Mini-Doc 1969: The 21st Century
Youtube Direktfuture, via Ronny
Seit ein paar Tagen rutschen Clips aus einer 1969er Retrofuture-Sendung vom CBS mit Walter Cronkite durch meinen Reader, hier die komplette Sendung, 25 Minuten aus der Zukunft von damals, inklusive aufblasbaren Sesseln, modularer Architektur und natürlich einer vollautomatischen Küche.
March 12, 1967 episode of CBS’ show ‘The 21st Century’ with legendary newsman Walter Cronkite bringing news of what we’d be doing at home and work in the future.
Vorher auf Nerdcore:
’64-65 NY World’s Fair Futurama-Ride Video
Japanese Retrofuturism, 1969
Space Age Hair Fashion
Flying Cars in german Edition of Popular Mechanics, 1957
NASAs Space-Colony Promovideo from the 70s
Doku: Auf der Suche nach der Welt von Morgen (NDR 1967)
Retrofuturistic Apocalypses
Retrofuture-Doku: Richtung 2000 – Vorschau auf die Welt von morgen (ZDF 1972)
Retrofuturism-Food
Retrofuture Dance
’64-65 NY World’s Fair Futurama-Ride Video
Ich hab’ mich grade durch den hervorragenden Tumblelog Space Age Planet geklickt – sehr Fashion-lastig, aber in Kombination mit Retrofuturismus mag ich das dann sehr gerne – und dort dieses tolle Video der 1964er Weltausstellung in New York gefunden, ein Promo für den Future-Ride dort. Schöne Zukunft, damals… schon lange vorbei.
Vorher auf Nerdcore:
Japanese Retrofuturism, 1969
Space Age Hair Fashion
Flying Cars in german Edition of Popular Mechanics, 1957
NASAs Space-Colony Promovideo from the 70s
Doku: Auf der Suche nach der Welt von Morgen (NDR 1967)
Retrofuturistic Apocalypses
Retrofuture-Doku: Richtung 2000 – Vorschau auf die Welt von morgen (ZDF 1972)
Retrofuturism-Food
Retrofuture Dance
Ray Kurzweil: How to create a Mind
Ich hab’ das neue Buch von Kurzweil bereits auf meinem neuen Kindle Paperwhite (dazu später mehr), aber ich hab’s noch nicht gelesen. Im Buch geht’s um künstliche Gehirne und AI, typischer Kurzweil-Kram, zum Glück ohne den “Live Forever”-Unsinn (glaube ich zumindest, wie gesagt: Ich hab’s noch nicht gelesen). Im Google-Talk oben erzählt er eine Stunde lang ein bisschen was dazu, Swen hat noch einen weiteren Podcast mit ihm, Snip von der Website zum Buch:
In How to Create a Mind, Kurzweil presents a provocative exploration of the most important project in human-machine civilization—reverse engineering the brain to understand precisely how it works and using that knowledge to create even more intelligent machines. Kurzweil discusses how the brain functions, how the mind emerges from the brain, and the implications of vastly increasing the powers of our intelligence in addressing the world’s problems. He thoughtfully examines emotional and moral intelligence and the origins of consciousness and envisions the radical possibilities of our merging with the intelligent technology we are creating.
Amazon-Partnerlink: How to Create a Mind: The Secret of Human Thought Revealed
Reddit in the Year 3000

Schönes Ding von Redditor Gonzoblair: Screenshot of reddit from the year 3012. Die Ghost-Story mit Bill Murray oben basiert übrigens auf einer Bill Murray Urban Legend, zu der er mal in einem Interview befragt wurde. Is’ natürlich nicht mit der Wahrheit rausgerückt: „It sounds crazy, doesn’t it? Just so crazy and unlikely and unusual?“ (Danke Gilly!)
50 Jahre The Jetsons
Heute vor 50 Jahren flogen die Jetsons zum ersten mal mit ihrem Flying Car über die Bildschirme. Die Serie von Hannah-Barbera hatte leider nie den selben Erfolg wie ihr Gegenstück aus der Urzeit, die Flintstones, und brachte es leider nur auf eine Staffel. Grade in Deutschland wurden die Retrofuture-Cartoons immer stiefmütterlich behandelt: Die Jetsons liefen bei uns 1970 in den Dritten der ARD, Ende der 80er ein Run auf RTL und im Jahr 2000 nochmal im PayTV. Deutschland hat’s halt nicht so mit Zukunft, auch wenn sie retro ist.
Ich hab’ die Jetsons vor ein paar Jahren dank PirateBay komplett nachgeholt und schaue mir heute immer noch ab und zu eine Folge an. Happy Jetpacks, everyone! Oben ein „History of the Jetsons“-Video, PaleoFuture hat ein schönes Posting, der erste Teil einer Artikelserie über die Jetsons und die Relevanz, die diese Serie heute immer noch hat.
“The Jetsons” was the distillation of every Space Age promise Americans could muster. People point to “The Jetsons” as the golden age of American futurism because (technologically, at least) it had everything our hearts could desire: jetpacks, flying cars, robot maids, moving sidewalks. But the creators of “The Jetsons” weren’t the first to dream up these futuristic inventions. Virtually nothing presented in the show was a new idea in 1962, but what “The Jetsons” did do successfully was condense and package those inventions into entertaining 25-minute blocks for impressionable, media-hungry kids to consume.
And though it was “just a cartoon” with all the sight gags and parody you’d expect, it was based on very real expectations for the future. As author Danny Graydon notes in The Jetsons: The Official Cartoon Guide, the artists drew inspiration from futurist books of the time, including the 1962 book 1975: And the Changes to Come, by Arnold B. Barach (who envisioned such breakthroughs as ultrasonic dishwashers and instant language translators).
Alternatives to the Singularity

Großartig! Ein paar Futuristen haben in einer kollaborativen Gemeinschaftsaktion eine Fake-Präsentation über alternative Singularitäten erstellt mit so Perlen wie der Crapularity, in der Spam aus 3D-Druckern die Welt mir Schrott überschwemmt (Trebbles!) oder die Bilderbergularity, in der die 1% in Raumschiffen in den Orbit flüchten und sich die 99% nach einem kurzen „Gottseidank“ gegenseitig zerfleischen. Hier die Story zu den alternativen Singularitäten vom Institute for the Future: Grumpy, Happy Collaboration: The Drug of Futurists (via New Aesthetic):
The first slides were weird, and esoteric, cynical, and wonderful. I was laughing out loud. Trolololitarity posited a world of 70s communist humor. “In Russia, the Internet surfs you.” My favorite of the early slides, Zizekularity, told of a world in which Slovenian political philosopher Slavoj Zizek is right about everything. Crapularity, Grouponularity, Abu Dhabularity, Singaporularity. […]
Seeing the “crack-like” addictive effect of the experience, I posited the Collabularity, wherein by 2012, every single person on Earth is contributing to the document, venting their own emotional gas about THE FUTURE we are being sold. Futurists like to go “meta.”
Die komplette Präsentation nach dem Klick oder auf Scribd.
The Singularity Movie
Youtube Direktray, via MeFi
Meine Portion Techno-Utopismus für heute: The Singularity is near, ‘ne Doku basierend auf Ray Kurzweils Buch, kommt am 20. Juli auf DVD.
The Singularity is Near, A True Story about the Future, based on Ray Kurzweil’s New York Times bestseller, intertwines a fast-paced A-line documentary with a B-line narrative story.
The A-line documentary features Ray Kurzweil interacting with a panoply of thinkers on the impact of exponentially expanding technologies on the nature of human life in the next half century. These ideas are illustrated with cutting-edge graphics and special effects.
The intertwined B-line is a Pinocchio story of Ramona (played by Pauley Perrette), a superhero avatar created by Ray. As the adventure unfolds, Ramona becomes more and more independent, hires Alan Dershowitz (who plays himself) to press for her legal rights, and is coached by Tony Robbins (who also plays himself) to discover the true meaning of what it means it be human.
Alternate SciFi-Economy-Art: The Arctics 24/7 Banking Ship


Ich liebe das hier! Tobias Revell vom Royal College of Art in England zeigt als Abschlußarbeit grade 88.7: Stories from the first transnational Traders. In einem Satz kann man die Arbeit nicht zusammenfassen, ich versuch’s mal mit zwei oder drei: Er hat eine „Historie der Macht“ visualisiert und diese Geschichte bis ins Jahr 2200 verlängert. Darin platziert er nun die Story der Banker auf dem ersten „transnationalen Handels-Eisbrecher“, der auf dem 88.7° Breitengrad um die Arktis schippert und so in einem 24-Stundenrythmus alle Handelszonen durchfährt, der Vorteil für die Elite-Banker an Bord ist immens und die Europäische Union wird in eine post-nationale Wirtschaftseinheit umgebaut, so um 2058 rum, wenn China kollabiert. Derweil wachsen den Bankern auf dem Schiff Hörner auf dem Kopf, weil das extreme Risikomanagement ihre Neurochemie ändert.
Mutanten! Wirtschaft! Science-Fiction! Politik! Alternate History! Und das alles als Kunst-Abschlußarbeit! Ich hab’ das alles noch nicht wirklich begriffen weil extrem episch, aber ich bin völlig begeistert, konzeptionell eine der stärksten Arbeiten, die mir bislang untergekommen ist. Hier die Timeline: A Brief History of Power und hier die Storys um den Handels-Eisbrecher und die Mutanten-Banker, hier die ganzen Visuals auf Flickr und hier das Bit über die Banker-Hörner:
Changes in the neurochemistry of traders was first noted as an effect of the risk mechanisms in the brain early in the century. The traders on board the Arktika were employees of the worlds most demanding and simultaneously rewarding trading system. They developed extreme emotional imbalances outside of their work resulting ultimately in a policy of isolated residency aboard and urgent study of ways to stabalise their neuro-biology with the establishing of neuro-genetics laboratory on board.
Later, the first growths developed on traders as chemical changes forced keratin cells in the epidermis to fuse. The pattern of the growths were influenced by the intensity of the chemical changes in the brain, themselves reflections of trading activity. Depending on the experience, age and stability of the trader the compound growths could extend up to 300mm without any side effects. The growths became objects of intense study from corporate geneticists hoping to gain some insight into this melding of man and market.
Innovations of Tomorrow
Tolle neue Ausgabe des NYTimes Magazines über Innovation und Futurismus. Kernstück ist wohl ein interaktives Feature 32 Innovations that will change your Tomorrow, außerdem sehr lesenswert: Freaks, Geeks and Microsoft – How Kinect Spawned a Commercial Ecosystem, die Bilderstrecke über das remixte Magazin-Logo.
We tend to rewrite the histories of technological innovation, making myths about a guy who had a great idea that changed the world. In reality, though, innovation isn’t the goal; it’s everything that gets you there. It’s bad financial decisions and blueprints for machines that weren’t built until decades later. It’s the important leaps forward that synthesize lots of ideas, and it’s the belly-up failures that teach us what not to do.
Robert Crumbs City of the Future

Robert Crumbs City of the Future aus ZAP Comix #0. Das vierte Panel auf der zweiten Seite ist ne ziemlich genaue Vorhersage von Facebook und Lifestreams und Zeugs. We’re all normal now. You! You are normal. Brrrrr…

(via Dangerous Minds)
Atari sketches Wikipedia, 1982

Bob Stein hat auf dem Blog vom “Institute for the Future of the Book” (!) eine Reihe alter Illus über die Zukunft einer intelligenten Enzyklopädie gepostet, die er damals in seinem Job bei Atari bei Disney-Zeichner Glenn Keane in Auftrag gegeben hatte. Die Illus sind okay, als retrofuturistisches Artefakt aber natürlich hochinteressant.
Bild oben: “A third grade class studies various aspects of space travel. The group on the right is running a simulation of a Mars landing while the students on the left are studying a design for a spacecraft.”
Alan Kay had just become the Chief Scientist at Atari and he asked me to work with him to continue the work I started at Encyclopedia Britannica on the idea of an Intelligent Encyclopedia. We came up with these scenarios of how the (future) encyclopedia might be used and commissioned Glenn Keane, a well-known Disney animator to render them. The captions also date from 1982.
Back to the Future — In honor of Encyclopedia Britannica giving up its print edition
TEDxBrussels: A Day in the Deep Future
Im November veranstaltete TEDxBrussels einen Futuristen-Event, in dem alle Vorträge unter dem Motto „A Day in the Deep Future“ standen und die Redner ihre Visionen vom Leben in 50 Jahren (deep?) darzulegen. Metafilter hat alle Vorträge davon zusammengestellt, oben exemplarisch der Vortrag „Beyond Machines: The Year 3000“ von Rudy Rucker, neben William Gibson wohl der bekannteste Vertreter des Cyberpunk.
Rudy Rucker, a science fiction writer, professor of Computer Science tells TEDxBrussels his vision of the future. As in his novel “Software” where computers ‘preserve’ the human brain, a so-called ‘life box’ database remains which keeps our memories alive.
These machines however cannot substitute humans as our minds perform more physical and biological processes, where artificial intelligence only relies on inferences.
Biomathematics models such as cellular automaton and Belousov–Zhabotinsky simulation come closer to the biological processes.
He describes his idea of this biological computation emerging in the future with beautiful (mostly self-drawn) paintings.
Hier die komplette Liste und hier die Youtube-Playlist, eher als Reminder für mich gedacht, weil ich mir die alle ansehen will… irgendwann.
* Paddy Ashdown (British politician and diplomat): Why the world will never be the same & what we should do about it
* Eileen Bartholomew (Senior Director Life Sciences at X PRIZE Foundation): The XPrize Foundation of 2061
* John Bohannon (Dancer, biologist and journalist): Dance Your PhD
* Lorenz Bogaert (Online media entrepreneur): The European Dream
* David Brin (Astrophysicist and science fiction author): Target 2061: Reinventing Civilization Across Half a Century
* Kushal Chakrabarti (Founder of Vittana, turning global education into opportunity): Literacy is not enough
* Leila Janah (Founder of Samasource, giving digital opportunity to impoverished people): The microwork revolution
* Peter Cochrane (Futurologist, researcher and engineer): Not HAL9000
* David Cuartielles (Microchip inventor, co-founder of Arduino): Open Source Hardware
* David Ewing Duncan (Journalist, Author, Medical Technologist): When I’m 164
* Sebastien de Halleux (Belgian engineer, Co-Founder of Playfish): Games the Next Billion will play
* Alain De Taeye (Co-founder of Tele Atlas): Five Minutes into the Future
* David Deutsch (Quantum Physicist): The Unknowable & how to prepare for it
* Hasan Elahi (Interdisciplinary media activist, privacy artist): Hiding in Plain Sight
* Peter Fenwick (Neuropsychiatrist): The Art of Dying Well
* Carl Flink and Edward Oroyan (Choreographers and Artists): Black Label Movement – Zero Gravity Dance
* Ken Haase (Engineer-scientist-philosopher): The Singularity is Here
* Kaliya Hamlin (Identity Researcher): Identity, the Contexts of the Future
* Charles Hazlewood (Conductor and advocate for access to orchestral music): Music of the Future
* Andrew Hessel (Biologist and Author): Making Worlds
* Peter Hinssen (Thought leader, the impact of technology on society): The Tiger and the Rock
* Mikko H. Hypponen (Chief research officer at F-Secure Corporation in Finland): Defending the Net
* Julie Meyer (Founder and CEO of Ariadne Capital, Founder – Entrepreneur Country, Managing Partner – Ariadne Capital Entrepreneurs Fund [ACE]): Entrepreneurs 2061
* Marc Millis (NASA deep space expert): Space Flight Predictions: After AI & Transhumanism
* Raul Rojas (Specialist in artificial neural networks) Cars that Think
* Rudy Rucker (Founder of the cyberpunk literary movement): Beyond Machines: The Year 3000
* Henrik Scharfe (Director at the Center for Computer-mediated Epistemology): Geminoid-DK
* John Shirley (American fantasist, author of BioShock Rapture): False Singularities…
* Rob Spence (Eyeborg and enhanced human): Eyeborg, the Enhanced Self
* Luc Steels (Director of the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory): The Robot Culture
* Jack Tuszynski (Computational biophysician): From eDx to eRx The digital future of personalized diagnostics and pharmaceuticals
* Jacques Vallee (Computer scientist and ufologist, Mars mapping for NASA): A Theory of Everything (else)…
Predicting the Future of Computing
Die New York Times hat eine superinteressante Timeline mit Vergangenheit und Zukunft von Technologien, inklusive Voting und User-Generated-Schnickschnack. Sweet!
Since no supercomputer can yet predict the future, we need your help. Readers are invited to make predictions and collaboratively edit this timeline, which is divided into three sections: a sampling of past advances, future predictions that you can push forward or backward in time (but not, of course, into the past), and a form for making and voting on predictions.
Doku: Internet Rising
Dailymotion Direktrising, via Martin
Internet Rising: Interessante Doku von Andrew Kenneth Martin, Marina Eisen und Alex Eisen. Es geht mehr oder weniger um die Theorie, das Netz könnte eines Tages tatsächlich als ein neues, kollektives Bewusstsein erwachen.
INTERNET RISING is a digi-documentary investigating the evolving relationships between the Internet and collective consciousness of humanity. It provokes many questions about ancient and modern paradoxes of life, its pleasures and pains… and the gray area contrasts in between – but most of all it is meant to be an inspiring conversation starter; a launchpad for future remixes of a collective search for some meaning/mindfulness. It is also spiced with a bit of humorous satire to give our *overloaded* BIG DATA _information_ dump() brains a little break from the daily race :)
INTERNET RISING is a labor of love comprising a rapid fire mashup stream of live interviews all conducted within the web sphere. The film’s participants include many profound personalities and key internet influencers ranging from professors, corporate academics, futurists, researchers, writers, bloggers, media creators, activists, gamers, educators, scientists, artists, innovators – real humans, all of whom provide amazing insights into how our state of the world is changing and transforming via various forces of economic, social, geographic, political, cultural, philosophical development… all centered around technology’s transformative and generative power.
Microsofts Productivity Future Vision-Clip
(Youtube Direktfuturism, via Gizmodo)
Süßer Clip von Microsoft Office und ihrer Zukunftsvision, in der alles touchable ist und als Screen funktioniert. Wird natürlich alles anders kommen und das ist auf so ‘ne Microsoft-Art ja ziemlich klebrig-clean, so völlig falsche Werbe-Weltgrinsedeppen und sowas. Aber ich steh’ auf diesen Zukunftsquatsch, was willste machen.


In How to Create a Mind, Kurzweil presents a provocative exploration of the most important project in human-machine civilization—reverse engineering the brain to understand precisely how it works and using that knowledge to create even more intelligent machines. Kurzweil discusses how the brain functions, how the mind emerges from the brain, and the implications of vastly increasing the powers of our intelligence in addressing the world’s problems. He thoughtfully examines emotional and moral intelligence and the origins of consciousness and envisions the radical possibilities of our merging with the intelligent technology we are creating. 
The Singularity is Near, A True Story about the Future, based on Ray Kurzweil’s New York Times bestseller, intertwines a fast-paced A-line documentary with a B-line narrative story.
INTERNET RISING is a digi-documentary investigating the evolving relationships between the Internet and collective consciousness of humanity. It provokes many questions about ancient and modern paradoxes of life, its pleasures and pains… and the gray area contrasts in between – but most of all it is meant to be an inspiring conversation starter; a launchpad for future remixes of a collective search for some meaning/mindfulness. It is also spiced with a bit of humorous satire to give our *overloaded* BIG DATA _information_ dump() brains a little break from the daily race :)

