5 Technologies That 5 Billion Will Use by 2050
Possibly changing the way we live just as profoundly as the internet did.
HD DownloadSince 1996, the number of people using the internet has climbed from about 40 million people to about 5 billion—or 60 percent of the world's population. There's internet access in the city slums of India, the rice terraces of Vietnam, and the favelas of Brazil.
That's a massive shift in 27 years—or my entire lifetime.
Venture capitalist Paul Graham recently asked on Twitter, "What do 36 million people use now that eventually 5 billion will?"
Here are my predictions for five technologies that could overtake the world by 2050, possibly changing the way we live just as profoundly as the internet did, and solving some of our most vexing problems, which almost always happens through creativity and innovation, not through regulation or government spending.
Micromobility
About 4.4 billion people live in big cities, myself included, and getting around isn't easy or convenient. The pandemic made the budgetary problems of urban transit systems even worse, bringing steep declines in ridership. Meanwhile, the federal government is providing massive new subsidies for urban rail systems that barely anyone used even pre-COVID, like a proposed $2.5 billion streetcar in Atlanta.
Rail was a cutting-edge technology—in the 19th century. I predict that by 2050 the standard in urban mobility will be electric mopeds and pedal-assisted bikes—individualized forms of street transit powered by apps.
The U.S. electric scooter market is expected to double in size by 2030. And we're actually late adopters: Throughout much of Asia, especially India and China, mopeds have already become commonplace, competing with cars, rickshaws, and the lowly bicycle in providing point-to-point mobility, which is where rail falls short.
Some U.S. cities have sought to ban e-scooter companies such as Bird, Lime, and Revel, but like Uber, these services are proving so popular that commuters won't let them be outlawed.
Delivery Drones
Since Amazon founder Jeff Bezos unveiled plans for delivery drones a decade ago, progress has been slow.
Today, there are only a few thousand delivery robots currently operating in the U.S. But that's about to change: In December, Prime Air successfully completed commercial deliveries in College Station, Texas, and Lockeford, California.
On the other side of the world, Meituan and Alibaba have just started rolling out this service to customers.
In the U.S., delivery drones have been hindered by the Federal Aviation Administration's approval process, and it's the same regulatory story in China. But I predict that won't be true much longer because of the overwhelming benefit this service brings in terms of convenience for customers and in reducing the traffic problems caused by delivery trucks clogging up our streets.
By 2050, I'm confident that the urban skyline will be buzzing with what will look like a swarm of carrier pigeons bearing books, spatulas, bottles of vinegar, or whatever else you might order on Amazon—not to mention, hearts and kidneys racing toward hospitals.
Language A.I.
Generative A.I.—the form of artificial intelligence that uses human prompts to generate unique text and images—had a breakthrough year in 2022. From DALL-E to Lensa, people are using image generators mostly to screw around on the internet. But we're entering the age of sophisticated text A.I., which will revolutionize everything from customer service to poetry.
ChatGPT requires a prompt to generate large volumes of fairly sophisticated text. It is capable of "answering followup questions, admitting its mistakes, challenging incorrect premises, and rejecting inappropriate requests," according to its developer, OpenAI.
Described as a "second brain," ChatGPT will free up some people to work different jobs, as technology always does, while allowing others to do the same work more productively.
Why spend hours researching the technologies described in this video when you can just ask ChatGPT to generate a personalized report? ChatGPT could write the first draft of a professor's syllabus, suggest storylines for a TV show, craft portions of a journalist's article, or create website copy describing a product for sale. Language A.I. will change how we do our jobs in much the same way that search did.
Lab-Grown Meat
When factory farming first began in the '20s, it was designed to minimize costs while maximizing production—animal welfare be damned. But now that scientists can grow meat in labs there's less reason to inflict suffering on the 50 billion chickens and 300 million cows we raise and kill for food each year.
I personally find plant-based substitutes like Impossible Burgers and Beyond Burgers disgusting, but when we can actually scale the process of growing meat in labs, that'll be a game changer. That's when the era of factory farming will come to an end, rendering the U.S. Department of Agriculture mostly useless while reducing the industry's environmental footprint. We'll finally be able to enjoy foie gras without having to think about the ducks we force-fed to fatten their livers.
I bet there will always be some demand for actual meat, just as there are upscale buildings with elevator operators and horse and carriage rides in Central Park. But meat lovers in general will make more ethical food choices as it gets easier, cheaper, and more delicious to do so.
Health Wearables
When Fitbit trackers debuted in 2009, they allowed people for the first time to track their movement with a simple black wristband. Of course, the concept of the pedometer is an old one—there was a big step-counting craze in 1960s Japan—but the FitBit ushered in the modern-day trend of using wearables to learn about your own individual health data, whether it be step counting, sleep tracking, and continuous glucose monitoring. By 2050, I predict that wearables loaded with censors will eliminate the already dubious annual physical and send most of our primary care doctors the way of switchboard operators.
Before the advent of continuous glucose monitoring, people with diabetes had to prick their fingers throughout the day to measure their blood sugar. Now these tiny electrode devices under the skin can do so continuously. I think by 2050, even nondiabetics will use these tools to monitor their insulin responses, getting data about how their bodies interact with the things they put in them—a business idea that's already in the works.
Some 540 million adults live with diabetes worldwide, a number that's expected to grow to almost 800 million by 2045. The global prevalence of obesity tripled between 1975 and 2016. On one level, that's a free market success story: Fewer people are dying of starvation than ever before. In fact, they're now experiencing the consequences of gluttony and abundance.
But over the next 27 years, we should expect better drugs and devices that will help people manage their weight and health, detecting problems earlier and more accurately than ever before.
***
When French artists envisioned the year 2000 in the year 1900, they were too conservative with their predictions, unable to imagine a world that had done away with clunky propellers, electrical wiring, and bulky machinery in favor of more streamlined, more efficient tools for housework, transportation, and food production. Everyone also seemed to think that blimps would be a really big deal.
Nobody anticipated the massive shifts that would come because of exponential increases in computing power especially. Perhaps these predictions are also limited by our imagination.
The details are hard to know, but I'm confident that by 2050 technological creativity will have made mundane tasks obsolete, freed us from the constraints of biology, and collapsed distance and time in ways that make the constraints of the physical world increasingly irrelevant.
Photo Credits: Asun Díaz, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons; ARipstra (WMF), CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Authors of the study: Dong-Hee Kang, Fiona Louis, Hao Liu, Hiroshi Shimoda, Yasutaka Nishiyama, Hajime Nozawa, Makoto Kakitani, Daisuke Takagi, Daijiro Kasa, Eiji Nagamori, Shinji Irie, Shiro Kitano & Michiya Matsusaki, CC BY 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Bartz/Stockmar - Fleischatlas 2018, CC BY 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Baldesteinemanuel326, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Bfyhdch, CC BY-SA 4., via Wikimedia Commons; Beyond My Ken, CC BY-SA 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons; The Cefnamwlch Home Farm Milking Carousel by Eric Jones, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons; CAPTAIN RAJU, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Comyu, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Consumer Reports, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Centro de Producción Audiovisual. Oficina responsable del archivo fotográfico institucional., CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Chris Talbot / Paignton - Internet Cafe; Cqholt, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; David Revoy / Blender Foundation, CC BY 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Daniel Oberhaus, CC BY 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Dllu, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Ed Gold, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; East Devon : Heathen Hill Farm & Milking Parlour by Lewis Clarke, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Envato Elements ; Elvert Barnes from Silver Spring MD, USA, CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons; Gangaasoonu, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Gabriel S. Delgado C., CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Hynek Moravec, CC BY 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons; IICD www.iicd.org/photos, CC BY 2., via Wikimedia Commons; Internet Archive; kamran.solangi, CC BY 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Kevin Nicol/World Pictures/Photoshot/Newscom; Kiran Jonnalagadda from Bangalore, India, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Larry D. Moore, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Library of Congress; Marie, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Mike Winkelmann, CC BY 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Martin2035, CC BY 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons; Mack Male from Edmonton, AB, Canada, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Matthew T Rader, https://matthewtrader.com, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Mont Servais/Abaca/Newscom; Mliu92, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Michael Coghlan, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Noah Wulf, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Narek75, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Nevit, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Ossewa, CC BY-SA 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons; Project Kei, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Phillip Pessar, CC BY 2.0 , via Wikimedia Commons; Pavanaja, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Raman Patel, CC BY 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Rhetos, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons; Raysonho @ Open Grid Scheduler / Grid Engine, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons; Rob Croes / Anefo, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons ;Secretaria de Agricultura e Abastecimento do Estado de São Paulo Agriculturasp, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Subhashish Panigrahi, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Tom Williams/Roll Call Photos/Newscom; User:psubhashish, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons; User:Vmenkov, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons; User: (WT-shared) Shoestring at wts wikivoyage, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons; Watershed Post, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons.
Music Credits: "Stutter Island," by Ros-e via Artlist; "Youth," by ANBR, via Artlist; "Metaverse," by Lux-Inspira via Artlist; "Polygons," by Evgeny Bardyuzha via Artlist; "Lost," by Ramol, via Artlist; "Still Need Syndrome," by Yarin Primak via Artlist.
Cameras by Jim Epstein; writing by Liz Wolfe; editing by Regan Taylor.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
An app that tracks vaccination status and percent amount of mask usage in mandated areas tied to ones social credit score.
Next year's predictions, not last year's.
Great article, Mike. I appreciate your work, I'm now creating over $35,200 dollars each month simply by doing a simple job online! I do know You currently making a lot of greenbacks online from $28,200 dollars, its simple online operating jobs.
.
.
Just open the link--------------------------------->>> http://Www.JobsRevenue.Com
You actually think the FAA gives two shits about what customers find "convenient?" That's hilarious...
I am making a good salary from home $6580-$7065/week , which is amazing under a year ago I was jobless in a horrible economy. I thank God every day I was blessed with these instructions and now it’s my duty to pay it forward and share it with Everyone,
🙂 AND GOOD LUCK. 🙂
Here is I started.……......>> http://WWW.SALARYBEZ.COM
Let me guess, this article was actually written by ChatGPT. Congratulations, you've been made obsolete. Maybe you could learn to code? /sarc
Oh, and I for one welcome our new
insectrobot overlords!I get paid over 190$ per hour working from home with 2 kids at home. I never thought I’d be able to do it but my best friend earns over 10k a month doing this and she convinced me to try. The potential with this is endless. Heres what I’ve been doing..
HERE====)> http://WWW.NETPAYFAST.COM
Micromobility? Try walking.
You say that like the goal is to move around, experience new things, and to better yourself and those around you and not, instead, to be effectively locked in place mooing for your free shit like cattle in a feed lot.
A riisible position from the magazine that argued that masking and mandated vaccinations were certainly libertarian. Scooters may be popular elsewhere, but the most common forms of 2-wheeled transportation are not electric. Further, in large metropolitan areas in the EU and Asia, public transportation is used, and often. This is a typical US-centric progressive-leaning tech piece. The fascination w/ AI, the swooning over lab-grown meat, the insistence that the world will use the internet, when there isn't much use for it in most of the world, the touting delivery drones, when much of the world is beyond their range, the gen-Z 'ooooh, shiny toys' about wearables.
I get paid more than $90 to $400 per hour for working online. I heard about this job 3 months ago and after joining this I have earned easily $10k from this without having online working skills . Simply give it a shot on the accompanying site…
Here is I started.………….....>>> http://www.jobsrevenue.com
How about the overwhelming annoyance drones bring to home owners that end up in the flight paths of these drones?
That won't be a problem. Remember: "You will own nothing and you will be happy - or else."
The first drone that crashes into Suzy Snowflake will mark the end of drone deliveries.
I predict by the year 2050 computers will correct "censors" to "sensors" when a human uses "censors" incorrectly.
I remain unconvinced of the error. Wearables will contain censors that will alleviate you of your already dubious need for future physicals.
And spewing problematic thoughts through your oral cavity!
●US Dollar Rain Earns upto $550 to $750 per day by google fantastic job oppertunity provide for our community pepoles who,s already using facebook to earn money 85000$ every month and more through facebook and google new project to create money at home withen few hours.Everybody can get this job now and start earning online by just open this link and then go through instructions to get started..........
See this article for more information————————>>>http://WWW.DAILYPRO7.COM
This is laughably stupid.
Here–
In 2050 There will be nothing referred to by the idiotic term ‘micromobility’. After the collapse of the leftist takeover attempt known as the ‘climate change’ movement, research will be renewed into more efficient energy usage and storage. Breakthroughs in storage will give rise to higher battery life and will power cars much more efficiently.
Drones will be used for depot to depot delivery, their use as personal delivery units having been discontinued as the skies began to blacken with them. There are simply too many deliveries made in any given time period for a personal unit for each delivery to be feasible.
R.I. (robotic intelligence) will become the given term as the charade of A.I. is dropped in the wake of the ChatGPT scandal. Far worse that the Sophia and Amelia animatronics, the ChatGPT program, presented as if it were creating new art and writing was revealed to be a heavily curated sampling program resulting in plagiarism and copyright infringement lawsuits that had sweeping impacts on how such things were presented in 2050.
The fad of lab grown meat has, by 2050, been used to produce such artisanal meats as dinosaur, dragon, unicorn and from the darker corners of the web, human. Highly unscalable for everyday consumption, the idea was actually abandoned for general use when it was made plain that farm animals would not be transitioning back to the forest.
In 2027, the autodoc replaced human doctors. Without the subjectivity of humans, the medical field expanded greatly. The fad of continuous monitoring went by the wayside as healthcare moved away from the guesswork it was.
4.5/5
Your drone and micromobility predictions have some mutual issues. Delivering everything everywhere all at once with drones will also be phenomenally wasteful. Giving both people and their stuff greater mobility is dumb. "Drone delivery" will shift from meaning "individual quadcopter package delivery" to "Amazon employs interchangeable humans on the ground to make sure their unmanned cargo planes take off and land as expected"
Inclement weather, high winds, driving rain, freezing rain, snow etc. etc. fighting all those conditions to get one user across town one relatively light package...
Then to land the fucking thing, how's it going to get through the gotdamned tree cover over my house? Drone delivery in a developed, urban environment is so dumb, I can't think of anything dumber.
You can add, albeit not w/o a fight, the autoattorney. Once the 'professional' white collar jobs are replaced by automation, time and money saved will be immense. And the 'profession' of law may even come to be known for something other than dishonesty.
How would autoattorney work when so many laws contradict one another? I would think it would break from all of the illogic.
Easy, ChatGPT will make that moral decision in case of conflict. We've already seen examples of that in real time. No sweatsky
Greed. I don't know that I like the idea much, but if based on precedent, ethical decisions could be made by machine attorneys. I stand by my argument that the savings in time and money would be immense, as would the benefit for the law.
Meta space? Won't we spend all our time in Meta Space? I think I have some stock to sell now.
Micromobility
This presumes no major shifts in urbanization. That still isn't at all clear to me. One really interesting development of the pandemic is the realization that the cubicle farm is largely a relic. The technology has evolved to the point that decentralized remote work, at least if you have a motivated workforce that doesn't need close supervising, is as or more efficient than the centralized model. If that's the case, the entire idea of "city as work" begins to collapse. And if that happens, a moped for around town, doesn't make nearly the sense you suggest.
Lab-Grown Meat
Can I get a call on the lawsuits in the 2060s if the lab grown meat didn't take into account the role of various harmones and biological processes in natural growth of meat? I'm not saying lab grown meat is a bad idea. It just looks like a solution to a problem that really hasn't been established. And my guess is we're going to see a major spike in medical malpractice suits (whether justified or not) emerging from the COVID vaccination push and the current gender transition fad.
Health Wearables
Oh, Dear Lord, let's hope not! All we need is a detailed transmission of personal health and behavioral activity to the state and medical-insurance establishment. What could possibly go wrong? But, oh, that whole, they'll microchip everyone is just a right-wing conspiracy theory!
As for my own predictions:
Modular Nuclear Reactors
The technology on this looks increasingly promising. And, if we're going to reduce fossil fuel consumption, you're not serious if you're not including nuclear.
I predict that that will not happen because the purpose of “going green” isn’t to reduce the use of fossil fuels, it’s to reduce the use of energy. Remember that, from the socialist/environmentalist point of view, it’s better to be equally poor than to be unequally rich. Energy has made us rich. To achieve equality we must stop using so much energy. That’s why nuclear power is not on the table.
Micro or mini reactors definitely should have been in this list, but consider the publication.
It is capable of "... admitting its mistakes, challenging incorrect premises..."
So it's smarter than most people.
That's when the era of factory farming will come to an end, rendering the U.S. Department of Agriculture mostly useless
uhh... I have news for you. it's entirely useless now.
Lab-Grown Meat
"I bet there will always be some demand for actual meat, just as there are upscale buildings with elevator operators and horse and carriage rides in Central Park. But meat lovers in general will make more ethical food choices as it gets easier, cheaper, and more delicious to do so."
Ah, claiming meat consumption is unethical. People who hunt, farm, and fish are not trying to make food choices "easier". It's about self-reliance, and not depending on gov't and the industrial supply chain to feed us.
Ah, claiming meat consumption is unethical.
Paradoxically or nonsensically no less. There are upscale buildings with elevator attendants because people just get a kick from how unethical it is to pay people to stand in the elevator and push buttons.
They have no clue about future history, but they're already sure they're on the right side of it.
The U.S. electric scooter market is expected to double in size by 2030. And we're actually late adopters: Throughout much of Asia, especially India and China, mopeds have already become commonplace, competing with cars, rickshaws, and the lowly bicycle in providing point-to-point mobility, which is where rail falls short.
Do we consider the mopeds and electric bikes "micromobility"? Because if it's just scooters, I was working in China in 2015/2016 and everyone used the electric bikes and mopeds, but they were making pretty long treks in them. Not sure if that would fly on a scooter. Scooter's are the niche of the niche transportation option. Useful if you want to go a distance where it's juuuust too far to walk, but for a commute any real distance, you're going to need a moped or electric bike. After that, it requires a car or train/bus.
And for rural people, micromobility is pretty much a non-starter.
Scooters are a novelty for people who secretly want to hurt themselves.
We've been through this one before. Drones will never become a viable option in a developed, urban area. And the reasons for that are so obvious I feel like I don't need to explain why.
Hint:
BUT THEY'RE USING THEM IN THE SERENGETTI IN AFRICA!
What does the Serengetti not have that San Francisco and Omaha have?
What does the Serengetti not have that San Francisco and Omaha have?
Steers and Queers!
ChatGPT requires a prompt to generate large volumes of fairly sophisticated text. It is capable of “answering followup questions, admitting its mistakes, challenging incorrect premises,
Hehe… hehehe….
No.
And let's pretend for a moment we had the technology. The reason [the WEF] wants labgrown meat is to cut down on carbon emissions.
Energy inputs into a lab-grown t-bone?
LOOK, YOUR SHOE'S UNTIED!
LOOK, YOUR SHOE’S UNTIED!
The whole argument about how lab-grown meat will allow you to eat foie gras guilt-free feels an awful lot like a solution in search of a problem to sneak up behind, tap on the shoulder, and then duck out of the sight of.
To solve the problem of tormenting the duck’s immortal soul even after its death strictly for human consumption reasons, we immortalized the duck’s liver cell lines so that we can feed them and keep them growing, even after its death, strictly for human consumption purposes.
In 2050 we will still be trying to invent fire again after the failed Communist Chinese takeover of Taiwan.
All of the preppers will still giggle thinking of the flailing of all the globalists who starved to death in their homes after online orders could no longer be delivered following the first nuclear exchange.
Lab meat is going to turn out to be a health disaster. It will take years off your life expectancy. Slather it in margarine and flush it.
Not AI robo hookers? Eventually everyone will be using intelligent sex toys.
by 2050 technological creativity will have ... freed us from the constraints of biology
Yep, we'll be "free at last" -- just like MLK. 8-(
But meat lovers in general will make more ethical food choices as it gets easier, cheaper, and more delicious to do so.
And you can find what you regard as "ethical food choices" on the banks of the Rubicon.
I recall AC Clarke saying that he never doubted that humans would walk on the moon but he didn't predict that we'd all be watching it.
What Golden Age SF writers in general missed were advances in communication and information. So AFAIC the question is what are missing now?
5 Technologies That 5 Billion Will Use by 2050
I'd like to take this opportunity to note that 3D printing and Bitcoin didn't make the list.
Great article, thanks!
Jiva Web Solutions
Web Design Company
https://www.jivawebsolutions.com/web-designing-in-toronto
Web Design Company | Ecommerce Website Development Toronto
Jiva Web Solutions Toronto, a pioneer in eCommerce website development Toronto expertised in ecommerce website development, website design, eCommerce website design, and web design services.
Phone
1-855-611-5482
Email
info@jivawebsolutions.com
Location
East Tower, 77 City Centre Dr Suite 501,
Mississauga, ON L5B 1M5