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The Most Futuristic Predictions That Came True In 2014

The Most Futuristic Predictions That Came True In 2014
As 2014 comes to a close, it's time to reflect on the most futuristic breakthroughs and developments of the past year. This year's crop features a slew of incredible technological, scientific, and social achievements, from mind-to-mind communication to self-guiding sniper bullets. Here are 15 predictions that came true in 2014.

Technologically-assisted telepathy was successfully demonstrated in humans

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Expect the computer to be replaced by a wedding ring.
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The bit about it being "non-invasive" is what caught my attention... cause we always seem to jump over the stereotypical sci-fi aspects of a lot of "future" tech and I was hoping for a couple of decades of a COM ports at the base of the skull, or matrix plugs all over your head.
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we are almost there folks. Soon we can send dick pics directly to other peoples brains.
Remarkably, the system is completely non-invasive. By using internet-linked electroencephalogram (EEG) and robot-assisted image-guided transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) technologies, an international team of researchers were able to get two subjects — one in India and one in France — to mentally transmit the words "hola" and "ciao." It's an important proof of concept for furthering the development of tech-enabled telepathy. Image: Carles Grau et al/Plos.
And in a similar breakthrough, a different team developed a system that allowed a human subject to control the movements of another person. The University of Washington researchers showcased the technology by having participants collaborate on a computer game where a "sender" sent mental instructions to a "receiver" to control their hand movements.

NASA emailed a wrench to the space station

The Most Futuristic Predictions That Came True In 2014
In what's being seen as a precursor to a Star Trek-like replicator, astronauts aboard the ISS used their 3D printer to manufacture a socket wrench. Remarkably, the 20-part wrench was designed on Earth and emailed to astronaut Barry Wilmore who ran it through the printer. It's a prime example of how 3D printing is poised to change space travel, allowing astronauts to produce equipment on demand and in emergency situations. Image: NASA.

Surgeons began using suspended animation

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do they have this for fat people?
The technique, which is only being used on patients who would otherwise be expected to die, involves internal rather than external cooling. The patient's blood is replaced with a cold saline solution, which slows down the body's metabolic functions and need for oxygen. Image: Prometheus.

The U.S. Navy deployed a functional laser weapon

The device, called a High Energy Laser (HEL) weapon, was fitted to the USS Ponce, which is currently on exercises in the Persian Gulf.
The Most Futuristic Predictions That Came True In 2014
It's still at the prototype stage, but it's being fielded to evaluate its capabilities in a real-world environment where it has already shown its effectiveness in destroying two boats and a drone. Image: U.S. Navy.

Scientists "uploaded" a worm's mind into a robot

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Can you hear the worm scream?
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AHHHHH!!!!
Researchers at the OpenWorm project are trying to create a digital version of an actual nemotode worm in a computer. They're not quite there yet, but that didn't stop team member Timothy Busbice from creating software that mimics the natural processes of the worm's neural networks — and then putting that knowledge in a LEGO Mindstorms EV3 robot.
"My research takes the way the worm's brain is wired and extends it to a robot for sensory input and motor output," Buspice told Gizmodo. "What we found is that rather than just random, crazy movements by the robot, it actually responded to its environment in the same manner as the biological worm."

A computer solved a math problem that we can't check

Mathematician Steven Strogatz once predicted that computer-assisted solutions to math problems will eventually extend beyond human comprehension. His prediction appears to have finally come true.
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Well, wait a minute. This is a hardly new.
Earlier this year, a computer solved the longstanding Erdős discrepancy problem. Unfortunately, human mathematicians aren't entirely sure about the solution because it's as long as all of Wikipedia's pages combined.

An artificial chromosome was built from scratch

The Most Futuristic Predictions That Came True In 2014
In what was the year's biggest artificial life breakthrough, researchers from New York University Langone Medical Center reconstructed a synthetic and fully functional yeast chromosome. Incredibly, they were also able to insert their own special additions to the chromosome, including a chemical switch that allows scientists to "scramble" it into thousands of different variations to make subsequent gene editing even easier. It's an important proof of concept that could lead to designer organisms and artificial chromosomes in humans.

A venture capitalist firm appointed an AI to the board

The Most Futuristic Predictions That Came True In 2014
Some say it was a media stunt, but it might be the start of a larger trend: Hong Kong-based Deep Knowledge ventures appointed a machine learning program, called VITAL, to its board of directors. It's said to be an "equal member" that will uncover trends "not immediately obvious to humans" in order to make investment recommendations. The system will pour over massive data sets, apply machine learning, and then predict which life sciences companies are the best investments.

A double amputee received two mind-controlled arms

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This is really cool, and I just finished this game again this weekend which makes me feel like the future is now. Considering it's near the same tech and augmentations.
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You can just see his brain go "holy fucking shit. HOLY SHIT"
Les Baugh became the first human to ever receive two shoulder-level thought-controlled prosthetic arms. It's not permanent, but the researchers at Johns Hopkins are hoping that the arms will eventually become a permanent add-on.
In other major cybernetic breakthroughs, researchers created an artificial hand that feels, and the first mind-controlled prosthetic hand with 10 degrees of freedom. Also, these wearable limbs took us a step closer to creating Doctor Octopus.

A cloaking device that hides objects in the visible spectrum

We've seen so-called invisibility cloaks before, but nothing quite like this one.
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This was a fun trick, but it's a bit less impressive when you see the setup required to make it work. It basically bends light around a donut-shaped region in the middle. The scale of the setup is determined by the size of the lenses, with each lens placed a greater distance apart than its focal point.

I can't think of a single practical application for this thing.
Researchers at the University of Rochester developed a cheap and surprisingly effective cloaking device that's being heralded as the first to perform 3D, continuously multidirectional cloaking in the visible spectrum of light. To do it, they combined four standard optical lenses that keeps an object hidden — even as the viewer moves side to side. The system could eventually be used to eliminate blind spots in vehicles or let surgeons see through their hands during surgery. Photo credit: J. Adam Fenster / University of Rochester.

Gender-neutral pronouns came to North America

Vancouver's school board introduced the gender neutral pronouns "xe," "xem," and "xyr," in an effort to accommodate students for whom gender-specific pronouns doesn't fit or is considered inappropriate. The move is similar to measures enacted in Sweden and Germany.

An orangutan became a legally recognized person

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Hello there...come here my little friend, don't be afraid
In an important precedent that could influence law elsewhere, a 29-year-old Sumatran orangutan held at an Argentinian zoo was granted the right of habeas corpus, or bodily autonomy. As noted by AFADA lawyer Paul Buompadre, "This opens the way not only for other Great Apes, but also for other sentient beings which are unfairly and arbitrarily deprived of their liberty in zoos, circuses, water parks and scientific laboratories." Sandra will be released from the zoo and transfered to a sanctuary.

Self-guiding sniper bullets became a reality

The DARPA-funded system, called EXACTO, features a .50-caliber sniper round that can be optically guided to a target with a laser. Incredibly, the bullet can hit a target up to 1.2 miles (1.9 km) away.
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I got to speak with a gentleman that worked on something similar to this, He talked like they basically used sabot rounds and a smooth bore, though I can't remember how the control was done, deployable fins maybe?
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We are all fucked.
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n00b snipers (like me here) rejoice!
The technology was developed by Teledyne Scientific and Imaging, who disclosed virtually no information as to how the bullet maneuvers mid-trajectory.

A proto-cyber war erupted between the U.S. and N. Korea

The Most Futuristic Predictions That Came True In 2014
It all started because of a very silly movie, but the consequences — and potential implications — are anything but. The Sony Hacks were directly linked to North Korea (an accusation that's still being contested), resulting in the temporary cancellation of The Interview's theatrical release. Shortly afterward, North Korea's entire Internet was taken down, allegedly by the United States. The world thus caught its first glimpse of what a cyber war might actually look like.

Humanity landed a robot on a comet

We've sent robotic probes to planets, but we've never done anything quite like this before.
The Most Futuristic Predictions That Came True In 2014
Philae's harrowing landing on Comet 67P in early November wasn't perfect, but the mission is being hailed as a wild success. In addition to some incredible images, we're learning about organic compounds on the comet and weird water that's potentially upending our theories of where our oceans came from. Image: ESA.

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There are cars that can fly, and as far as the Sci-Fi type flying cars, if they'd exist they'd need energy economy better then road vehicles, and would have to be self guided (which is a lot more complicated in air craft) because giving average people aircraft every day is extremely dangerous.
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There is an estimated 6.4 million car accidents every day, one sixth of which involve loss of life.
Imagine what would happen if the car accidents had gravity working against them as well. The loss of life would go up on a per accident basis, plus the collateral damage would be incredible.
On the flip side, I think society would be a much better off without all these roads.
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Certainly not from lack of trying. Granted, the vehicle pictured on the left converts from a "car" to a plane. Not quite a flying car.
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Considering C Elegans has 302 (Exactly!) neurons in their brains and bodies, I'm not really that distraught. (And to put this into perspective, the average cockroach has about a million neurons in it's whole body.)
I think I'd be far more worried if we managed to figure out how to boost the worms processing power to a level comparable to ours.
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This is really cool, and I just finished this game again this weekend which makes me feel like the future is now. Considering it's near the same tech and augmentations.
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The bartender's smile widened. His ugliness was the stuff of legend. In an age of affordable beauty, there was something heraldic about his lack of it. The antique arm whined as he reached for another mug. It was a Russian military prosthesis, a seven-function force-feedback manipulator, cased in grubby pink plastic. "You are too much the artiste, Herr Case." Ratz grunted; the sound served him as laughter. He scratched his overhang of white-shirted belly with the pink claw. "You are the artiste of the slightly funny deal."
Bill Gibson, circa 1983
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Only item on this list that doesn't belong is the "cloaking device," because it isn't a cloaking device as commonly understood. It doesn't make something invisible to ordinary vision, it bends light around an object placed inside a system of lenses. Calling it a cloaking device (as the scientists do) is misleading hype.
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Yeah, that was a little confusing to me, especially since the reported uses seemed to be the opposite of not being able to see something.
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Well, they're not, but having a solid favor in pocket from their neighbors, and an opportunity for their troops to practice cyberwar really doesn't hurt.
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This was a fun trick, but it's a bit less impressive when you see the setup required to make it work. It basically bends light around a donut-shaped region in the middle. The scale of the setup is determined by the size of the lenses, with each lens placed a greater distance apart than its focal point.

I can't think of a single practical application for this thing.
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The practical application for this is an image relay. It is not an impressive application as it's been done approximately since lenses existed. Magicians use more impressive "cloaking devices" when they make their assistants disappear.
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I must say, this is a more intelligent answer than all the people who told me in the comments below that article that "now that we've proven the principle, all we need to do is scale it down". I really don't think this is a failure of imagination on my part.
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All I got from this article was: There is a chance that someday the earth will be locked into some type of Gender neutral Artificial Human Cyborg laser war ( with cloaking and magic bullets I might add) controlled by our Telepathic AI Overlords . Not sure how orangutan civil liberties will fit in here, i'm still crunching the numbers...
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And people doubt we're living in the future. Its not going the path we expected... but odds are we'll be exploring other star systems and have colonies on other worlds in our own solar system long before we eliminate fossil fueled vehicles completely.
And until we have an orbital ring around the earth and several space elevators... we're not going to have flying cars. The orbital ring would provide the infrastructure and observation ability for an automated global air traffic control system capable of handling billions of vehicles simultaneously. Without that kind of coordination, and systems that make the operation of a flying car as easy as pressing a button for your destination (and automatically detecting failure states such as low fuel) its safer by far to have ground vehicles. Its not that we can't build a safe flying car... we simply don't have the infrastructure to support it.
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