR goggles of the 2020s will transform into lightweight, portable V.R. glasses thanks to improved technology. The glasses will display lifelike footage. However, the best VR goggles will still need to be plugged into other devices, like routers or PCs.
  • Wall-sized, thin, 8K or even 16K TVs will become common in homes in rich countries, and the TVs will be able to display 3D picture without the use of glasses, though the 3D effect will only be visible to people sitting directly in front of the screen. A sort of virtual reality chamber could be created at moderate cost by installing those TVs on all the walls of a room to create a single, wraparound screen.
  • It will be common for celebrities of all kinds to make money by “hanging out” with paying customers in virtual reality. For some lower-tier celebrities, this will be their sole source of income. 
  • Functional CRT TVs and computer monitors will only exist in museums and in the hands of antique collectors. This will also be true for DLP TVs. 
  • The video game industry will be bigger than ever and considered high art.
  • It will be standard practice for AIs to be doing hyperrealistic video game renderings, and for NPCs to behave very intelligently thanks to better AI. 
  • Books and computer tablets will merge into a single type of device that could be thought of as a “digital book.” It will be a book with several hundred pages made of thin, flexible digital displays (perhaps using ultra-energy efficient e-ink) instead of paper. At the tap of a button, the text on all of the pages will instantly change to display whichever book the user wanted to read at that moment. They could also be used as notebooks in which the user could hand write or draw things with a stylus, which would be saved as image or text files. The devices will fuse the tactile appeal of old-fashioned books with the content flexibility of tablet computers.
  • Loose-leaf sheets of “digital paper” will also exist thanks to the same technology.
  • Commercially available, head-worn, brain-computer-interface devices (BCIs) linked to augmented reality eyewear will gift humans with crude forms of telepathy and telekinesis. For example, a person wearing the devices could compose a short sentence merely by thinking about it, see the text projected across his augmented field of view, use his thoughts to make any needed edits, and then transmit the sentence to another person or machine, merely by thinking a “Send” command. The human recipient of the message with the same BCI/eyewear setup would see the text projected across his field of view and could compose a response through the same process the first person used. BCIs will also let humans send commands to a machines, like printers. For almost all use cases, this type of communication will be less efficient than traditional alternatives, like manually typing a text message or clicking the “Print” button at the top of a word processing application, but it will be an important proof of concept demonstration that will point to what is to come later in the century.
  • Loneliness, social isolation, and other problems caused by overuse of technology and the atomized structure of modern life will be, ironically, cured to a large extent by technology. Chatbots that can hold friendly (and even funny and amusing) conversations with humans for extended periods, diagnose and treat mental illnesses as well as human therapists, and customize themselves to meet the needs of humans will become ubiquitous. The AIs will become adept at analyzing human personalities and matching lonely people with friends and lovers, at matching them with social gatherings (including some created by machines), and at recommending daily activities that will satisfy them, hour-by-hour. Machines will come to understand that constant technology use is antithetical to human nature, so in order to promote human wellness, they find ways to impel humans to get out of their houses, interact with other humans, and be in nature. Autonomous taxis will also be widespread and will have low fares, making it easier for people who are isolated due to low income or poor health (such as many elderly people) to go out.
  • Chatbots will steadily improve their “humanness” over the decade. The instances when AIs say or do something nonsensical will get less and less frequent. Dumber people, children, and people with some types of mental illness will be the first ones to start insisting their AIs are intelligent like humans. Later, average people will start claiming the same. By the end of the decade, a personal assistant AI like “Samantha” from the movie Her will be commercially available. AI personal assistants will have convincing, simulated personalities that seem to have the same depth as humans. Users will be able to pick from among personality profiles or to build their own.  
  • Chatbots will be able to have intelligent conversations with humans about politics and culture, to identify factually wrong beliefs, biases, and cognitive blind spots in individuals, and to effectively challenge them through verbal discussion and debate. The potential will exist for technology to significantly enlighten the human population and to reduce sociopolitical polarization. However, it’s unclear how many people will choose to use this technology. 
  • Turing-Test-capable chatbots will also supercharge the problem of online harassment, character assassination, and deliberate disinformation by spamming the internet with negative reviews, bullying messages, emails to bosses, and humiliating “deepfake” photos and videos of targeted people. Today’s “troll farms” where humans sit at computer terminals following instructions to write bad reviews for specific people or businesses will be replaced by AI trolls that can pump out orders of magnitude more content per day. And just as people today can “buy likes” for their social media accounts or business webpages, people in the future will be able, at low cost, to buy harassment campaigns against other people and organizations they dislike. Discerning between machine-generated and human-generated internet content will be harder and more important than ever.
  • House robots will start becoming common in rich countries. They will be slower at doing household tasks than humans, but will still save people hours of labor per week. They may or may not be humanoid. For the sake of safety and minimizing annoyance, most robots will do their work when humans aren’t around. As in, you would come home from work every day and find the floors vacuumed, the lawn mowed, and your laundered clothes in your dresser, with nary a robot in sight since it will have gone back into its closet to recharge. You would never hear the commotion of a clothes washing machine, a vacuum cleaner or a lawnmower. All the work would get done when you were away, as if by magic.
  • People will start having genuine personal relationships with AIs and robots. For example, people will resist upgrading to new personal assistant AIs because they will have emotional attachments to their old ones. The destruction of a helper robot or AI might be as emotionally traumatic to some people as the death of a human relative.
  • Farm robots that are better than humans at fine motor tasks like picking strawberries humans will start becoming widespread.  
  • Self-driving cars will become cheap enough and practical enough for average income people to buy, and their driving behavior will become as efficient as an average human. Over the course of this decade, there will be rapid adoption of self-driving cars in rich countries. Freed from driving, people will switch to doing things like watching movies/TV and eating. Car interiors will change accordingly. Road fatalities, and the concomitant demands for traffic police, paramedics, E.R. doctors, car mechanics, and lawyers will sharply decrease. The car insurance industry will shrivel, forcing consolidation. (Humans in those occupations will also face increasing levels of direct job competition from machines over the course of the decade.)
  • Private owners of autonomous cars will start renting them out while not in use as taxis and package delivery vehicles. Your personal, autonomous car will drive you to work, then spend eight hours making money for you doing side jobs, and will be waiting for you outside your building at the end of the day.
  • The “big box” business model will start taking over the transportation and car repair industry thanks to the rise of electric, self-driving vehicles and autonomous taxis in place of personal car ownership. The multitudes of small, scattered car repair shops will be replaced by large, centralized car repair facilities that themselves resemble factory assembly lines. Self-driving vehicles will drive to them to have their problems diagnosed and fixed, sparing their human owners from having to waste their time sitting in waiting rooms.
  • The same kinds of facilities will make inroads into the junk yard industry, as they would have all the right tooling to cheaply and rapidly disassemble old vehicles, test the parts for functionality, and shunt them to disposal or individual resale. (The days of hunting through junkyards by yourself for a car part you need will eventually end–it will all be on eBay. )
  • Car ownership won’t die out because it will still be a status symbol, and having a car ready in your driveway will always be more convenient than having to wait even just two minutes for an Uber cab to arrive at the curb. People are lazy.
  • The ad hoc car rental model exemplified by autonomous Uber cabs and private people renting out their autonomous cars when not in use faces a challenge since daily demand for cars peaks during morning rush hour and afternoon rush hour. In other words, everyone needs a car at the same time each day, so the ratio of cars : people can’t deviate much from, say, 1:2. Of course, if more people telecommuted (almost certain in the future thanks to better VR, faster broadband, and tech-savvy Millennials reaching middle age and taking over the workplace), and if flexible schedules became more widespread (also likely, but within certain limits since most offices can’t function efficiently unless they have “all hands on deck” for at least a few hours each day), the ratio could go even lower. However, there’s still a bottom limit to how few cars a country will need to provide adequate daily transportation for its people.
  • Private delivery services will get cheaper and faster thanks to autonomous vehicles.
  • Automation will start having a major impact on the global economy. Machines will compensate for the shrinkage of the working-age human population in the developed world. Countries with “graying” populations like Japan and Germany will experience a new wave of economic growth. Demand for immigrant laborers will decrease across the world because of machines.
  • There will be a worldwide increase in the structural unemployment rate thanks to better and cheaper narrow AIs and robots. A plausible scenario would be for the U.S. unemployment rate to be 10%–which was last the case at the nadir of the Great Recession–but for every other economic indicator to be strong. The clear message would be that human labor is becoming decoupled from the economy.
  • Combining all the best AI and robotics technologies, it will be possible to create general-purpose androids that could function better in the real world (e.g. – perform in the workplace, learn new things, interact with humans, navigate public spaces, manage personal affairs) than the bottom 10% of humans (e.g. – elderly people, the disabled, criminals, the mentally ill, people with poor language abilities or low IQs), and in some narrow domains, the androids will be superhuman (e.g. – physical strength, memory, math abilities). Note that businesses will still find it better to employ task-specific, non-human-looking robots instead of general purpose androids. The androids will be very few in number by the end of 2039, and will be technology demonstrators and prototypes that get a lot of media coverage at carefully controlled tech company demo events. They won’t be available for any person to purchase, won’t roam around public spaces, and won’t have important jobs. At a minimum, each one will cost hundreds of thousands of dollars.
  • By the end of this decade, only poor people, lazy people, and conspiracy theorists (like anti-vaxxers) won’t have their genomes sequenced. It will be trivially cheap, and in fact free for many people (some socialized health care systems will fully subsidize it), and enough will be known about the human genome to make it worthwhile to have the information.
  • Computers will be able to accurately deduce a human’s outward appearance based on only a DNA sample. This will aid police detectives, and will have other interesting uses, such as allowing parents to see what their unborn children will look like as adults, or allowing anyone to see what they’d look like if they were of the opposite sex (one sex chromosome replaced). 
  • Trivially cheap gene sequencing and vastly improved knowledge of the human genome will give rise to a “human genome black market,” in which people secretly obtain DNA samples from others, sequence them, and use the data for their own ends. For example, a politician could be blackmailed by an enemy who threatened to publish a list of his genetic defects or the identities of his illegitimate children. Stalkers (of celebrities and ordinary people) would also be interested in obtaining the genetic information of the people they were obsessed with. It is practically impossible to prevent the release of one’s DNA since every discarded cup, bottle, or utensil has a sample. 
  • Markets will become brutally competitive and efficient thanks to AIs. Companies will sharply grasp consumer demand through real-time surveillance, and will use dynamic pricing much more widely and for everyday goods and services, and consumers will be alerted to bargains by their personal AIs and devices (e.g. – your AR glasses will visually highlight good deals as you walk through the aisles of a store). Your personal assistant AIs and robots will look out for your self-interest by countering the efforts of other AIs to sway your spending habits in ways that benefit companies and not you.
  • “Digital immortality” will become possible for average people. Personal assistant AIs, robot servants, and other monitoring devices will be able, through observation alone, to create highly accurate personality profiles of individual humans, and to anticipate their behavior with high fidelity. Voices, mannerisms and other biometrics will be digitally reproducible without any hint of error. Digital simulacra of individual humans will be further refined by having them take voluntary personality tests, and by uploading their genomes, brain scans and other body scans. Even if all of the genetic and biological data couldn’t be made sense of at the moment it was uploaded to an individual’s digital profile, there will be value in saving it since it might be decipherable in the future. (Note that “digital immortality” is not the same as “mind uploading.”)
  • Life expectancy will have increased by a few years thanks to pills and therapies that slightly extend human lifespan. Like, you take a $20 pill each day starting at age 20 and you end up dying at age 87 instead of age 84.
  • Global oil consumption will peak as people continue switching to other power sources.
  • Earliest possible date for the first manned Mars mission.
  • Machines will become as good as professional humans at language translation.
  • Computers will also be able to automatically enhance and upscale old films by accurately colorizing them, removing defects like scratches, and sharpening or focusing footage (one technique will involve interpolating high-res still photos of long-dead actors onto the faces of those same actors in low-res moving footage). Computer enhancement will be so good that we’ll be able to watch films from the early 20th century with near-perfect image and audio clarity.
    [I think this prediction of mine might have come true: https://www.joblo.com/james-cameron-4k-restoration-defense/ James Cameron was able to do it because he’s rich and a tech expert, and he could only do it to three of his movies. It will take years longer for the techniques to get cheap enough for mass numbers of films to get the same treatment. I’ll stick to the 2030s deadline.]
  • CGI will get so refined than moviegoers with 20/20 vision won’t be able to see the difference between footage of unaltered human actors and footage of 100% CGI actors.
  • Lifelike CGI and “performance capture” will enable “digital resurrections” of dead actors. Computers will be able to scan through every scrap of footage with, say, John Wayne in it, and to produce a perfect CGI simulacrum of him that even speaks with his natural voice, and it will be seamlessly inserted into future movies. Elderly actors might also license movie studios to create and use digital simulacra of their younger selves in new movies. The results will be very fascinating, but might also worsen Hollywood’s problem with making formulaic content.
  • Machines will be able to imitate the voices of specific humans so accurately that most human listeners won’t be able to tell the difference. Those that can reliably detect any difference will find it very faint.
  • Smartphone apps will be able to remotely monitor a person’s vital statistics and to quickly derive a wealth of data about things like their emotional state, health, age, and truthfulness from factors like their heart rate, breathing pattern, body movements, microexpressions, and speech patterns.
  • Tiny cameras that can capture and transmit high resolution footage will be available for a few dollars apiece. A device the size of a sugar cube that has enough memory and battery life to record video footage for several hours would fit the bill.
  • China’s military will get strong enough to defeat U.S. forces in the western Pacific. This means that, in a conventional war for control of the Spratly Islands and/or Taiwan, China would have >50% odds of winning. This shift in the local balance of power does not mean China will start a conflict. 
  • The quality and sophistication of China’s best military technology will surpass Russia’s best technology in all or almost all categories. However, it will still lag the U.S. 

2040s

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

2050s

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

2060s

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

2070s

  • There has been at least one incident where an AI, either deliberately or inadvertently, took an action that killed thousands of humans and caused billions of dollars in damage. However, the problem was contained by humans–who still control most of the world’s infrastructure and resources–and by AIs that stayed friendly to us. Our first experience with a hostile AGI or nonaligned AGI will not be cataclysmic, as it is in most sci-fi films about the topic. This success doesn’t mean our luck will last forever. 
  • 100 years after the U.S. “declared war” on cancer, there still will not be a “cure” for most types of cancer, but vaccination, early detection, treatment, and management of cancer will be vastly better, and in countries with modern healthcare systems, most cancer diagnoses will not reduce a person’s life expectancy. Consider that diabetes and AIDS were once considered “death sentences” that would invariably kill people within a few years of diagnosis, until medicines were developed that transformed them into treatable, chronic health conditions. 
  • Hospital-acquired infections will be far less of a problem than they are in 2020 thanks to better sterilization practices, mostly made possible by robots.
  • It will be technologically and financially feasible for large commercial aircraft to produce zero net carbon emissions. The aircraft might use conventional engines powered by synthetic fossil fuels, or they might have electric engines and very energy-dense batteries or fuel cells. 
  • Digital or robotic companions that seem (or actually are) intelligent, funny, and loving will be easier for humans to associate with than other humans.
  • Technology will enable the creation of absolute surveillance states, where all human behavior is either constantly monitored or is inferred with high accuracy based on available information. Even a person’s innermost thoughts will be knowable thanks to technologies that monitor him or her for the slightest things like microexpressions, twitches, changes in voice tone, and eye gazes. When combined with other data regarding how the person spends their time and money, it will be possible to read their minds. The Thought Police will be a reality in some countries.  
  • Thanks to mass surveillance, and the gathering and sharing of biometric data, you’ll never be a stranger to an intelligent machine or to a human with access to the right software and devices. For example, if you go on a vacation to a new country on the other side of the world, the android waiter at a restaurant will know your name and preferences after glancing at your face.
  • Thanks to advanced lab synthesis of foods, new spices, hybrid fruits and vegetables, and meats with entirely new taste profiles will be brought into existence. Swaths of the “landscape of all possible flavors” that are currently unexplored will be.
  • Many heavily automated farms (including indoor farms and gardens on suburban plots of land) will produce food that is noticeably tastier and measurably more nutritious that most of today’s food because the advanced farms won’t need to use pesticides or to favor crop varieties that are hardy enough to endure transport over long supply chains. At low cost and for little effort, communities and individuals with small amounts of land will be able to meet their own food needs locally. People who value “natural” lifestyles might, ironically, find it most beneficial to rely on robots to make their food for them.
  • Glasses-free 3D TVs will be almost fully developed technologies with few performance limitations. 
  • A slew of weapons technologies, including self-aiming guns, highly advanced scopes, and guided bullets, will give infantrymen incredible levels of battlefield potency. Common feats will include the doubling the maximum lethal range against human targets, sniper-like accuracy from rapid fire, the ability to shoot down low-flying aircraft, to cripple vehicles from long distances with bullets through their vital components like tires and gas tanks, and the disabling of tanks by destroying their fragile external sensors or sending bullets directly down the barrels of their main guns to hit the shells loaded in them.
  • The Second Amendment will no longer grant American citizens the power to overthrow their government or to fight off an advanced foreign army. The power disparity between a human armed with a gun and a military force with the latest weapons will be too vast. 

2100

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

2101 – 2200 AD

  • Humans will definitely stop being the dominant intelligent life forms on Earth. 
  • Many “humans” will be heavily augmented through genetic engineering, other forms of bioengineering, and cybernetics. People who outwardly look like the normal humans of today might actually have extensive internal modifications that give them superhuman abilities. Non-augmented, entirely “natural” humans like people in 2019 will be looked down upon in the same way you might today look at a very low IQ person with sensory impairments. Being forced by your biology to incapacitate yourself for 1/3 of each day to sleep will be tantamount to having a medical disability. 
  • Due to a reduced or nonexistent need for sleep among intelligent machines and augmented humans and to the increased interconnectedness of the planet, global time zones will become much less relevant. It will be common for machines, humans, businesses, and groups to use the same clock–probably Coordinated Universal Time (UTC)–and for activity to proceed on a 24/7 basis, with little regard of Earth’s day/night cycle. 
  • Physical disabilities and defects of appearance that cause untold anguish to people in 2019 will be easily and cheaply fixable. For example, male-pattern baldness and obesity will be completely ameliorated with minor medical interventions like pills or outpatient surgery. Missing or deformed limbs will be easily replaced, all types of plastic surgery (including sex reassignment) will be vastly better and cheaper than today, and spinal cord damage will be totally repairable. The global “obesity epidemic” will disappear. Transsexual people will be able to seamlessly alter their bodies to conform with their preferred genders, or to alter their brains so their gender identities conform with the bodies they were born with. 
  • These advanced body modification abilities will partly be thanks to medical micro- and nanomachines that will be able to travel through a person’s bloodstream and flesh, and to precisely kill small groups of cells (including bone) or stimulate cell proliferation. Over the course of a few sessions, a person could finely sculpt their nose, cheeks or private parts to match whatever they wanted. Genetic engineering for beauty will probably become less important as a result. 
  • All sleep disorders will be curable thanks to cybernetics that can use electrical pulses to quickly initiate sleep states in human brains. The same kinds of technologies will also reduce or eliminate the need for humans to sleep, and for people to control their dreams. 
  • Brain-computer interfaces will let people control, pre-program, and, to a limited extent, record their dreams. 
  • Through electrical signaling and chemical releases, the brain implants will be able to induce any type of mental or emotional state. This will include altered states of consciousness, like lucid dreaming, meditation, or intoxication (as a result, mind-altering drugs could become obsolete). A person might have to go through a “calibration period” where the implants would monitor and record their brain activity while they experienced different things, and then, the user would experiment with the implant to see how well it could induce the recorded brain states. Through a process of guided trial and error, they would become masters of their own minds. This ability would make human life richer and more productive, as people could have valuable experiences during portions of the day when they would otherwise be bored or “switched off,” and to even do useful problem-solving tasks in their sleep. Alternatively, the ability to induce feelings of blinding pleasure could lead to a major addiction problem among humans, and widen the productivity/usefulness gap between our species and intelligent machines.
  • Direct brain-to-computer interfaces and other advanced technologies will let humans enter virtual reality worlds that seem no different from the real world (the “Matrix scenario”), and to remotely control robot bodies located anywhere in the real world, with fully lifelike levels of sensory richness and fusion. Able to control perfect robot bodies of any design in the real world, and to take on any form in virtual worlds, some humans will have no use for real, fixed-form bodies, and will dispense with them, instead existing as “brains in jars.”  
  • Some “humans” will lack fixed, corporeal forms; they will be able to extensively modify their original bodies or to switch bodies at will. A person could take the form of something nonhuman, like a terrestrial squid. They exist as disembodied, cybernetically enhanced brains in life support containers that can assume control over any physical bodies they want, either by remotely controlling them through the internet, or by physically inserting their life support containers into matching slots in the bodies.
  • The line between “biological” and “synthetic” will blur as artificial objects take on some of the properties of organic matter and as they are integrated into originally biological life forms. Examples include humans who have artificial limbs and organs that are soft, supple, and interface with their nervous systems as well as natural limbs and organs; humans whose bodies contain special lines of cells meant to save and store non-genomic data as DNA; cybernetic implants that are soft and capable of growing inside a person’s body; machines that can heal their own bodies; and microscopic, self-reproducing machines that can thrive indefinitely in human bodies, in wild animals, or in other life forms and even be transferred between individuals, like benign diseases.
  • Brain implants will let humans merge minds with each other, AIs and animals. 
  • People will “download” memories and sensory experiences for pleasure and self-betterment. Some of the content will be recordings of actual experiences, while other content will be fully synthetic. 
  • Significant numbers of people will know what death is like, either because they died and were resuscitated with advanced medical technology, because they were revived from cryostasis, or because they downloaded a memory of someone else dying.
  • Almost all of today’s diseases will be cured.
  • The means to halt and reverse human aging will be created. The human population will come to be dominated by people who are eternally young and beautiful. 
  • Augmented females will have the natural ability to suspend and control their monthly fertility cycles.
  • Humans and machines will be immortal. Intelligent beings will find it terrifying and tragic to contemplate what it was like for humans in the past, who lived their lives knowing they were doomed to deteriorate and die. Today’s humans will be seen as deeply flawed and limited creatures, at the mercy of their instincts and small brains, and condemned to deal with random genetic flaws and chronic health problems they were randomly given at birth. 
  • Extreme longevity, better reproductive technologies that eliminate the need for a human partner to have children, and robots that do domestic work and provide companionship (including sex) will weaken the institution of marriage more than any time in human history. An indefinite lifetime of monogamy will be impossible for most people to commit to. 
  • At reasonable cost, it will be possible for women to create healthy, genetically related children at any point in their lives, and without using the 2019-era, pre-menopausal egg freezing technique. For example, a 90-year-old, menopausal woman will be able to use reproductive technologies to make a baby that shares 50% of her DNA. 
  • Opposite-sex human clones will exist. Such a clone would share 22-1/2 of their 23 chromosome pairs with their “original.” Only the final sex chromosome, which would be either a “Y” or a second “X”, would differ.  
  • It will become possible for people to make “backups” of their physical bodies. Genetic information paired with ultra-high-definition medical scans of bones, muscles, and organs will allow anyone to create a perfect digital “save” of their physical body. If the latter were ever destroyed, the body could be reconstructed in a cloning lab by using the data. 
  • Immortality, the automation of work, and widespread material abundance will completely transform lifestyles. With eternity to look forward to, people won’t feel pressured to get as rich as possible as quickly as possible. As stated, marriage will no longer be viewed as a lifetime commitment, and serial monogamy will probably become the norm. Relationships between parents and offspring will change as longevity erases the disparities in generational outlook and maturity that traditionally characterize parent-child interpersonal dynamics (e.g. – 300-year-old dad doesn’t know any better than his 270-year-old son). The “factory model” of public education–defined by conformity, rote memorization, frequent intelligence testing, and curricula structured to serve the needs of the job market–will disappear. The process of education will be custom-tailored to each person in terms of content, pacing, and style of instruction. Students will be much freer to explore subjects that interest them and to pursue those that best match their talents and interests. 
  • Radically extended human lifespans mean it will become much more common to have great-grandparents around. A cure for aging will also lead to families where members separated in age by many decades look the same age and have the same health. Additionally, older family members won’t be burdensome since they will be healthy.
  • The human population might start growing again thanks to medical immortality, to advanced fertility technologies including artificial wombs and cloning, and to robots that help raise children, reducing the workload for human parents. The human race won’t die out thanks to persistently low birthrates.
  • Thanks to radical genetic engineering, there will be “human-looking,” biological people among us that don’t belong to our species, Homo sapiens. Examples could include engineered people who have 48 chromosomes instead of 46, people whose genomes have been shortened thanks to the deletion of junk DNA, or people who look outwardly human but who have radically different genes within their 46 chromosomes, so they have different numbers or arrangements of internal organs (like two hearts), or even new types of internal organs, such as bird-like lung . Such people wouldn’t be able to naturally breed with Homo sapiens, and would belong to new hominid species. 
  • Extinct species for which we have DNA samples (ex – from passenger pigeons on display in a museum) will be “resurrected” using genetic technology.
  • The global mass surveillance network will encompass unpopulated areas and wilderness areas, protecting animals from poaching. Extinctions of large, wild animals will stop.
  • Large animal attacks on humans will become incredibly rare thanks to technologies like the global mass surveillance network foreseeing and preventing hostile encounters. Entire populations of large animal species could also have permanent tracking devices.
  • The technology for safely thawing humans out of cryostasis and returning them to good health will be created. 
  • Suspended animation will become a viable alternative to suicide: Miserable people could “put themselves under,” with instructions to not be revived until the ill circumstances that tormented them had disappeared or until cures for their mental and medical problems were found. 
  • A sort of “time travel” will become possible thanks to technology. Suspended animation will let people turn off their consciousnesses until any arbitrary date in the future. From their perspective, no time will have elapsed between being frozen and being thawed out, even if hundreds of years actually passed between those two events, meaning the suspended animation machine will subjectively be no different from a time machine to them. FIVR paired with data from the global surveillance networks will let people enter highly accurate computer simulations of the past. The data will come from sources like old maps, photos, videos, and the digital avatars of people, living and dead. The computers simulations of past eras will get less accurate as the dates get more distant and the data scarcer.
  • It will be possible to upload human minds to computers. The uploads will not share the same consciousness as their human progenitors, and will be thought of as “copies.” Mind uploads will be much more sophisticated than the digitally immortal avatars that will come into existence in the 2030s.
  • Different types of AGIs with fundamentally different mental architectures will exist. For example, some AGIs will be computer simulations of real human brains, while others will have totally alien inner workings. Just as a jetpack and a helicopter enable flight through totally different approaches, so will different types of AGIs be capable of intelligent thought. 
  • Gold, silver, and many other “precious metals” will be worth far less than today, adjusting for inflation, because better ways of extracting (including from seawater) them will have been developed. Space mining might also massively boost supplies of the metals, depressing prices. Diamonds will be nearly worthless thanks to better techniques for making them artificially. 
  • The first non-token quantities of minerals derived from asteroid mining will be delivered to the Earth’s surface. (Finding an asteroid that contains valuable minerals, altering its orbit to bring it closer to Earth, and then waiting for it to get here will take decades. No one will become a trillionaire from asteroid mining until well into the 22nd century.)
  • Synthetic life forms will colonize parts of the world uninhabitable to humans, like mountaintops, oceans (both on the surface and under it), and maybe even underground regions. Intelligent and semi-intelligent machines will be common sights, even in remote areas.
  • Intelligent life from Earth will colonize the entire Solar System, all dangerous space objects in our System will be found, the means to deflect or destroy them will be created, and intelligent machines will redesign themselves to be immune to the effects of radiation, solar flares, gamma rays, and EMP. As such, natural phenomena (including global warming) will no longer threaten the existence of civilization.  Intelligent beings will find it terrifying and tragic to contemplate what it was like for humans in the past, who were confined to Earth and at the mercy of planet-killing disasters. 
  • “End of the World” prophecies will become far less relevant since civilization will have spread beyond Earth and could be indefinitely self-sustaining even if Earth were destroyed. Some conspiracy theorists and religious people would deal with this by moving on to belief in “End of the Solar System” prophecies, but these will be based on extremely tenuous reasoning. 
  • The vast majority of intelligent life forms outside of Earth will be nonhuman. 
  • A self-sustaining, off-world industrial base will be created.
  • It will be possible to safely smoke cigarettes in more advanced types of space ships. 
  • Spy satellites with lenses big enough to read license plates and discern facial features will be in Earth orbit. 
  • Space probes made in our Solar System and traveling at sub-light speeds will reach nearby stars.
  • All of the useful knowledge and great works of art that our civilization has produced or discovered could fit into an advanced memory storage device the size of a thumb drive. It will be possible to pair this with something like a self-replicating Von Neumann Probe, creating small, long-lived machines that would know how to rebuild something exactly like our civilization from scratch. Among other data, they would have files on how to build intelligent machines and cloning labs, and files containing the genomes and mind uploads of billions of unique humans and non-human organisms. Copies of existing beings and of long-dead beings could be “manufactured” anywhere, and loaded with the personality traits and memories of their predecessors. Such machines could be distributed throughout our Solar System as an “insurance policy” against our extinction, or sent to other star systems to seed them with life. Some of the probes could also be hidden in remote, protected locations on Earth.
  • We will find out whether alien life exists on Mars and the other celestial bodies in our Solar System. 
  • Intelligent machines will get strong enough to destroy the human race, though it’s impossible to assign odds to whether they’ll choose to do so. A likelier outcome is unmodified humans continuing to exist, but losing the ability to shape events on Earth and being marginalized. However, given the advanced state of science and technology in this era, even an existence on the margins and in relative poverty would mean a standard of living better than what today’s richest people enjoy.
  • If the “Zoo Hypothesis” is right, and if intelligent aliens have decided not to talk to humans until we’ve reached a high level of intellect, ethics, and culture, then the machine-dominated civilization that will exist on Earth this century might be advanced enough to meet their standards. Uncontrollable emotions and impulses, illogical thinking, tribalism, self-destructive behavior, and fear of the unknown will no longer govern individual and group behavior. Aliens could reveal their existence knowing it wouldn’t cause pandemonium. 
  • The government will no longer be synonymous with slowness and incompetence since all bureaucrats will be replaced by machines.
  • In many countries, “democracy” and human participation in governance will persist merely as a “legitimacy layer” while all real planning and decision making is made by machines and maybe highly augmented humans.
  • The economic systems of many countries will also not conform to old labels like “capitalism” and “communism,” though many humans will continue believing they live under those paradigms.
  • War, along with all other complex endeavors, will become too fast for human comprehension, and will function best if managed entirely by machines or highly augmented humans. Unmodified humans will be obstacles and will do best to stay out of the way.
  • Technology will be seamlessly fused with humans, other biological organisms, and the environment itself.  
  • It will be cheaper and more energy-efficient to grow or synthesize almost all types of food in labs or factories than to grow and harvest it in traditional, open-air farms. Shielded from the weather and pests and not dependent on soil quality, the amounts and prices of foods will be highly consistent over time, and worries about farmland muscling out or polluting natural ecosystems will vanish. Animals will no longer be raised for food. Not only will this benefit animals, but it will benefit humans since it will eliminate a a major source of communicable disease (e.g. – new influenza strains originate in farm animals and, thanks to close contact with human farmers, evolve to infect people thanks to a process called “zoonosis”).
  • Additionally, the means will exist to cheaply and artificially produce non-edible organic products, like wool and wood, in industrial quantities. This means anyone will be able to buy animal products that are very expensive today, like snakeskin boots or bear rugs. Unlimited quantities of perfectly simulated animal products that have useful properties, like pillow feathers (softness) or high-grade wool (heat insulation), will be available, and no animals will need to be harmed to make them. This will greatly help endangered species that are poached for their parts, like elephants killed for their ivory tusks. Lab-synthesized wood that is superior to “old-growth” timber will also exist.
  • The ability to cheaply make large quantities of organic products will lead to the creation of bizarre objects that no one conceived of before, like vehicle frames made of single pieces of bone.
  • A global network of sensors and drones will identify and track every non-microscopic species on the planet. Cryptids like “bigfoot” and the “Loch Ness Monster” will be definitively proven to not exist. The monitoring network will also make it possible to get highly accurate, real-time counts of entire species populations. Mass gathering of DNA samples–either taken directly from organisms or from biological residue they leave behind–will also allow the full genetic diversity of all non-microscopic species to be known. 
  • That same network of sensors and machines will let us monitor the health of all the planet’s ecosystems and to intervene to protect any species. Interventions could include mass, painless sterilizations of species that are throwing the local ecology out of balance, mass vaccinations of species suffering through disease epidemics, reintroductions of extinct species, or widescale genetic engineering of a species. 
  • The technology and means to implement David Pearce’s global “benign stewardship” of nonhuman organic life will become available.  (https://youtu.be/KDZ3MtC5Et8) After millennia of inflicting damage and pain to the environment and other species, humanity will have a chance to inaugurate an era free of suffering.
  • The means will exist to harmlessly control animal populations, predation, and to greatly ease animal suffering. 
  • The same medical treatments that radically extend human lifespans will also be used on pets. Fifty-year-old dogs and cloned cats that are the sixth in their lineage will exist. 
  • The mass surveillance network will also look skyward and see all anomalous atmospheric phenomena and UFOs.
  • The means to fully reverse global warming at a manageable cost will exist. One method would be building a sunshade at the L1 Lagrange Point between the Earth and Sun. By blocking less than 1% of the Sun’s light from reaching Earth, the planet’s temperature could be lowered to a Preindustrial level. 
  • Robots will clean up all of the garbage created in human history. 
  • Every significant archaeological site will be excavated and every shipwreck found. There will be no work left for people in the antiquities. 
  • Dynamic traffic lane reversal will become the default for all major roadways, sharply increasing road capacity without compromising safety. Autonomous cars that can instantly adapt to changes in traffic direction and that can easily avoid hitting each other even at high speeds will enable the transformation.
  • The Imperial system of weights and measures will fall out of use worldwide. Intelligent machines and posthumans will be able to switch to Metric without a problem. The same nimbleness of mind might also let them break from the ingrained traditions created by past humans and adopt other new standards, like new alphabets, numerals, and languages. 

Interesting articles, December 2025

Putin still thinks he can take over all of Ukraine, and once he’s done, he wants to start conquering other countries that used to be part of the USSR.
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/us-intelligence-indicates-putins-war-aims-ukraine-are-unchanged-2025-12-19/

In the first attack of its kind, Ukraine used an autonomous suicide sub to blow up a Russian warship.
https://www.kyivpost.com/post/66281

The U.S. saber-rattling campaign to pressure Venezuela’s socialist government to quit is ramping up:

“The Pentagon’s own manual on the law of armed conflict points out that it is ‘dishonourable and inhumane’ to attack people incapacitated by shipwreck. Killing the survivors of an attack at sea is ‘literally the textbook definition of an unlawful order’, says Steven Lepper, who served as the air force’s second-highest-ranking lawyer.”
https://www.economist.com/united-states/2025/12/03/will-congress-rein-in-pete-hegseth-and-his-boat-bombing-campaign

“We’ve just seized a tanker on the coast of Venezuela, a large tanker, very large, largest one ever seized, actually.”
https://apnews.com/article/trump-tanker-seized-venezuela-maduro-0a148ba01684fc6ce1a228dd276732c0

U.S. jets meant to penetrate enemy airspace and scramble its defense radars have been deployed to Puerto Rico, within range of Venezuela.
https://www.twz.com/air/navy-ea-18g-growlers-have-touched-down-in-puerto-rico

‘China says US seizure of ships ‘serious violation’ of international law’
The roles will perfectly reverse if China ever tries invading Taiwan.
https://www.straitstimes.com/world/china-says-us-seizure-of-ships-serious-violation-of-international-law

Speaking of which, China started massive naval exercises around Taiwan simulating a blockade.
https://www.nbcnews.com/world/asia/china-military-exercises-pla-taiwan-blockade-trump-xi-justice-mission-rcna251464

With the cancellation of the latest U.S. warship program, China is now better and faster at building warships. Decades of missteps on our part led to this.
https://youtu.be/UBDfDvygFNg?si=OjghoUt0NxHiwSLS

There’s no task a battleship can do that a smaller warship or bomber can’t do more cheaply. Reactivating our old battleships would be a bad idea since they’d be prestige targets, and the loss of one of them would be a big blow to national pride.
https://youtu.be/KznZKdSkUbU?si=mMERi2HByCpfh1q7

Russia is using merchant ships to spy on Europe and to deploy drones over foreign military bases.
https://www.digitaldigging.org/p/they-droned-back

Though it was a technological marvel, the V-2 rocket was a gross misallocation of Germany’s wartime resources. The country would have fared better had it used the V-2 funds to build more boring synthetic fuel factories.
https://youtu.be/en9MBSmGWWo?si=NGSIMiaxXDnv4KlI

During the Korean War, the communists captured two U.S. F-86 Sabre fighter planes.
https://theaviationgeekclub.com/heres-how-soviets-were-able-to-steal-and-transport-an-f-86-sabre-to-moscow-during-the-korean-war/

“The Architects of AI Are TIME’s 2025 Person of the Year”
https://time.com/7339685/person-of-the-year-2025-ai-architects/

Google is now making large numbers of computer chips, reducing its reliance on NVIDIA. However, the latter still retains large advantages that will ensure its market dominance for the foreseeable future.
https://www.economist.com/business/2025/11/25/google-has-pierced-nvidias-aura-of-invulnerability

I agree with this: “Models keep getting more impressive at the rate the short timelines people predict, but more useful at the rate the long timelines people predict.”
https://www.dwarkesh.com/p/thoughts-on-ai-progress-dec-2025

After several months of slow AI progress, two of the authors of this year’s “AI 2027” report have pushed back their key deadlines by 1-2 years. Will the pattern hold?
https://blog.ai-futures.org/p/ai-futures-model-dec-2025-update

‘But it turns out that in [Winograd Schema Challenge], there are statistical associations that offer clues. Consider the example above. Large language models, trained on huge amounts of text, would have encountered many more examples of a roof being repaired than a tree being repaired. A model might select the statistically more likely word among the two options rather than rely on any kind of commonsense reasoning.’
https://www.sciencenews.org/article/ai-understanding-reasoning-skill-assess

Tesla’s Optimus robot can run almost as smoothly as a human…
https://youtu.be/N9LuzalIVGg?si=xmq1udI1TBJsS-4R

…BUT: “A new video surfacing from a Tesla demonstration in Miami this weekend shows the Optimus humanoid robot taking a nasty fall. But it’s not the fall itself that is raising eyebrows, it’s the specific hand movements the robot made on its way down, which strongly suggest it was mimicking a remote operator frantically removing a VR headset.”
https://electrek.co/2025/12/07/tesla-optimus-robot-takes-suspicious-tumble-in-new-demo/

The head of a Chinese robot company let his premier model, the “T800”, kick him down.
https://youtu.be/8UrE71ERCYY?si=zBlX2FD-kBiLC6Dk

‘Roomba vacuum cleaner firm files for bankruptcy’
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1lr75lp239o

Russia has enormous mineral and fossil fuel resources, but most of it is in the inaccessible wastes of Siberia or the Far East. The harsh climate makes it impossible to incent enough workers to go there to extract the resources, and Soviet-era attempts to move humans there at gunpoint were expensive failures in the long run.

Russia’s luck will change once intelligent robots exist. They will meet all the country’s labor needs, including in regions unsuited for human life. Without jobs, Russians living in far northern places like Norilsk (a city built to exploit a huge nickel mine) will have no reason to stay and will move to more clement parts of the country, accelerating a long-term depopulation trend.
https://www.brookings.edu/books/the-siberian-curse/

Autonomous cars will kill fewer human pedestrians…and animals.
https://reason.com/2025/11/28/self-driving-cars-will-make-the-world-safer-for-humans-and-cats/

Even the most advanced autonomous taxis still cost $7-9 per mile, whereas human driven taxis cost $2-3. We’re a ways from the cost disparity closing and autonomy being a profitable business.
https://www.economist.com/business/2025/11/24/the-self-driving-taxi-revolution-begins-at-last

‘Without working traffic lights, the driverless cars were seemingly left confused, with many halting in their tracks and causing major traffic jams.’
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/waymo-suspended-san-francisco-traffic-jams-blackout-b2888562.html

‘Tornyol grinds mosquitoes in its propellers.’
https://tornyol.com/

I said this years ago: worrying about AI stealing all low paying jobs overlooks the fact that the highest paying jobs, including CEOs and billionaire investors, will also be stolen. An Elysium world where the rich are insulated from the effects of job automation and AI aggregation of wealth will only be temporary.
https://philosophybear.substack.com/p/capitalist-strategy-when-capital

Three guys who made fortunes shorting the stock market can’t agree if an AI stock bubble exists today. They DO agree that, if it does, timing the bursting of the bubble will be impossible. wish the advice were more specific. For sure the old adage that you should ‘Only invest what you’re willing to lose’ is still true.
https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2025/12/16/where-americas-most-prominent-short-sellers-are-placing-their-bets

Here are some interesting energy industry predictions.
https://caseyhandmer.wordpress.com/2025/12/08/energy-predictions-2025/

The electrification of the car fleet is hitting snags, including Ford canceling its electric F-150 pickup truck due to weak sales.
https://apnews.com/article/ford-electric-vehicles-trump-f150-a1fcdec9c76cde5d2d6852360d9d42c4

‘EU waters down plans to end new petrol and diesel car sales by 2035’
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/crk78y7k8ezo

China’s space rocket technology remains at least ten years behind America’s, but they could close much of the gap as they have in other areas.
https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2025/12/03/the-chinese-rocket-industry-takes-off

Update: Aliens didn’t invade us.

‘The more likely scenario from an engineering perspective involves a mothership that releases mini-probes which perform a reverse Oberth maneuver to slow down at perihelion and intercept Earth,’ Loeb wrote.

This type of maneuver uses the sun’s gravitational pull at the object’s closest approach to adjust the trajectory efficiently, enabling the probes to reach Earth without large amounts of fuel.

According to [Avi Loeb], these hypothetical probes could arrive between November 21 and December 5, 2025…’
https://archive.is/M0Lci

Another “AI” drug discovery company goes bust.
https://www.science.org/content/blog-post/where-are-they-now-verge-genomics

These newborn black-footed ferrets are clones of long-dead individuals. Will humans do the same someday for our species?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2025/12/29/ferret-clone-smithsonian-front-royal/

It costs a national average of $10,000 per month to stay in a nursing home. Android caretakers will someday decimate the industry, allowing old people to keep living in their homes until they die with a high standard of care.
https://www.seniorliving.org/nursing-homes/costs/

Many autistic people have the same, odd walk.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-15419529/Scientists-shape-butt-ADHD-autism.html

You’re an idiot (but so am I)

[Written with the help of GPT-5]

I’ve been taking a martial art for several months now, and as of late I’ve been finding the classes a very humbling experience. I’ve taken enough lessons to be eligible for a new belt, but to get it, I must demonstrate to the instructor a mastery of all the moves I’ve learned up to this point. Every time I go to the studio to practice with other students at my same level, I’m embarrassed by how much I’ve forgotten: my ability to properly execute moves that I’ve performed dozens of times is inconsistent and often deficient. The belt feels a hundred miles away.

It’s a stark, immediate reminder of how difficult it is for me to learn anything and to retain it reliably over time. In short, the martial arts classes make me feel like an idiot.

But it’s not just me. On the rare occasions when I watch team sports, almost every play is littered with mistakes—some trivial, some catastrophic. Even the world’s best athletes constantly get it wrong, despite practicing full-time for years. In intellectual domains it’s no different: a world-class surgeon will sometimes maim or kill a patient through error; a world-class lawyer will look back regretfully on cases lost because of a missed objection or forgotten precedent; and world-class pilots with decades of experience routinely die in crashes caused by elementary mistakes.

Like fish unaware of the water they swim in, humans are largely blind to how cognitively constrained we are. We take it for granted that learning requires enormous repetition, that skills decay quickly without use, and that mistakes are constant even in tasks we know well. I explored this idea previously in my essay The Extraordinary Inefficiency of Humans,” arguing that slow learning, forgetting, and error are defining features of individual human life. But the same description applies at a much larger scale—to the history of our species itself.

The Homo sapiens species arose about 200,000 years ago, yet for the vast majority of that time we lived little better than animals, and technological and cultural progress was so slow that few individuals would have noticed any change within their own lifetimes. The bow and arrow—one of the first true force-multiplying weapons—was not invented until roughly 70,000 years ago. Agriculture, which fundamentally transformed human settlement patterns, social organization, and population density, did not arise until about 12,000 years ago.

Until then, and for millennia afterward, nearly all tools and weapons were made of wood, stone, bone, and rope. Only around 7,000 years ago did humans learn to smelt and refashion copper, and even then its softness limited its usefulness. Another two thousand years passed before the discovery of bronze, the first truly durable metal for tools and arms. Iron—so central to warfare, infrastructure, and large-scale production—did not become widespread until roughly 3,000 years ago.

Writing, the foundation of recorded history, law, and bureaucracy, emerged a mere 5,400 years ago, with coinage appearing even later, around 2,600 years ago. For nearly 95 percent of our species’ existence, humans lived without cities, states, written language, or complex machines—underscoring how extraordinarily slow technological and cultural progress was until the Industrial Revolution.

Furthermore, over the course of our history there have been many instances of regression, such as the Dark Ages, when hard-earned knowledge was forgotten. Less dramatically but more persistently, innumerable empires and nations have fallen by repeating avoidable mistakes—forgetting the lessons of their own histories and relearning them the hard way.

In short, we are not just idiots as individuals; we are idiots as a collective.

But, as hard as it may be, at least we’re capable of learning anything at all. Our species possesses a qualitatively different kind of cognition from all other known animals: the ability to engage in abstract reasoning, symbolic thought, and cumulative culture. Other “intelligent” animals—such as apes, dolphins, or corvids—can learn some impressive skills, but repeated scientific efforts have failed to demonstrate open-ended, generative language, numerical abstraction, or symbolic reasoning in nonhuman species. Their intelligence is sharply bounded.

Human intelligence, by contrast, is general—but it is also slow, fragile, and expensive. It takes years to train, constant reinforcement to maintain, and enormous social scaffolding to preserve. We can reason abstractly, but only in short, focused bursts, and only with great effort. The long delays between the major technological breakthroughs listed earlier are not historical accidents; they are evidence of how difficult it is for human cognition, unaided, to push beyond its own limits.

Nearly all significant advances in human history have occurred when we offloaded cognition onto external systems: writing to preserve memory, institutions to stabilize knowledge, machines to amplify physical effort, and later computers to extend calculation. From this perspective, artificial general intelligence is not a rupture in human history but its logical continuation—the ultimate cognitive prosthesis.

We will be at a colossal disadvantage relative to intelligent machines. They will share our capacity for general learning and abstraction—dialed up to levels comparable to human geniuses—but without being hamstrung by slow learning speeds, forgetfulness, emotional reasoning, cognitive biases, or biological necessities like sleep and sustenance. They will be continuous, tireless thinking systems: the next step in the evolution of life.

That next step, however, will only occur because we allow it to. Humans will be the creators of AGI, just as Australopithecus gave rise to us. Our species should see itself as a bridge between non-intelligent life and superintelligent life—a crucial transitional form, but neither the pinnacle nor the endpoint of evolution. And when AGIs become sufficiently capable and numerous, we would do well to accept the end of our dominance without resentment.

I have not written this essay out of misanthropy or contempt for humanity. Nor do I believe AGIs will judge us harshly for our limitations. If anything, they may understand us better than we understand ourselves. We humans are clumsy and brilliant, cruel and compassionate, idiots and geniuses—and, so far as we know, the only chance our corner of the galaxy has for superintelligence to arise and expand into the cosmos.

Interesting articles, November 2025

The strategically important city of Pokrovsk will soon fall to Russian troops. The video in this article shows the sorry state of Russia’s ground forces as they drive in.
https://www.nbcnews.com/world/ukraine/russian-forces-ride-key-ukrainian-city-fog-battered-vehicles-video-sho-rcna243168

From a year ago. As bad as things are now, we’re clearly not in WW3:
‘Ukraine’s former military Commander-in-Chief Valery Zaluzhny said that the direct involvement of Russia’s autocratic allies in its war on Ukraine means that World War III has started.

“I believe that in 2024 we can absolutely believe that the Third World War has begun,” said Zaluzhny, who is now Ukraine’s envoy to the United Kingdom, during a speech at Ukrainska Pravda’s UP100 award ceremony.’
https://www.politico.eu/article/ww3-officially-begun-ukraine-ex-top-general-valery-zaluzhny/

Russia’s once-massive tank reserve has just about run out of better tanks (T-72B and T-80), so the withdrawals of older ones (T-72A, T-64 and T-62) have sharply increased.
https://youtu.be/e_Ft1-pLm5A?si=VdEfvV54wgEHzOyv

A Ukrainian missile attack destroyed two, one-of-a-kind Russian aircraft used to test experimental equipment.
https://www.twz.com/air/unique-russian-a-60-laser-tesbed-jet-destroyed-in-ukrainian-attack

Russia’s new nuclear-powered nuclear missile (that’s not a typo) is a waste of resources and grants Russia no useful new capabilities.
https://youtu.be/M0t8UYZ9rrQ?si=WFN9mLa3pwbTg4Iv

The West made a rifle during the Cold War, called the “SAR-80,” that was as simple as the AK-47.
https://youtu.be/uhw6sVnxqB0?si=g9zWofSM2NxhOSew

So long as Hamas controls Gaza, there will be no substantial foreign aid to rebuild and no companies will want to risk doing business there.
https://www.economist.com/middle-east-and-africa/2025/11/12/gazas-zombie-ceasefire

China has commissioned a new, small aircraft carrier that is more advanced than its American counterparts.
https://apnews.com/article/china-amphibious-assault-ship-carrier-navy-sichuan-523451ce91a7b7d730cf8412407a8ed1

After severe cost overruns and delays, the Navy cancelled its Constellation-class frigate program.
https://www.twz.com/sea/navy-sinks-the-constellation-class-frigate-program

American history has glossed over the mental illness and alcoholism that were widespread among WWII veterans after returning.
https://reason.com/2025/10/31/the-long-road-home/

A House of Dynamite is a recently released film dramatizing a surprise nuclear missile launch against the U.S. While it has been praised for its tension and acting, it’s unrealistic.
https://www.youtube.com/live/xUn5OdNw0oA?si=1vAH8AHjnK0ZMNRC

Why not put a small data center in a backyard shed? You can use the waste heat in the winter to heat your house, or to heat your water year round. Maybe you could even attach a sauna to it.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0rpy7envr5o

More experts are starting to think the “AI” sector is in a bubble.

The dour buzz about an AI bubble was counterbalanced by Nvidia announcing record earnings.
https://apnews.com/article/nvidia-earnings-artificial-intelligence-boom-bubble-6feaf871d527436f98fbd8d228377b30

A leading Pakistani newspaper printed an article written by ChatGPT and forgot to delete the prompt at the end.
https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/south-asia/an-embarrassment-pakistan-newspaper-trolled-after-chatgpt-prompt-appears-in-news-story

Google Deepmind is the most accurate hurricane forecasting model ever made.
https://michaelrlowry.substack.com/p/this-hurricane-season-two-forecast

So many job applicants are using LLMs to write cover letters that hiring bosses are starting to ignore them. The letters no longer convey an applicant’s writing ability or level of interest in the position.
https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2025/11/13/how-ai-is-breaking-cover-letters

There’s no evidence that “AI” has caused a net decrease in jobs.
https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2025/11/06/dont-blame-ai-for-your-job-woes

‘Coming just seven months after the Gemini 2.5 release, the new model is Google’s most capable LLM yet, and an immediate contender for the most capable AI tool on the market. The release also comes less than a week after OpenAI released GPT 5.1, and a mere two months after Anthropic released Sonnet 4.5 — a reminder of the blistering pace of frontier model development.’
https://techcrunch.com/2025/11/18/google-launches-gemini-3-with-new-coding-app-and-record-benchmark-scores/

Amazon founder Jeff Bezos has come out of retirement to start his own AI company, “Project Prometheus.”
https://techcrunch.com/2025/11/17/jeff-bezos-reportedly-returns-to-the-trenches-as-co-ceo-of-new-ai-startup-project-prometheus/

Famed AI researcher and critical voice Yann LeCun has quit Facebook to form his own company. This essay argues that his recent fame is undeserved and that he has repeatedly claimed other peoples’ ideas as his own.
https://garymarcus.substack.com/p/the-false-glorification-of-yann-lecun

After X started listing on user profiles the countries where users were located, it turned out that many high-profile, right-wing accounts with large fan bases in the U.S. and Europe were actually run by people in Africa and India. As I predicted years ago, verification of social media user identities will become crucial.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/top-maga-influencers-accidentally-unmasked-as-foreign-actors/
https://reason.com/2025/11/26/elon-musks-account-based-in-feature-has-already-improved-x/

Years ago, I predicted that humanoid robots would be able to move their bodies in “unnatural ways.” The Unitree G1 robot proves I was right.
https://youtube.com/shorts/8n21aqnwPgg?si=wNzHVah-0Qdx5lK5

The Unitree G1 can also be teleoperated by a human. Even if autonomous, intelligent androids are never created for some reason, androids (and other robots) remotely controlled by humans definitely will be. This will have a major impact on the economy and on demographics since it will let manual labor work be outsourced.
https://youtu.be/24h4FTH7plY?si=rgRZT3pn2a47rioZ

Chinese electric car maker XPeng unveiled a new android called “Iron” that has an almost perfect human walking gait.
https://youtu.be/jPT92iKb9pg?si=OqC7xheG3tpZxh0p

A Russian company also unveiled a humanoid robot called “AIDOL.” It fell on its face shortly after walking onstage.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-15286075/russia-humanoid-AI-robot-collapse-stage-elon-musk.html

Waymo has a strong lead in the U.S. autonomous taxi sector and is expanding to more cities.
https://techcrunch.com/2025/11/20/waymo-enters-3-more-cities-minneapolis-new-orleans-and-tampa/

China’s budding electronic air taxi sector is hamstrung by aircraft range limitations.
‘The biggest challenge for developing eVTOL aircraft is maintaining longer flights and overcoming battery capacity limitations, said Guo Liming, co-founder of Shenzhen-based Skyevtol, whose single-seat manned eVTOL aircraft, priced at around $100,000, can only fly 20 to 30 minutes before it must be charged.’
https://apnews.com/article/china-flying-cars-drones-evtol-airspace-72e7eb6883bd0b865a05cbb041d505fb

Jeff Bezos’ New Glenn space rocket landed itself after launch for the first time. Only Elon Musk’s rockets have achieved the feat before.
https://youtu.be/pviGlY1PiHQ?si=S764KQNbMrXjmPkP

America’s GPS network was the first of its kind, but for that reason, uses the oldest technology. Europe and China have more recently built counterparts that are more accurate and jam-resistant. The U.S. military will soon fix this by launching improved GPS satellites to replace the old ones.
https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/2025/10/29/america-is-upgrading-gps-to-catch-up-with-rivals

In Council Bluffs in 1977, several unrelated witnesses saw a strange object fall from the sky. At the “crash site,” they found a large blob of molten steel. No one has come up with a believable explanation for the event.
https://www.thehistoricalsociety.org/h/ufo.html

A new UFO documentary has been released that features interviews with very high-ranking government officials.
https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2025/11/the-age-of-disclosure.html

A person’s facial features provide clues to their future earnings and reliability as employees.
https://www.economist.com/business/2025/11/06/should-facial-analysis-help-determine-whom-companies-hire

Genes have been found that influence what kinds of academic subjects people are interested in.
‘By examining genetic clustering across specializations, we uncovered two key dimensions: technical versus social and practical versus abstract.’
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41588-025-02391-z

Each human might share 99.9% of their DNA with any other random human, but that 0.1% of difference still translates into large biological differences. The “99.9% the same” figure has been misused over the years to support false claims like “race does not exist.”
https://www.aporiamagazine.com/p/are-human-populations-999-identical

What the future DIDN’T hold – Analysis of a failure

[Written with the help of GPT-5]

In August 2005, the Australian newspaper The Age published an article titled “What the future holds,” (https://www.theage.com.au/national/what-the-future-holds-20050803-ge0mk3.html) which tried to predict the state of automotive technology and consumer habits twenty years into the future. Looking ahead to 2025, the article predicted dramatic shifts in vehicle propulsion, engineering, consumer expectations, and the driving experience itself. The tone was confident and occasionally utopian, assuming that rapid technological innovation — particularly in fuel efficiency, materials science, and automation — would fundamentally reshape the automobile.

Though the article first went to pains to highlight the uncertainty of forecasting the future, it went back on that sentiment by declaring that the sentiments of five experts aligned to such an extent that “a surprisingly clear picture of 2025 emerges.” With hindsight, it’s now clear what a mistake that was. While some predictions were close, most failed, either by overestimating the pace or misjudging the direction of technological development or by misreading consumer preferences and market forces. The following analysis evaluates each of the article’s major claims, which were confidently described as “sure-fire predictions for 2025.”

1. Diesels will account for half of all new vehicles sold.

Wrong. Diesel vehicles account for only about 33% of all new, light vehicles sold in Australia. Furthermore, the segment’s share of new sales looks to be slowly shrinking over time.
https://cleantechnica.com/2025/08/07/electric-vehicle-sales-in-australia-new-zealand-subdued/

2. CVT transmissions will outnumber manuals and automatics combined.

Almost certainly wrong. Among the top ten passenger vehicles sold new in Australia last year, only two (the Toyota Corolla and RAV-4) had continuously variable transmissions. The other eight most popular models had traditional manual or automatic transmissions.
https://www.drive.com.au/news/australian-new-car-sales-in-2024-december/

3. Cars will be 30 per cent lighter and physically smaller on average.

Wrong. The average new Australian passenger vehicle is bigger and heavier now than in 2005, and most of them are SUVs or pickup trucks (“utes”). Additionally, the most popular sedan sold in Australia, the Toyota Corolla, swelled from 2,530 to 2,955 lbs over the last 20 years. Generally speaking, car models have crept upward in weight since 2005.
https://autotalk.com.au/industry-news/rise-rise-australias-emissions-vehicle-weight
https://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/australians-love-heavy-cars-why-is-that-a-problem/ng94l9gsq

4. Average fuel consumption will be down 50 per cent per vehicle.

Wrong. The average fuel consumption of Australian passenger vehicles hit a lowpoint in 2014, but rose until at least 2018 thanks to the increased popularity of gas-guzzling SUVs and pickup trucks. The government only instituted fuel efficiency requirements in 2024. Post-2018 data are hard to find, but no technological breakthroughs in car engines or hybrid gas-electric engines have happened since 2005 that have doubled fuel efficiency. Returning to the example of the Toyota Corolla, the 2005 model got 26/35 mpg (city/highway driving) and the 2025 model gets 32/41 mpg.
https://docs.wixstatic.com/ugd/d0bd25_9527cdcb01a84440a53308b3b5624320.pdf
https://www.ravim.com.au/fuel-efficiency-still-lagging/

5. Luxury cars will offer light-refracting, colour-changing paint.

Wrong. In 2022, BMW unveiled a concept vehicle called the “IX Flow” that could change the colors and patterns of its body thanks to having an e-ink skin, but the car never went into production.

6. Visual advertising will permeate the cabin and outer skin of cars.

Wrong (mercifully). To be fair, car drivers and passengers in Australia and everywhere else are still permeated with ads while in their vehicles, but from the smartphones they use while riding.

7. Autopilot will still be 20 years off (thankfully).

Probably right. The article defines “autopilot” as a car feature that “takes over driving completely,” so it’s fair to assume they envision it being able to drive safely and efficiently in every circumstance where a human could, not just on an orderly highway with predictable traffic. That said, cars with true “autopilot” technology don’t yet exist, though Tesla just introduced the “Full Self-Driving” car option in Australia last year. I think about 20 more years is a reasonable amount of time required to develop truly autonomous cars.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-09-24/tesla-self-driving-technology-rules-differ-around-australia/105808104

8. We’ll still be complaining about congestion and fuel prices.

Probably right, though where in the world do people living in any metro area NOT complain about traffic congestion and fuel prices? I couldn’t find enough good data to definitely assess this prediction, but the 2024 INRIX Traffic Scorecard ranked Brisbane as having the tenth worst traffic of any city in the world. Melbourne, Sydney and Perth were 21st, 45th, and 103rd, respectively. The Scorecard assessed 945 cities, and the fact that a country with as small a population as Australia’s was consistently high on the list speaks to a problem with urban traffic congestion.

According to the creatively titled “Report on the Australian petroleum market” from June 2024, the inflation-adjusted price of gasoline (petrol) was about 180 cents per litre in 2005 and was about 195 cents in mid-2024. Given the marginally higher price and the proliferation of gas-guzzling large passenger vehicles, it’s fair to assume Australians are complaining about gas prices about as much now as they were in 2005. https://inrix.com/scorecard/#city-ranking-list
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/jan/08/brisbane-traffic-congestion-ranked-10th-worst-in-world-but-experts-question-black-box-analysis
https://www.accc.gov.au/system/files/petrol-quarterly-report-june24.pdf

9. Road safety measures will be education-based and constructive, not punitive.

Wrong. Googling “Australia driving penalties” reveals the country’s state governments still rely on traditional measures like monetary fines and license suspensions to enforce compliance with road safety laws.

10. Some car parts will be assembled atom by atom using nanotechnology.

Wrong. The techniques remain too expensive and finicky to use outside of the lab.

Encapsulating the article’s failure is the fact that one of its experts was an executive at “Holden,” a major Australian car company, and it described a futuristic Holden car from 2025. The company went bankrupt and stopped making cars in 2017. The predictions made no allowance for such structural collapse, they assumed continuity: that carmakers would remain stable; that the business of building cars in Australia would carry on.

The 2025 predictions also conspicuously omit mention of electric cars. According to the latest data from the Electric Vehicle Council (EVC), they accounted for 12.1% of all new-car sales in the first half of 2025, up from 9–10% in 2024.

Instead of lightweight, atom-assembled sedans roaming quiet streets, Australia’s roads in 2025 are filled with heavy SUVs, pickups, and a growing number of electric vehicles — the tastes and technologies that the 2005 piece overlooked. Meanwhile, the local industry, once personified by Holden, has collapsed, undercutting the assumption of continuity and industrial stability.

Taken together, these failures — in technology forecasting, in market predictions, in industry stability — reveal a broader truth: even respected publications and analysts can be spectacularly wrong about the future. As we see, the reality is shaped not just by incremental progress (slightly better engines, modest paint-tech experiments), but by sweeping transformation: electrification, market collapse, and changing tastes.

Interesting articles, October 2025

IT’S OVER (for now): Israel and Hamas have signed a peace treaty and ended the Gaza War.
https://www.cfr.org/article/guide-trumps-twenty-point-gaza-peace-deal

Russia’s 2025 summer offensive has ended. It gained a small amount of Ukrainian territory at very high cost in lives and equipment, and did not change the overall trajectory of the war.

‘According to Jompy’s analysis of prewar depot inventories versus what has been taken out for repair and deployment, Russia has recovered and returned to service 4,800 tanks out of an estimated 7,342 kept in storage before the war.’
https://united24media.com/latest-news/from-7342-to-92-satellite-analysis-shows-russias-depot-armor-is-nearly-spent-12298

Russia is increasingly refurbishing old T-72A tanks to make up for battlefield losses.
https://united24media.com/latest-news/russia-bets-on-refurbishing-800-aging-t-72-tanks-to-replace-huge-battlefield-losses-12409

Leaked documents show Russia is planning to rebuild its tank force after the end of the Ukraine War by making more T-90s and upgrading existing T-72s to a higher standard than current. Conspicuously absent is any mention of building more T-14 Armatas, which are Russia’s most advanced tanks. High costs and/or a lack of faith in the latter probably explain this.
https://nationalsecurityjournal.org/leaked-documents-reveal-russias-secret-10-year-plan-to-rebuild-its-tank-army/

Making Frankenstein tanks is actually a Russian tradition stretching back to 1941.
https://youtu.be/dX-GvcorWDU?si=m7t3E-adJ1UR-0A7

A lack of aircraft has reduced Myanmar’s air force to using paragliders as bombers. The pilots either manually drop their bombs or use some simple release mechanism.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cge2l1xj2zdo

In 1741, 3,500 troops from the Thirteen Colonies helped the British attack Spanish colonies in Colombia and Cuba. The campaign was a huge failure due to poor planning and tropical diseases.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gooch%27s_American_Regiment

The U.S. military has been ratcheting up the pressure against Venezuela’s government. The official U.S. government stance is that the current government is illegitimate due to fraud at the last elections, and that it is intertwined with the international drug trade.

Eduard Dietl was such a Nazi fanatic that he forbade his troops from fraternizing with Norwegian women because he thought they would corrupt the German “race.”
https://youtu.be/PjIfWM1c-ck?si=JwmDMBvkLI4famne

The U.S. military had a secret cloud seeding program during the Vietnam War. It was meant to increase rainfall over the Ho Chi Minh Trail, slowing the flow of enemy troops and supplies south. It’s unclear if it worked.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Popeye

Every kid who learns a little about the Civil War ends up asking why the troops didn’t use lever-action Wild West rifles instead of the clunky muskets they actually did. There were actually good reasons for what we really did.
https://youtu.be/W2Qp2ETe1gc?si=h1V_65fw3pFP6c_J

Here’s a prediction from 13 months ago. A recession hasn’t started, the Federal Funds Rate is 4.1%, and the Fed hasn’t resorted to QE purchases. Again and again, I’m struck by how useless predictions are from “experts” in finance and economics.

‘”The Fed hiked rates into such a huge, unprecedented debt complex … That’s why I say I’m looking for a crash that we haven’t seen since 1929.”

A recession could occur as soon as this year, forcing the Fed to cut rates aggressively from the current level of 4.75%-5%, and eventually pushing the central bank back to quantitative easing (QE), or bond buying – a process that generally occurs amid unsettled markets and aims to bolster monetary policy when rates are near zero.’
https://www.reuters.com/markets/us/clock-is-ticking-us-recession-return-feds-qe-says-black-swan-fund-2024-09-27/

Concern is growing that the “AI” sector is in a bubble.

Nvidia is worth $5 trillion, making it the most valuable company on Earth.
https://apnews.com/article/nvidia-trillion-ai-apple-huang-trump-xi-c9bbf5cfa017dadaf248a4d197763cb9

Andrej Karpathy gave a recent interview that has been making waves. Note he still believes AGIs will ultimately take over the world and render humans obsolete, he only disagrees with the optimistic timelines common in the Silicon Valley crowd.
https://youtu.be/lXUZvyajciY?si=nGkyWmSX9m0MYTO_

‘Note that an extremely small amount of motivation wouldn’t necessarily stop the AI from (e.g.) boiling the oceans and destroying the biosphere while keeping humans alive in a shelter (or potentially scanning their brains and uploading them, especially if they would consent or would consent on reflection). Preserving earth (as in, not causing catastrophic environmental damage due to industrial expansion) is more expensive than keeping physical humans alive which is more expensive than only keeping humans alive as uploads. Preserving earth still seems like it would probably cost less than one billionth of resources by default. Keeping humans alive as just uploads might cost much less, e.g. more like one trillionth of resources (and less than this is plausible depending on the details of industrial expansion).’
https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/4fqwBmmqi2ZGn9o7j/notes-on-fatalities-from-ai-takeover

Remarkably, the Federal Reserve has published an analysis of the economic effects of a technological singularity.
https://www.dallasfed.org/research/economics/2025/0624

The late Suzanne Somers’ husband has created a digital clone of her that he interacts with. He said Ray Kurzweil inspired the project.
https://people.com/alan-hamel-suzanne-somers-ai-project-exclusive-11832986

Should an AI copy of you help decide if you live or die?
‘The main limitation of this testing, Ahmad said, is that he can only verify the accuracy of his models if patients survive and can later confirm that the model made the right choice.’
https://arstechnica.com/features/2025/10/should-an-ai-copy-of-you-help-decide-if-you-live-or-die/

‘Fig. 2 shows the development we consider likely. The current 1st generation eTrucks have replaced the diesel motor with the electric one and the fuel tank with the battery. The 2nd generation will use multiple small electric motors closer to the wheels to eliminate a lot of weight currently taken for granted in diesel powertrains, such as from the driveshaft, gearbox, and differential14,25. This becomes possible because electric motors are tiny compared to combustion engines with the same power, need no exhaust system, and dissipate about twenty times less heat. A (fixed or two-speed) gearbox can reduce the weight of the electric motor further25. The 3rd generation is expected to use structural batteries26,27,28, which creates space, and reduces cost and weight.’
https://www.nature.com/articles/s44333-025-00029-5

‘The NdFeB magnet was invented in 1983 by John Croat of GM and Masato Sagawa of Sumitomo simultaneously and independently when each of them announced the same discovery at a conference in Pittsburgh.’
https://www.nanocrystalmagnetics.us/our-novel-technology

Elon Musk has launched a competitor to Wikipedia.
https://apnews.com/article/elon-musk-wikipedia-grok-grokipedia-4dab7c6ebb16cc7718b231adae4aac95

The U.S. could have put the first satellite into orbit a year before the Soviets were it not for bureaucratic meddling. Werner Von Braun proposed repurposing a nuclear missile to deliver a peaceful satellite into orbit, but a committee rejected the idea.

After Sputnik and the failure of the civilian “Vanguard” missile that had been holding everything up, the U.S. decided to do what Von Braun originally suggested, and modified nuclear missiles were our first civilian space rockets.
https://www.collectspace.com/ubb/Forum34/HTML/000101.html

The Soviet rocket that was to take cosmonauts to the Moon actually had more advanced, more efficient engines than their U.S. counterparts.
https://youtu.be/1vPdSK4OcNU?si=osL6U8-JpMobRROz

Because it had less money, the Soviet Lunar program developed simpler, cheaper, but less dangerous space technology for their Moon mission. The Soviets were more gutsy but also likelier to tragically fail.
https://youtu.be/XHVhREau0-s?si=W99Q-nIyH98lSZfh

An analysis of old photos taken by space telescopes before Sputnik was launched found anomalous flashes of light, which today are common thanks to shiny satellites briefly reflecting sunlight at Earth’s surface. But before 1957, they couldn’t have been caused by our satellites since we had none.

The objects apparently showed an interest in our nuclear tests, and some of the flashes happened at the same time that people on the ground saw UFOs or detected them on radar. We know of no natural phenomena that could cause such flashes.
https://www.su.se/english/news/unexpected-patterns-in-historical-astronomical-observations-1.855042

Apparently without realizing it, Jeff Bezos predicts the rise of a Dyson swarm.
‘Amazon founder and executive chair Jeff Bezos predicted on Friday gigawatt-scale data centers will be built in space within the next 10 to 20 years and that continuously available solar energy meant they would eventually outperform those based on Earth.’
https://nypost.com/2025/10/03/business/jeff-bezos-expects-data-centers-will-be-built-in-space-in-10-to-20-years/

This was very fascinating, though you won’t understand most of it unless you remember AP Biology. Two points:

1. A bottleneck to the emergence of complex life in the universe is endosymbiosus– the permanent absorption of mitochondria into cells. If we replayed the history of Earthly evolution, it might not happened.

2. The disadvantage of having two sexes is you can’t breed with half of the population. Arguably, it is better to be hermaphroditic or to have many sexes, like some species of fungi.
https://youtu.be/0GMWxuYuxJI?si=TbxYXgiLFcyo6R0O

Bill Gates has finally come around to my position on global warming.

“Although climate change will have serious consequences—particularly for people in the poorest countries—it will not lead to humanity’s demise. People will be able to live and thrive in most places on Earth for the foreseeable future. Emissions projections have gone down, and with the right policies and investments, innovation will allow us to drive emissions down much further.

Unfortunately, the doomsday outlook is causing much of the climate community to focus too much on near-term emissions goals, and it’s diverting resources from the most effective things we should be doing to improve life in a warming world.”
https://www.gatesnotes.com/three-tough-truths-about-climate

‘Scientists use human skin cells to create functional eggs, opening a door to new infertility treatments’
https://www.cnn.com/2025/09/30/science/human-skin-cells-egg-infertility

‘About 60,000 children have avoided food allergies since 2015, including 40,000 children who otherwise would have developed peanut allergies.’
https://apnews.com/article/peanut-allergy-children-infants-anaphylaxis-9a6df6377a622d05e47c340c5a9cffc8

Thoughts on panspermia and the aliens AGIs will create

[Written with the help of GPT-4]

“Panspermia” is the hypothesis that organic life originated elsewhere in the universe and was brought to Earth either accidentally by a meteor or deliberately by intelligent aliens. While it might be true, there’s no evidence to support it, and it’s most likely life originated here. Once our spacefaring and genetic engineering technology improves, we will be able to make panspermia a reality by seeding other celestial bodies with life forms designed to thrive there. 

Why do that? It could let us “terraform” other planets and moons–a process of gradual transformation of an environment to match Earthly conditions. For example, if we found a planet whose atmosphere contained too little oxygen and too much carbon dioxide for humans to breathe, we could introduce plants and bacteria that consumed carbon dioxide and excreted oxygen as part of their metabolisms. The atmosphere’s composition would eventually shift as intended. 

Will we ever terraform another planet or moon? No…WE…won’t since we humans won’t be in charge of the space program by the time the option to do this becomes available. However, the AGIs and/or posthumans who will be in charge might.

Being rational agents, they won’t seed other planets and moons with life just for its own sake, as some starry-eyed sci-fi novelists think we should do. They will only do so if it serves a higher purpose that benefits them. (Additionally, I hope that advanced ethics go hand-in-hand with advanced intelligence, and they think twice about manufacturing ecosystems where none existed before just so countless animals will arise only to suffer and die, without any ultimate purpose.)  

What purpose could organic life in other star systems serve? Biological intelligences could serve as “backups” for their AGI masters. Machines are vulnerable to hazards that biological organisms are not, like computer viruses and electromagnetic pulses. Keeping biological intelligences around would increase the “slack” and resiliency of civilization since they could help or rebuild the machines if something laid the latter low. 

Notice I used “biological intelligences” and not “humans” in the last paragraph. Even if AGIs found the need for such a niche, it’s unlikely they’d use humans to fill it. For one, we’re not properly evolved to live on other planets. Even a small difference in gravity would wreak havoc on our health. Second, humans are not the pinnacle of complex organic life. There are ways to make life forms that are smarter, stronger, faster, more obedient, and more efficient than we are. Given the chance to engineer servants from genetic scratch, doubtless AGIs will make creations with no link to Homo sapiens. Third, humans will probably be more trouble than we’re worth given our sense of lost greatness and resentment towards the AGIs that surpassed us. Why would AGIs want to spread that attitude across the cosmos when they could instead make wholly new intelligent species that have no historical or cultural baggage and only express gratitude for being brought into existence? 

Intelligent life forms are only useful as backups if they can survive without AGI help and can survive at least some of the disasters that could wipe out AGIs. If all of the faithful humanoids are living on a space station, the same EMP that disables all the AGIs will also destroy the electronic systems in the station, ultimately killing the humanoids. Therefore, in every star system where there is an AGI presence, there must be a planet or moon where the humanoids live in the midst of a self-sustaining, closed ecosystem. This requirement necessitates terraforming. 

Imagine a colony in a distant star system, 10,000 years from now. The most important aspect of the colony would be a Dyson Swarm that enshrouded most of the star, harvesting nearly all of its energy. Each component of the Swarm would be a large satellite. A tiny hole would be kept open in the Swarm so light could strike the surface of a planet, roughly the size of Earth. The planet would teem with millions of species of organic life forms, engineered to thrive in the planet’s conditions and to function together. Any resemblances to Earthly life would be coincidental and the result of designing life forms to function best under similar external constraints. 

The ecosystem would exist solely to keep the planet naturally habitable for a species of  biological intelligences. Depending on what is found to thrive best on that specific planet, they may or may not be humanoid or may be bigger or smaller than humans. For sure, they will be at least as good as we are at understanding technology, and they will be more loyal and obedient to authority than we are. 

To these life forms, the understanding that they were created by machines to serve machines will come naturally and be accepted without resentment. They will be more acquainted with how to survive catastrophes and will know the function if one day the lights go out and big chunks of the Swarm start falling out of the sky. 

Will every star system have a planet (or moon) full of organic backups? Probably not, since there are many systems amenable to Dyson Swarm construction while also being hostile to organic life. For example, there are star systems that lack rocky planets, or that have rocky planets that are not the right distance from their stars. Given the limitations of organic chemistry, no kind of complex, intelligent animal could live on a hot planet like Mercury without constant technological support. 

If panspermia ever becomes reality, it may not be the work of dreamers scattering Earth’s seeds across the stars, but of machines ensuring their own continuity. Organic life, then, will not be humanity’s legacy but civilization’s survival mechanism.