Submitted by phriot t3_ykcjwo in singularity
I'm currently reading The Singularity is Near (2005) by Ray Kurzweil. While he doesn't make a big deal out of it (so far in my reading), Kurzweil makes the claim that chips will be ubiquitous, giving everything from our clothes to the walls around us computational ability. I'm reading on Kindle, so I'm having some trouble finding the exact passage, but I believe his time frame for that was sometime between 2010 and 2020. Michio Kaku makes a similar claim in Visions (1998) and/or Physics of The Future (2011). I distinctly remember Kaku writing that computation would fade into the background, and we wouldn't even notice that the world around us was "smart" anymore.
I definitely have a lot more "things" with chips than I did in the early 2000s. And those things that I did have with chips back then are able to do far more computation today. In 2005, I had a desktop computer, a wireless router, a Timex Ironman watch, a feature phone, etc., but I still had a CRT television and computer monitor. I still read paper books at the time. Today, my house has smartphones, smart TVs, tablets, laptops, still have a desktop, our doorbell has a camera and wifi, and so on. I read e-books at least as often as paper books, now. So yes, a lot more chips and computational capacity.
But all of these chips are still confined to things recognizable as "devices." Ok, maybe 2005 me would have thought it was weird that my 2022 doorbell had all that capability, but it's still a "thing" that has the chips in it. The computation hasn't diffused so much that I can't comprehend the chips are housed in a device. The same goes for TVs, watches, and my Kindle.
Edit: About the only place I can think of where "chips everywhere" is happening that is kind of obscured is with cars. Cars have a ton more chips, sensors, and computational capacity, yet you still think of them as "cars." I don't think of blind spot detection, automatic braking, etc., as being more computation when they are triggered, just new features that cars have. My house doesn't have many (any?) new computational features that I passively consume. I'm very aware when I tell my smart speaker to turn off the light.
Were the futurists of the late 1990s and early 2000s wrong about the path computation will take, or were they just early? We're now getting kind of past Kurzweil's timeline for this prediction. (If I can turn up my copy of either of Kaku's books tonight, I'll update with his timeframe.)
ITsupportSuperHero t1_iutebes wrote
Cant speak to the other things, but as for clothes I believe Kurzweil acknowledged he got that wrong for 2 reasons. One, everything that would have been added to clothes was just added to our phones instead. Two, fashion: he is unable to predict what will be socially acceptable. Most people don't want electronics in clothes and while we can make cool shirts or hats that change looks with an app, nobody wants to wear that. All the rest of the biometric stuff is usually in a smartwatch or bracelet.
Reminds me of how a lot of people don't want AR/VR until it is the size of a regular pair of sunglasses. Everybody will just make fun of you for wearing a toaster on your face : ( not that I mind, vr is cool 😎 lol