I remember these ads from when I was in high school. I remember thinking that the technology required to make these things happen may never actually
exist.
But with the invention of the internet, and nanotech, we have not only achieved most of the things featured in these "Have you ever....You Will" ad
campaigns, but we have SURPASSED most of the tecnology.
Like the ad that says: "Have you ever sent a fax...from the beach?".
Well, email has almost completly replaced the fax.
or another: "Have you ever tucked in your child from a pay phone?"
Well....no....we dont really have alot of payphones anymore!!
So here are the ads, compiled into one youtube video.
Reminds me of an interactive show at Universal Studios that was created in the 90's, based on the terminator films.
It has a little film that plays before the show, it’s a “commercial” from Sky Net and it shows a girl being tucked in by a robot while her
father talks to her on something that looks just like the webcams we have today.
I believe all but two have successfully been implemented or at least been made possible in some way or another.
The "groceries paid for all at once" hasn't happened, IMO, not because we couldn't do it, but because of social evolution and practical issues
with people making pricing mistakes and what-not. And the "doing business in a language we don't understand" is not quite at the level they portray
here (although it is possible on a lesser level).
Really, the only "prophecy" that was wrong was the claim that AT&T brought us any of it!
Wonderful find indeed.
Take into account most of the technology we use now has been developed for years, but are commercially/economically viable now.
When i was in school we went on a school trip to Madrid's SIMO (IT and new technologies fair) around 1992-93, i remember an exhibition about
videoconferences where you could talk with people in either Barcelona or Paris (people from the company who was doing the exhibition of course). This
may seem trivial now, but back then i was amazed, more so when one of the helpful attendants told me the technology was workable since the late
70's-early 80's. I still blame that moment for the birth of my actual geeky self.
This is kind of like what my boss was telling me. He said back in the 50's or so someone came to his school and said "In the future you will paint
with a spray can." That at the time sounded impossible but lo and behold we use spray paint all the time. It really is neat how this stuff turns
out. Wish I was around when someone said "In the future Microsoft will rule the world so invest now." lol
Funny how every "in the future..." depiction includes some sort of robo-butler or servant AI who can comprehend complex and abstract orders and
carry them with absolute efficiency but speaks in a Mac II voice synth monotone
Well, not being American and not having AT&T as an available service provider, I have never seen these ads, but I'll be very interested to see how
accurate they are when I get home, where I have speakers.
I'll make a more informed comment then. Just posting this to submit to the thread for later
All those technologies existed then. What didn't exist was the backbone network to service and deliver the technologies over a wide area.
I kind of envy the innocence of the generation that has always know televisions and computers.
I fear though that said technology has rendered many just a little more stupid because it now takes less brain effort to find information out.
It's as if people have all these great information resources, but no idea what to do with the information they are resourcing other than to
regurgitate it to someone else who can actually use it.