by SteveVeilStream on 1/6/25, 10:58 AM with 7 comments
Of course, there have also been a lot of other technologies that were a tough sell and never took off. In hindsight, we assume we would have been able to tell the difference but we're probably wrong about how good our forecasting ability would have been.
What's a technology today that is seeing a lot of skepticism and limited uptake but will have a massive impact over the next 10-20 years?
One idea that comes to mind is pre-fab housing kits/components. People have been trying to make it work for a long time but it's never been able to achieve scale. I think it will finally reach a tipping point.
by brucehoult on 1/6/25, 12:08 PM
Internet replaced (and far surpassed) proprietary corporate and government communication systems such as X.25, Compuserve, ATT.net, AOL.
Linux replaced proprietary OSes. It is the biggest mobile platform (Android) and the vast majority of servers, MacOS is a parallel and largely compatible Un*x, and Windows is slowly being assimilated by WSL.
RISC-V is going to replace proprietary instruction sets such as x86 and Arm. Never entirely, of course, just as Mac and Windows and IBM S/360 have never gone fully away. They just lose their relevance to most people, and especially new users.
I was using internet in 1989 when New Zealand universities got the first 9600 bps full time connection to Hawaii, and a local BBS I was using (Actrix) got a connection to the local university. I was then able to telnet to BIX in the USA instead of using crazy expensive X.25. Usenet groups and email updated in real time. It was amazing. Limited then, but clearly the future.
I was experimenting with MkLinux part time on my PowerPC Mac in 1996, and x86 Linux on a borrowed Pentium 60 a year before that -- I had a contract to connect an app on the Mac to a mysql database on Linux. I bought a machine, a Pentium Pro 200, specifically to run Linux full time at home, in 1997. Linux also was limited at the time, but clearly the future.
RISC-V is the same now, and I've believed so since I bought my first board, a HiFive1, in December 2016. RISC-V is already well established in embedded uses, taking significant market share from Arm and virtually killing off everything else. In the last two years RISC-V has started to appear in cheap (close to Raspberry Pi price) SBCs and in 2024 in low end laptops.
I was playing around with various internet access methods in the 90s, including a weird system with download via a satellite dish but outbound data via modem which I got in I think 1997 (IHUG SatNet). And playing around with Linux.
Both started to feel really serious when I got both a cable modem and Ubuntu in 2004.
I think RISC-V will hit that stage in the next 12-24 months.
by gregjor on 1/6/25, 1:11 PM
I can't predict the future. If I had any insight I would invest today and not tell anyone about it here.
by JoeAltmaier on 1/6/25, 2:07 PM
Anyway, I'd guess Neural Implants. The next thing for rad body-mod hardcore net-citizens. Then a fad for hipsters. Then everybody has it. That's the path I predict.
by rstuart4133 on 1/7/25, 3:32 AM
Like the internet, it will require everyone and every company on the planet to converge on the one protocol which probably will be FIDO2 or something very close to it. Like the early internet running over POTS (plain old telephone lines) we don't have the hardware yet.
Yet it seems like we are getting groping towards a solution. Surely it must arrive one day.