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Mosaic Donating Member (851 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-24-10 12:36 AM
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Futurology: The tricky art of knowing what will happen next
Edited on Fri Dec-24-10 12:43 AM by Mosaic
Most of the sci-fi predictions like Hal, spinners, or moonbase Alpha never came to be, I still enjoy some of the cheesy movies of yesteryear. Thx and Logans' run are two I often watch, probably because they are about a common man escaping an ideal world gone terribly wrong.

Futurology: The tricky art of knowing what will happen next

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-12058575

A 1972 book which predicts what life would be like in 2010 has been reprinted after attracting a cult following, but how hard is it to tell the future?

Geoffrey Hoyle is often asked why he predicted everybody would be wearing jumpsuits by 2010. He envisioned a world where everybody worked a three-day week and had their electric cars delivered in tubes of liquid.

These colourful ideas from his 1972 children's book, 2010: Living in the Future, helped prompt a Facebook campaign to track him down. His work has now been reprinted with the year in the title amended to 2011.

"I've been criticised because I said people wear jumpsuits," explains Hoyle, the son of noted astronomer and science fiction author Fred Hoyle. "We don't wear jumpsuits but to a certain extent the idea of the jumpsuit is the restriction of liberties."

Hoyle's book is a product of its time. The move towards a planned society with an emphasis on communal living colour it.

"Most of it is based on the evolution of a political system," Hoyle notes.

The author also predicted widespread use of "vision phones" and doing your grocery shopping online.
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