Wednesday, March 26, 2008

What 2008 Looked Like In 1968

Here is a really interesting article from the November 1968 issue of Mechanix Illustrated, entitled What Will Life Be Like in the Year 2008?

Some of the predictions were just a bit off

You slide into your sleek, two-passenger air-cushion car, press a sequence of buttons and the national traffic computer notes your destination, figures out the current traffic situation and signals your car to slide out of the garage. Hands free, you sit back and begin to read the morning paper—which is flashed on a flat TV screen over the car’s dashboard. Tapping a button changes the page.

The car accelerates to 150 mph in the city’s suburbs, then hits 250 mph in less built-up areas, gliding over the smooth plastic road. You whizz past a string of cities, many of them covered by the new domes that keep them evenly climatized year round.
Ninety minutes after leaving your home, you slide beneath the dome of your destination city.

Your car decelerates and heads for an outer-core office building where you’ll meet your colleagues. After you get out, the vehicle parks itself in a convenient municipal garage to await your return. Private cars are banned inside most city cores. Moving sidewalks and electrams carry the public from one location to another.

Others are spot on.

The single most important item in 2008 households is the computer… Computers also handle travel reservations, relay telephone messages, keep track of birthdays and anniversaries, compute taxes and even figure the monthly bills for electricity, water, telephone and other utilities.

Money has all but disappeared. Employers deposit salary checks directly into their employees’ accounts. Credit cards are used for paying all bills. Each time you buy something, the card’s number is fed into the store’s computer station. A master computer then deducts the charge from your bank balance.

I winder what will 2048 be like?

On an even lighter note, here is some video of Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In giving us "the news from the future." Watch for two eerily accurate predictions after Goldie Hawn.

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