Author Topic: The Future is Now  (Read 628 times)

Offline F22RaptorDude

  • Persona Non Grata
  • Gold Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3641
Re: The Future is Now
« Reply #15 on: May 29, 2011, 01:26:14 PM »
The Terrafugia Transition isnt being worked on, they are actually for sale.
For how much?  :O

we have been living in the future ever sense man has walked the earth, tomarrow is the future, yesterday was the past.  Everyday you wake up is another day in the future, something to think about.  :aok
1 second from now is the future.
Reaper in a T-50-2 Scout tank in 10 seconds flat

Offline Penguin

  • Persona Non Grata
  • Gold Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3089
Re: The Future is Now
« Reply #16 on: May 29, 2011, 01:30:49 PM »
Future: a time that hasnt happened yet but will
Present: were in the present penguin...not the future...

I was referring to the future depicted in science fiction, where we'd have space ports and flying cars and huge cities and mobile communication devices.

-Penguin

Offline Tupac

  • Platinum Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 5056
Re: The Future is Now
« Reply #17 on: May 29, 2011, 01:31:46 PM »
For how much?  :O
1 second from now is the future.

I think they are around 160,000 dollars. Personally, I think they are a novelty item and wont ever serve much practical purpose.

Also I dont like the idea of having a snowmobile engine in my car/airplane.
"It was once believed that an infinite number of monkeys, typing on an infinite number of keyboards, would eventually reproduce the works of Shakespeare. However, with the advent of Internet messageboards we now know this is not the case."

Offline 68ZooM

  • Platinum Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 6337
Re: The Future is Now
« Reply #18 on: May 29, 2011, 01:38:06 PM »
I think they are around 160,000 dollars. Personally, I think they are a novelty item and wont ever serve much practical purpose.

Also I dont like the idea of having a snowmobile engine in my car/airplane.

You know they have been using Rotax engines for years, and are one of the most reliable engines ever made. They use them in snowmobiles because of there reliability, power to weight ratio.
UrSelf...Pigs On The Wing...Retired

Was me, I bumped a power cord. HiTEch

Offline flight17

  • Silver Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 1612
Re: The Future is Now
« Reply #19 on: May 29, 2011, 02:49:36 PM »
I think they are around 160,000 dollars. Personally, I think they are a novelty item and wont ever serve much practical purpose.

Also I dont like the idea of having a snowmobile engine in my car/airplane.
200k. They are supposed to start deliveries this year if all goes to plan
119th Riffle Tank Regiment leader -Red Storm Krupp Steel Scenario

Active Member of Air Heritage Inc. http://airheritage.org/

Offline Tigger29

  • Gold Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2568
Re: The Future is Now
« Reply #20 on: May 29, 2011, 03:04:38 PM »
It seems as if there's never been a topic about this, but the future is now!  Look around us, friends- we can communicate across the globe, we have flying cars and spaceships.  The technology of this age is astounding, and I am lucky to be so young; able to experience it all.  I cannot wait until I can help to explore space, our final frontier.

My thanks go out to the giants upon whose shoulders our world and my education stand: Einstein, Hawking, Tesla, Hubble, Graham-Bell, Mendel, Darwin and Edison, to name a few.

To sum up my point; wow, we really are in the future!

-Penguin

In order to appreciate the future you have to have understood and lived through the past.  No offense, but I am not quite sure that you're yet old enough to qualify to make that kind of a statement.

Seriously though, he does have a point, the future is here but not exactly as people would imagine it would be. They said by 2000 we would have flying cars and cities miles in the sky and interplanetary travel. Its not here yet but it is being worked on.

Again, this is where lack of experience comes in to play.  You are correct in that we don't really have any of that stuff yet but I can tell you it will be a LONG time before we do.  It's not that we don't have the technology - it's that nobody wants to assume the liability.  If someone who spills hot coffee on themselves (granted there were some questionable circumstances, but still) can sue for millions then why would a company even begin to want to produce a flying car that would be driven by someone with almost no piloting experience?!  Who would want to sell a jet pack that an 8 year old could get their hands on?  Who would want to build cities high into the skies only to be brought down by an airplane or a bomb?  (maybe even by one of those flying cars?!)  You get my point here?

Back when these technologies were first envisioned, people held themselves accountable for their actions and companies didn't take advantage of that.  Today for the consumers it's all about finger pointing and blaming everyone but themselves.  For the companies it's all about covering their butts so that they don't have fingers pointed at them and so they don't get sued into bankruptcy.  Personally it makes me sad to think of all of the technologies that we DON'T have because of this.