Visions of Futures Past

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And the exhibit showed electronic cars that we'd all drive to work in 1997, and ways to raise more food for the world through hydroponic greenhouses we'd all use when we went to Mars, and so on. Epcot was originally going to be a huge experiment in sustainable living, but when Disney realized there was no money in that, they had GE, GM, and AT&T drop these huge advertisements for life in the future. And the same thing is, in 1983, it all seemed so fucking feasible that in 20 years we'd all have video phones and TVs with smellovision and pod cars, and I remember that view of the future so vividly. And now that future is in the past, and none of it happened. I used to read in Compute magazine about how, maybe if we all tried hard, cars might have a single microprocessor in them, and it would be so cool to get so much blazing power out of an 8-bit 6510 wired into our engine. And now, I've got at least twenty processors sitting on my desk, in my watch, in my camera, in my mouse, and none of them are doing anything remotely as interesting as what I thought they would be. I have ten times the computing power of that Xanadu house sitting in the battery charger to my camera, and none of it is being used to automatically cook my food or turn on the jaccuzi when I get home from work. And that's sad, in a way.

“Tell Me a Story About The Devil: The assorted ramblings of a Midwestern writer in Denver [3]”

Xanadu [4] has been torn down, and we still don't have flying cars.

I want my future back!

[1] http://www.commodore.ca/history/other/1982_Future.htm

[2] http://www.roadsideamerica.com/set/xanadu.html

[3] http://www.rumored.com/journal/html/20060105.html

[4] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xanadu_House

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