The World in 2025: 10 Scientific Breakthroughs
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The World in 2025: 10 Scientific Breakthroughs
Prognosticating is a tricky business, especially in the realms of science and technology. Things change fast, but if you crunch today's data with sufficient gusto, you can sometimes get an intriguing glimpse of tomorrow.
That's the idea behind the report "The World in 2025: 10 Predictions of Innovation." Compiled by a team of science analysts at Thomson Reuters, the report was presented at this week's Aspen Ideas Festival in Colorado. Here's a rundown of the report's 10 predictions for the year 2025.
Solar power will be the primary source of energy on the planet in 2025, thanks to improvements in photovoltaic technology and chemical bonding. The average solar energy conversion rate, less than 10 percent in 2014, will skyrocket.
Early detection and prevention of neuro-degenerative diseases, like Alzheimer's and dementia, will improve along with increased understanding of the human genome. As the baby boomers reach their 80s, more research and funds will be dedicated to the cause.
Food shortages and price fluctuations will be less troublesome in 2025 as advances in genetic modification improve crop yields. New lighting technologies will also enable widespread indoor crop growth, with 24-hour light provided by low-energy LEDs.
Thanks to innovations in human genome engineering, type 1 diabetes will be preventable in 2025, along with other metabolic conditions like muscular dystrophy.
Everything from cars to appliances to individual personal items will be digitally connected in 2025, due to cascading innovations in semiconductors, graphene-carbon nanotube capacitors and wireless 5G technology.
Batteries will store much more energy in 2025 and recharge 10 times faster, resulting in viable electric vehicle fleets both on the ground and in the air. Small-scale commercial aircraft, powered by lightweight lithium-ion batteries, will be the preferred option for short-hop flights.
In 2025, advancements in nanotechnology, big data and cellular analysis will allow for DNA mapping at birth, as a way to manage disease risk. Blood tests will be replaced with nano-probes that are painlessly injected into the body to gather data.
The adverse effects of toxic chemicals used to treat cancer will be reduced, thanks to better understanding of antibodies and the mechanisms of protein bonding. Improved knowledge of specific gene mutations will also lead to better treatment options of particular afflictions like melanoma and lung cancer.
Most plastics used in packaging are still petroleum-based, but that won't be the case in 2025. Instead, fully biodegradable packaging using nanocellulose materials will be the emerging industry standard.
Research related to the Higgs Boson experiments has increased exponentially since the so-called "God Particle" was discovered last year. By the year 2025, active research into quantum teleportation will be well underway. Human beings won't be beaming up, but research trends suggest that we will actually be attempting to teleport other forms of matter through space.
http://news.discovery.com/tech/the-world-in-2025-10-scientific-breakthroughs-140705.htm
Does anyone else have any scientific innovations that could come about by then?
That's the idea behind the report "The World in 2025: 10 Predictions of Innovation." Compiled by a team of science analysts at Thomson Reuters, the report was presented at this week's Aspen Ideas Festival in Colorado. Here's a rundown of the report's 10 predictions for the year 2025.
Solar power will be the primary source of energy on the planet in 2025, thanks to improvements in photovoltaic technology and chemical bonding. The average solar energy conversion rate, less than 10 percent in 2014, will skyrocket.
Early detection and prevention of neuro-degenerative diseases, like Alzheimer's and dementia, will improve along with increased understanding of the human genome. As the baby boomers reach their 80s, more research and funds will be dedicated to the cause.
Food shortages and price fluctuations will be less troublesome in 2025 as advances in genetic modification improve crop yields. New lighting technologies will also enable widespread indoor crop growth, with 24-hour light provided by low-energy LEDs.
Thanks to innovations in human genome engineering, type 1 diabetes will be preventable in 2025, along with other metabolic conditions like muscular dystrophy.
Everything from cars to appliances to individual personal items will be digitally connected in 2025, due to cascading innovations in semiconductors, graphene-carbon nanotube capacitors and wireless 5G technology.
Batteries will store much more energy in 2025 and recharge 10 times faster, resulting in viable electric vehicle fleets both on the ground and in the air. Small-scale commercial aircraft, powered by lightweight lithium-ion batteries, will be the preferred option for short-hop flights.
In 2025, advancements in nanotechnology, big data and cellular analysis will allow for DNA mapping at birth, as a way to manage disease risk. Blood tests will be replaced with nano-probes that are painlessly injected into the body to gather data.
The adverse effects of toxic chemicals used to treat cancer will be reduced, thanks to better understanding of antibodies and the mechanisms of protein bonding. Improved knowledge of specific gene mutations will also lead to better treatment options of particular afflictions like melanoma and lung cancer.
Most plastics used in packaging are still petroleum-based, but that won't be the case in 2025. Instead, fully biodegradable packaging using nanocellulose materials will be the emerging industry standard.
Research related to the Higgs Boson experiments has increased exponentially since the so-called "God Particle" was discovered last year. By the year 2025, active research into quantum teleportation will be well underway. Human beings won't be beaming up, but research trends suggest that we will actually be attempting to teleport other forms of matter through space.
http://news.discovery.com/tech/the-world-in-2025-10-scientific-breakthroughs-140705.htm
Does anyone else have any scientific innovations that could come about by then?
Guest- Guest
Re: The World in 2025: 10 Scientific Breakthroughs
I love this stuff
My prediction is that artificial intelligence will have progressed to the point that around this time, many of the routine tasks we perform each day can be handed off to computers. Thanks to the "internet of things" mentioned in the OP, managing your household, from shopping to cleaning, will largely be done by machines.
As society moves beyond books, newspapers, magazines, movies, TV series and music on physical formats, internet access will become cheaper or free and near-ubiquitous. The idea of "going to the computer" will become obsolete; your "computer" will live in a server and you'll access it through a mobile device (maybe a tablet that can be collapsed into a cell-phone form, or that a cell phone can be detached from); maintaining a version of itself with all your files and software remotely so that you never really have to get a new computer.
National electric grids will become "smarter" and more robust to meet the challenge of requiring non-stop power. Many critical installations, such as airports, will have dedicated power generation.
Like cars, our own bodies will have diagnostic computers that will allow physicians to get instant read-outs of a range of internal factors such as temperature, white blood-cell count, cholesterol levels, blood pressure, and other hormone and bacteria/virus levels without having to perform a raft of tests.
My prediction is that artificial intelligence will have progressed to the point that around this time, many of the routine tasks we perform each day can be handed off to computers. Thanks to the "internet of things" mentioned in the OP, managing your household, from shopping to cleaning, will largely be done by machines.
As society moves beyond books, newspapers, magazines, movies, TV series and music on physical formats, internet access will become cheaper or free and near-ubiquitous. The idea of "going to the computer" will become obsolete; your "computer" will live in a server and you'll access it through a mobile device (maybe a tablet that can be collapsed into a cell-phone form, or that a cell phone can be detached from); maintaining a version of itself with all your files and software remotely so that you never really have to get a new computer.
National electric grids will become "smarter" and more robust to meet the challenge of requiring non-stop power. Many critical installations, such as airports, will have dedicated power generation.
Like cars, our own bodies will have diagnostic computers that will allow physicians to get instant read-outs of a range of internal factors such as temperature, white blood-cell count, cholesterol levels, blood pressure, and other hormone and bacteria/virus levels without having to perform a raft of tests.
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