tech
Curious tech and technology from the realm of science and science fiction.
A year since lockdown: How has technology adapted to the challenges and changes of the pandemic
As the pandemic rages on causing concern around the world, it has created new challenges that have brought upon new solutions. To help contain the virus and minimise its spread, lockdowns have been introduced. This has given birth to home schooling and remote working.
By Yasmita Kumar5 years ago in Futurism
3 Future Home Energy-Saving Solutions
As time passes, technology advances and our society progresses. Inventions have made our lives better with futuristic appliances and devices. Day by day, we are being presented with state-of-the-art technologies that are bound to make our everyday living easier. It makes us wonder, what more is yet to be invented?
By Quality Electrical Projects5 years ago in Futurism
2000 Years From Now — How Does Life Looks Like?
Recently, I had a conversation with the family about the past and what it was like in our neighbourhood in the period of Romans 2000 years ago. This conversation came up because I found a flyer about a little history of the Limes, where my village is also a part of, and a brief history of that part. My village, Bunnik, The Netherlands, exists for more than 2000 years during the Roman years. They have lived in my village, or at least the place where my village lies.
By Agnes Laurens5 years ago in Futurism
Time Travel Science Gains Momentum with Global Journals Peer-Reviewed Publication
Global Journal of Science Frontier Research Interdiciplinary has published the first peer-reviewed paper showing a path toward quantum based time travel via documented research and experiments as predicted by Neil Turok of Canada's Perimeter Institute."Souping-Up" Aharonov's Quantum Measurement Engine with a Plaga/Everett Apparatusat Global Journal of Science Frontier Research Interdiciplinary.
By Marshall Barnes5 years ago in Futurism
What software outsourcing trends can we expect in 2021?
Software outsourcing is the answer to the challenges of a modern and technologically evolving world. To stay ahead of the competition and gain an advantage over rivals while optimizing costs, more and more companies are opting for the recently popular solution of creating and maintaining infrastructure and software outside their structures.
By Olivia Cuthbert5 years ago in Futurism
Measuring the impacts of Shared and Electric Autonomous Vehicles (SAEV) on urban mobility.
Autonomous driving, connectivity, car sharing, electric vehicles, and the rise of renewable energy will all have powerful mutually reinforcing effects. For example, the introduction of self-driving cars in the 2020s will increase the use of EVs in high-use services such as ride-hailing because lower operating costs will offset the higher initial costs of these vehicles.
By Jair Ribeiro5 years ago in Futurism
The Parallel Universality
We pursue our dreams in a high-tech world that blurs fact and fiction, love and loneliness, even confidence and craziness. In this modern-day version of The Twilight Zone, imagine if you will, a hologram of Rod Serling welcoming us once again into the parallel universe of our deepest dreams and nightmares. The more we rely on technology, the more vulnerable we become. First and foremost, this series would focus on the inevitability that mankind will be, at best, kind, but more than not maniacal. Welcome to The Parallel Universality.
By Craig Stuart Wilson5 years ago in Futurism
5 Science fiction technologies that are actually going to be released.
1. Hoverboard On a skateboard, Marty McFly delivers himself a wild chase through the city. But the board has no wheels, it glides weightlessly through the air: In the second part of the science fiction classic “Back to the Future” from the 1980s, young Michael J. Fox is catapulted by a time machine into the year 2015, where the hoverboard helps him escape. However, the battery-powered boards with two wheels, which are sold under this name today, have little to do with the original.
By AddictiveWritings5 years ago in Futurism
Tesla to Apple
Elon Musk- The Early Tesla Electric Cars Tesla, Silicon Valley: 2003. A few talented engineers get together believing that the world would one day drive electric cars and feel good about it. They dreamt of making cars that would be comparable if not better in speed, style and comfort than gas-powered cars. Add to that - clean energy. The need of the hour, the urgency of which could not be more for a planet in distress.
By Xilla Club5 years ago in Futurism







