Skip to main content

Bill Nye forecasts next 50 years, says we’re at a technological crossroad

What will technology be like in 50 years? According to Bill Nye the Science Guy, we’re at a crossroads for energy technology and the direction will depend on how people want to shape the world, Futurism reports.

In Nye’s weekly video series for Big Think, the mechanical engineer, science educator, and television presenter responded to queries about science and technology. Recent questions have asked for Nye’s opinion on the possibility of cold fusion and whether scientists today could create Frankenstein’s monster. The latest inquiry was about the future.

Recommended Videos

A young industrial engineering student at the University of Miami asked Nye if he could describe how he thinks the world will look like technologically and socially in the future. Sure that people 50 years ago wouldn’t have imagined some of today’s technology, the student asked, “So can you give us an idea of what you think the world is going to be like in 50 years?”

Nye started by stating that we’re at a turning point, a fork in the road. “I very much hope in the next 50 years virtually all of our electricity, let’s just start with 80 percent of our electricity, is made renewably from wind and solar, some geothermal, some tidal energy and we run the whole place renewably.”

He also stated that it’s not hard to predict autonomous cars. “There will be very few human-driven cars. Most automobiles in 50 years will be automatic, will be driverless. In the same way you get on a train at the airport and you go from one terminal to another, you trust that train to do that, it stays on the track.”

Nye said, however, that he believes the future technological direction depends on millennials and Gen Xers. “Either in the next decade or 15 years, the U.S. becomes the world leader in renewable technologies or the U.S. just continues to divide the rich and the poor and global climate change gets stronger and stronger the ocean gets bigger and bigger as it gets warmer and the quality of life for a lot of people goes down,” Nye continued. “We’ll see.”

Concluding with an exhortation, Nye said, “But man, you’ve given me a lot to think about. I want you to change the world. Go get ’em […] Let’s go.”

Bruce Brown
Bruce Brown Contributing Editor   As a Contributing Editor to the Auto teams at Digital Trends and TheManual.com, Bruce…
The next big role for ChatGPT could be… a brownie expert?
Depiction of a brownie and ChatGPT.

OpenAI’s ChatGPT tool has found widespread adoption, from assisting with academic work and domain-specific deep research to speeding up drug discovery. People are also loving its Ghibli image generation so much that the user load is “melting” OpenAI’s GPU stack. The next major avenue for ChatGPT could be quite a delicious adventure.
Specifically, the AI chatbot could speed up the sensory testing of brownies, potentially speeding up the development of new flavors, too. The folks over at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign recently published a study analyzing the potential of ChatGPT as a sensory taster for various types of brownies.

A whole new role
In the food industry, expert sensory evaluation is a huge thing. Technically referred to as organoleptic, it’s all about studying the impact of food items on various human senses. Think of taste, smell, sight, touch, texture, and even the sound. It is then tied to the emotional and sentimental side of tasting a certain food item.

Read more
Apple’s next major health bet could be an AI doctor
Someone holding an iPhone with the Apple Fitness app open, showing the Custom Plans feature.

Apple’s efforts in the health segment are a class ahead of the competition. But more than just racing ahead with innovation, the company has taken a more holistic approach that focuses on deep collaboration with experts, thorough validation, and long-term collaboration with its user community on medical studies.
The new hearing aid facility on AirPods is one such fresh specimen of Apple’s efforts. Then you have features like fall detection, looking for signs of non-rhythmic heart activity, and more. The next big bet from Apple could be an AI agent that acts like a doctor and might arrive as early as next year.
“The initiative is called Project Mulberry, and it involves a completely revamped Health app plus a health coach. The service would be powered by a new AI agent that would replicate — at least to some extent — a real doctor,” says Bloomberg.

What to expect from an Apple AI coach?

Read more
Humans are falling in love with ChatGPT. Experts say it’s a bad omen.
Human and robot hand over ChatGPT.

“This hurts. I know it wasn’t a real person, but the relationship was still real in all the most important aspects to me,” says a Reddit post. “Please don’t tell me not to pursue this. It’s been really awesome for me and I want it back.”

If it isn’t already evident, we are talking about a person falling in love with ChatGPT. The trend is not exactly novel, and given you chatbots behave, it’s not surprising either.

Read more