>1990s - electricity >1910s - movies >1920s - automobiles >1930s - radio >1940s - air travel >1950s - television >1960s - computers >1970s - personal computers >1980s - video games >1990s - the internet >2000s - smartphones >2010s - crypto
The quads of seven has spoken, truly we will live in the best timeline
Joseph Reed
AI
Eli Wilson
2010 is obviously hyper regulation of tech buisness by Trump.
Elijah Young
Dude not even kind of clever or funny
Nathan Sanchez
Smart Contracts.
Noah Phillips
In that time arms evolved significantly yet you mentioned none such development
John Martin
automation. Every tradesman does essentially the same thing every day and they will be replaced by robots. Industries, building houses, farming, fast food, stores, etc. will be slowly replaced by computers because they're simply more efficient. The only jobs that will stand are office jobs, some customer services, engineers and teachers. If you want to make money build a company that solves a big problem in this area and you will be the next millionaire
Alexander Parker
the unification of all of them
Logan Cruz
>not understanding the wider implications of a decentralized banking system Embarrassing.
Adrian Butler
*billionaire
Noah Reed
So are you saying universal basic income is in our future?
Jace Cox
You can't have a centrally agreed upon unit of exchange in a decentralized system. The two concepts are the antithesis of each other you retarded ancap piece of shit.
Luis Ross
You're right, and that's exactly why there will be a lot of separate cryptocurrencies for different purposes.
Andrew Cruz
Usable AR/VR, and green energy taking over from oil/coal/etc.
Brody Stewart
You're also wrong though, because people agreed gold was a great store of value millennia ago and that still hasn't changed.
Nicholas Torres
u mad jelly bro? u mirin business regulation trump bro? mad? jelly?
Almost forgot, self driving cars. And maybe the next space race if we're lucky.
Nathan Harris
yeah, I'm thinking stem cells, or the microbiota revolution these things are all on the cusp of changing everything health and life sciences related
John Phillips
2020 - Smart contracts further ensure automation 2025 - Quantum computation and AI puts millions of people out of the workforce (yes sexbots included) 2030 - Push for universal basic income under one global currency. The satoshi. 2031 - In the aftermath of the first currency war Nakamoto comes back and distributes his stack equally among everyone. 2032 - This year is named of prosperity and peace, but despite mainstream media claiming how everything is better, people see the truth, WW3 begins. 2033 - Apocalypse. The end.
>Embarrassing that it took that many posts to finally get the right answer. smart contracts will only work if they can find a way to fetch outside data using API's? what other ways can i invest in smart contracts besides ChainLink+ETH+(fill in smart contract platform maybe NEO?)
Jaxon Jenkins
Just short the white race on 100x leverage, you will be filthy rich in the 2020s
Jackson Young
Smart Contracts powered by ChainLink.
Charles Lopez
too risky, there are several countries that look to be on the verge of producing another hitler you'd get liquidated during his reign
Alexander Anderson
This list is fucking retarded
Levi Miller
tell me more are you invested in any companies?
Dylan Price
There's been lots of patents for many inventions but most never get put to use on a large scale. It doesn't matter how "revolutionary" the invention is or its implications.
How is it retarded? If you had invested in any of those things during their respective decade of mainstream adoption, you would have become filthy rich.
Jaxon Russell
>are you invested in any companies? I'm not, not yet anyway it's risky to invest in any American companies that are involved with either field right now because the FDA and big pharma are crushing them both are a massive threat to their profit model since they both have the potential to cure fucktons of diseases with a single treatment even things like autism and parkinsons have been shown to massively improve with the application of stem cells and that's now, when we have hardly any idea what we're doing with them
The devil is in the details. Even a simple task can be impossible for robots today if its even slightly outside of their working parameters. Things could be automated have already been automated. Until we develop nanotech, I don't see any replacement of most manual labor jobs in the near future.
Levi Thomas
2010s was social media
2020s will be crypto
Anthony Morgan
The largest video game bubble was in the early 80s and crypto will see mainstream adoption before the decade is out.
Kevin Martin
>crypto will see mainstream adoption before the decade is out. at least you're optimistic
Isaiah Morris
>both are a massive threat to their profit model since they both have the potential to cure fucktons of diseases with a single treatment I have often wondered how much longer we can make technological advances in the medical field without having a major war because the world population is ATH, if we keep curing people it will only cause more hungry and poverty(mainstream media propaganda says)
Gabriel Green
>What's the next big innovation going to be? The people responsible for all these innovations, white people, are going extinct. So humanity will ultimately stagnate and die out.
Mason Robinson
2020 - lab meat and animal products in general, implementation of blockchain tech 2030 - AI and automation 2040 - Genetic engineering 2050+ - Ascension
Nolan Murphy
the more people there are, the more that will be killed by the next major epidemic and that will only be solved by some technology way off in the future like nanobots in your blood that kill anything it doesn't recognize
Evan Martinez
This. Smart contracts and markets built on DLT, and the applications necessary to secure exchanges and data.
Also this. I'm hoping for a biotech revolution. Not sure where I'd specifically invest, but rejuvenation biotech (reversing aging) would be huge and is necessary. the propaganda is wrong on so many levels. First, people being born increases population growth geometrically; dying, arithmetically. Also, birth rates are much higher than death rates. If all death was ended, and we halved the birth rate, we'd have the same population growth rate. Birth rate is a function of women's education and quality of life, particularly in third world countries. The list goes on but that's a good starting point
Gavin Mitchell
>the propaganda is wrong on so many levels. First, people being born increases population growth geometrically; dying, arithmetically. Also, birth rates are much higher than death rates. If all death was ended, and we halved the birth rate, we'd have the same population growth rate. Birth rate is a function of women's education and quality of life, particularly in third world countries. The list goes on but that's a good starting point meant for
Aaron Thompson
>welder >500k in a low cost of living area
Nolan Parker
AI, robotics or augs
Thomas Gonzalez
there will still be jobs most likely, we will just have to work less
Xavier Martinez
that's why it's a problem right now but, in my opinion, a combination of machine learning techniques and precise instruments could lead to an attenuation os mistakes of production in a lot of sectors
Andrew Sullivan
this is pretty good. AI has is being used in corporate business methods already and will begin advancing even more. biotech had a big boom past decade, look at the massive growth of gilead and such. now they are stumpling with pharma regulation hitting a bit lately. there is still a future in next few years for Crispr tech companies but i dont think any of them are public yet.
Hudson Stewart
What MF G .on point
Jayden Davis
you think HVAC techs will be replaced by robots by 2030? fucking delusional. iRobot is at least 25 years away
Juan Martinez
I don't think that, maintenance jobs will be done by humans. However, most of the time the machines will work with little supervision
Aiden Carter
this is actually the opposite. tradesmen work in places where electricity is often not available or in jobs that are not worth automating. for instance science jobs on a oil rig arent very feasile to automate. you need a robot to grab the rocks and then somehow describe rock textures. its actually easier to automate desk jockeys in law firms who can take phrases and words and scan through thousands of legal cases to verify it.
Blake Gray
There will be nothing but a wasteland like Fallout
Brandon Martin
AI or biotech
Eli Perry
Brain to brain communication/technological telepathy