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It has always been difficult:Ivan Seeking said:What's coming is more the point. I've always been able to imagine what the world will be like in 20 years. Now, I have no idea.
https://www.rd.com/list/predictions-that-were-wrong/
It has always been difficult:Ivan Seeking said:What's coming is more the point. I've always been able to imagine what the world will be like in 20 years. Now, I have no idea.
I bet the list of predictions that were right is much shorter.fresh_42 said:It has always been difficult:
https://www.rd.com/list/predictions-that-were-wrong/
I can't tell what will happen 3 years down the road. Alvin Toffler in overdrive.Ivan Seeking said:What's coming is more the point. I've always been able to imagine what the world will be like in 20 years. Now, I have no idea.
Maybe they would in overall introverted societies like Finland. Wonder if this is qualified in/by Hofstadter.BillTre said:
One of my favorites, I modeled my business on his idea for the "electronic cottage" (as he called it) in his book, The Third Wave. Accordingly, I was running a systems integration business in a converted barn in the middle of nowhere, with my nearest customer 100 miles away, back in 1998. It was just becoming practical to do business over the internet. Thanks to Toffler, I was all over it. And for the next 20 years it worked.WWGD said:I can't tell what will happen 3 years down the road. Alvin Toffler in overdrive.
He lived to see his prediction come true. He died in 2016. I admired him for being both smart academically and down to earth and commonsensical, i.e., not an egghead.Ivan Seeking said:One of my favorites, I modeled my business on his idea for the "electronic cottage" (as he called it) in his book, The Third Wave. Accordingly, I was running a systems integration business in a converted barn in the middle of nowhere, with my nearest customer 100 miles away, back in 1998. It was just becoming practical to do business over the internet. Thanks to Toffler, I was all over it. And for the next 20 years it worked.
Do you remember my "Dual Timeline" short stories/paragraphs that I wrote around the turn of the millenia? Although the stories were meant to be polar opposites, the outcomes became intertwined into something where nearly everything in both stories came true.Ivan Seeking said:What's coming is more the point. I've always been able to imagine what the world will be like in 20 years. Now, I have no idea.

A fair guess is that one semester was Kinematics and Fundamental Mechanics, maybe including something of Thermodynamics; and the two# semester was to push E&M and "Modern" Physics all into the single semester. I could not say if such arrangement would be deficient for the students' Engineering courses/programs.Ivan Seeking said:I was shocked to learn recently that some of our young electrical engineers (where I work) only took two physics classes in college. I have noticed time after time that many don't seem to know basic physics.
TWO! I think EE majors at my alma mater had to take two years of physics classes.
We have one guy, an EE PE, who thinks physicists are really just philosophers. At first I thought he was joking or just being antagonistic, but he really didn't understand the difference. There is another who didn't know that all engineering is derived from physics.symbolipoint said:A fair guess is that one semester was Kinematics and Fundamental Mechanics, maybe including something of Thermodynamics; and the two# semester was to push E&M and "Modern" Physics all into the single semester. I could not say if such arrangement would be deficient for the students' Engineering courses/programs.
I looked like the dull one in this exchange when I thought they were referring to someone "Passky", when they were referring to Pass Keys, sadly, it took me a couple of minutes to realize it. Duh.Ivan Seeking said:We have one guy, an EE PE, who thinks physicists are really just philosophers. At first I thought he was joking or just being antagonistic, but he really didn't understand the difference. There is another who didn't know that all engineering is derived from physics.
On the upside, this often gives me a huge advantage.
Now that I believe.WWGD said:...but my boss only told me he had a headache...

skyshrimp said:I'm amazed by what I'm seeing on TikTok regarding advancements in Chinese robotics. Viewers are commenting that they think the robots are actually people in suits. That's how natural they are walking now.
They're not just walking. They can do anything and have passed the limitations of human movement. It's beyond parkour.
You are correct. I’ve seen amazing videos years ago before AI video generators were capable of deceiving us. I’ll dig them up and probably start a new thread about it.collinsmark said:Just be sure to use critical thinking when assessing robot advancement videos on TicTok, or any other social media platform for that matter. Check the source of the video. Check the source's sources to make sure it's all legit.
While this may be good advice about any subject, it especially applies to robotics videos lately. In my personal anecdotal experience, in my own social media feed lately, of all the videos lately that involve robots, nearly 100% of these videos are AI generated or just simply AI slop.
In other words, yes the robots look extremely natural and realistic, but that's just because AI video generation is getting so much better (there aren't even necessarily any real robots at all, in most of these videos).
Of the few (very few) videos that are real, most of them are made by the companies' marketing that portray the robot overly optimistically (probably).
That's not so say that there are no robot advancements. There are. There's plenty of actual, true advancements in humanoid robotics lately. I'm just saying that most of the videos circulating on social media mischaracterize these advancements.