future
Exploring the future of science today, while looking back on the achievements from yesterday. Science fiction is science future.
How the Universe will end?
The universe started roughly 14 billion years ago from an infinitesimally small and dense point. This event is known as the Big Bang. How do I know this? Well, we have evidence to support this. It is amazing that we have progressed so much that we understand the universe pretty well and have clever ways to do so. For example, when we came to know about the expansion of the universe we thought of the past and then the beginning part became clear. Not completely, but we have to admit that we do understand it well-nigh.
By Muhammad Raza4 years ago in Futurism
More Beautiful is the Future
It was supposed to be a weekend assignment. Go, review, write, return. No more than three days of time… then back to Santiago and drink on the company dime. The assignment was a village in the hills of northern Chile in what was once mining country.
By Alejandro escobedo4 years ago in Futurism
Like fleas on a dog...
When things got heated in Europe and the Middle East over borders and such, everyone speculated about world war 3. It never happened though. When the pandemic of 2020 came and killed thousands, people thought this might be the thing that kills us all off, especially with variant after variant popping up. We got through it. But all the while things were at work. Natural disasters, fires, earth quakes, people blamed it on global warming. There were a few science fiction writers who saw it coming but didn’t actually think it was true. Fantasy they said, not actual truth. The Earth is trying to renew herself, some said. Well, the truth is she was trying to in a way. You see, it turns out we are the flea on her back and she is so frustrated with the havoc we have caused she is trying to shake us off, anyway she can. Fires and volcanos like fever fighting an infection. Earthquakes and magnetic polar shifts caused by Earth trying to shake us, scratch us off like a dog rolling and scratching to remove the cause of an awful itch. Viruses released like flea powder to kill us off. What’s next, a flea dip? Or, dare I ask, is there something worse?
By Gina Solomon4 years ago in Futurism
The search for Clean Energy
Support power consumers, large corporations, municipal customers, and high-energy consumers with high clean energy to meet their affordable renewable energy needs. Encouraging renewable energy and using it at home to accelerate the transition to the future of clean energy. Although you can install solar panels, you should be able to select electricity from clean energy sources.
By Zack Mcall4 years ago in Futurism
Love letter from the future
February 23rd 2050 Hello world, Today I am 100 years old and I am more in love with life on this planet than ever before. When I was born in 1950 the world was just getting over the Second World War and when I was 12 there was the Cuban Missile Crisis. I wondered a few nights running if I would wake up the next morning, but as fate would have it, I did and life flowed on for us all. When I turned 70 in 2020, the world experienced a global pandemic which turned war on its heels and from that point on it has become a mystifying ancient practice that no one born after 2025 can even comprehend.
By Soleira Green4 years ago in Futurism
The strive for a better life
Life can be best enjoyed when living the best life. The strive for a better life is one thing every human would want to have for themselves and their loved ones. No one wants to live a life not worth living. A life filled with chaos and disaster isn't anyone's prayer, so we tend to look out for any possible means to get our desired better lives. We look overall it will take for us to achieve and experience our best view or decision of life, we then go all out to seeing our dreams and aspirations fulfilled.
By Olalekan Adeeko4 years ago in Futurism
Augmented Reality - The Cure for Consumerism
“By all accounts, Prime Day was a massive success for Amazon, seeing massive revenue and profit growth year-over year.” It has almost become a post-Prime Day tradition for Amazon to announce record sales, and you would have been able to find some variation of that statement since the massive online retailer launched the “holiday” in 2015. In 2021, some analysts were disappointed that they estimated sales rose “only” 7% (note that even such an apparently disappointing figure represents an increase of hundreds of millions of dollars). Meanwhile, the latest hard figures released by the company show that they release over 50 metric tons of CO2 in a year, about as much as 13 coal-burning power plants. In a society that is increasingly aware of the impacts of climate change, how do we rectify our seemingly insatiable hunger for consumer goods with the need to reduce the damage we’re doing to the environment? What if I told you the short answer was: “we don’t need to”?
By Chris Laughton4 years ago in Futurism









