0:40 -- Facetime video 0:45 -- Jpeg, spreadsheets 0:50 -- Amazon Prime 0:55 -- iPhone; iPad, etc. 1:10 -- Email 1:22 -- Google Alerts 1:45 -- decline of newspapers 2:15 -- End of daily commuting (Oops, sorry. Not quite.) 2:50 -- Single worldwide timezone. (Nope) 3:15 -- Communication satellites. 3:50 -- Contact with non-terrestrials 4:35 -- SmartWatches 5:00 -- Downsides of technology Not a bad record as a prognosticator.
Clarke was absolutely brilliant... and cleverly witty. One of my favorite quotes is, "I don't believe in astrology; I'm a Sagittarius and we're skeptical."
To be fair, he saw the early stages of the Internet before anyone even knew what a cpu network even was. People don't remember that AT&T/Bell Labs were once at the forefront of networking.
Technically you are right, I misused the acronym CPU, but typically people use CPU to represent a computer as a whole. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_processor
@@guilhermesilveira5254 none of which were even mentioned in this interview. Here he is stating what he thinks will happen over the next few decades, and he was absurdly accurate
Even as a little girl, I listened to this man very carefully. I knew he was stating facts that would come true later on. ...and wow thankfully I listened. I was more prepared than I thought I would be about the technological advances Dr. Clarke was describing here. Extraordinary man. Ahead of his time.
@@nyccollin He predicted the internet, search engines, video calls, smartwatches and smartphones which tbf were similar to concepts already in many pieces of sci fi like star trek but he also predicted at how society would be changed drastically by this invention(look at a post iPhone world) he also predicted how due to all these systems people would not need to travel and could work at home through video chat and computer software through all of these inventions and wouldnt need to travel along along with many other predictions.
i got recommended this in 2021.folks hope you are all ok. arthur c clarke was amazing. now I'm reading his books on an electronic device. he would be proud.
Clarke was a great ambassador for science and technolgy in popular culture. He's like your favourite uncle who can discuss groundbreaking ideas in a way that you'd imagine you'd talk to someone over a cup of tea. I'm sure he had a far more in depth grasp of many technolgies than he presented in many of his novels (so as not to overwhelm more casual readers than some them - probably in technology industries or academia, etc.).
Relax people. What Clarke is stating here was already then mainstream discussion topics among computer science academia. These are not his prediction nor ideas alone. Alan Kay had already envisioned portable Tablet computers 5 years prior. Most important, Douglas Englebarts groundbreaking lecture showcasing the first real graphical user interface in 1968. He made a video conference call, showed off the keyboard and mouse combo, introduced a file system, monitor, word processor, real time editing and much more. It was called "the Mother of All Demos." and it changed everything.
Umm, we are relaxed. Please provide links to back up your argument. Next you're going to tell me that satellites were a common subject in the scientific community in 1945.
Additionally, inspired by the fiction of Jules Verne, Tsiolkovsky theorized many aspects of space travel and rocket propulsion. He is considered the father of spaceflight and the first person to conceive the space elevator, becoming inspired in 1895 by the newly constructed Eiffel Tower in Paris. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Konstantin_Tsiolkovsky
Kamakiri Sassorichan Google "the mother of all demos" and you will see in 1968, what the mainstream press was discussing regarding Computer Science. This interview is 7 year after THAT
This guy was a visionary. Some would say mistakenly a prophet, but he was only way ahead of the people of his time. Probably he helped to shape the future that is now our present. Unfortunately one of two, we do not see people like him nowadays or we are not inteligent enough to recognise them.
5:00 Wow!!! THIS GUY IS A GENUINE Genius! mobile phones not even invented yet and hes talking about how people are just going to ignore phone calls and the social implications of that. I kinda wish we would have received a alien transmission so this guys dream could have come true.
Only the 'not commute' part did not come true. The rest is astonishingly true. That has just inspired me to read more about Arthur C.Clark, so I'm off to read now...
when this interview happened there was already a rudimentary internet. look at the history of the internet. called the ARPANET the first connection was from UCLA to SRI (Stanford Research Institute) in 1969. by 1971 they had 14 nodes in operation by years end they had 19. 10 more in 1972. ethernet demonstrated in 1974 (everything was using coaxial cables up to this point). 61 nodes in 1975 (they were also using satellite communication from NORSAR [Seismic monitoring and modeling seismic data] to SDAC [Seismic Data Analysis Center]). by 1976 computer scientists at UC Berkeley are revising a Unix system to incorporate TCP/IP protocols (the main internet protocol we use now). someone that had their mind facing towards the future, knowing what was already available at the time, could easily see what can and will come about.
Pretty sure, that stumped investors, in the late 80's & 90's just looked back to this guy, and said, "ok, he's right! That would be pretty cool! Let's just try do do what he said!" And along came the internet and cell phones.
He should get more credit for his ideas, Kubrick turned his book into 2001 a Space Odyssey. Long before the internet Clarke's ideas were being fed to an enthusiastic audience. Truly a mentor of genius.
The Dick Tracy reference was obvious to anyone that had a flip-phone back in the mid 90's. This was released about the time of the smartwatch. I'm guessing holographic projecting wearable devices will shadow the Apple watch before the next decade.😁👍
The global pandemic put that to a test. Telecommuting proved that many tasks can be accomplished by a wide variety of workers. Not all occupations have come up to speed yet.
@@nickrich56 Moving the tasks that can be completed to homes frees up transit capacity for those who must travel. What are some examples of occupations that you've found that can't be WFH or "work from zone" where the zone is a place near home where people can converge to do the work?
In all honesty he COULD have "predicted" such things, BUT, does anyone think that it's possible that people that ended up creating these big businesses of such technology that we have today originally got their ideas from things like this? Because in all seriousness I feel as though he is SPOT ON with literally everything he said, almost so much so that it leads me to believe that that is the case.
in the end it doesn't matter if innovators and scientists got inspired by people like this. 40 years in the future is too long a time to be able to control the result. two many variable parameters introduced for such a long time. this guy makes amazing predictions and obviously had great accurate visions of the future.
noiserrr Yea making those things a reality is one thing, I was just talking about the generalized ideas of those types of products and services that he was talking about.
Dr. Clarke got most of his predictions from watching and listening to what was already around him. Star Trek was showing up and Mr Clarke based on what he saw at military and science labs was that someday the everyday person will be able to enjoy such technological luxuries too. Before people thought these technologies would only be for the elite and the military, but Dr. Clarke took it a step further and said that these technological advances will be available for all. In other words, science fiction do inspire scientists and inventors, and the technologies that scientists and inventors make also inspire science fiction writers to be more creative. It is wonderful really, otherwise we wouldn't have the dynamic so aw-inspiring science fiction world we have today and the technologies that came out of them. It is really a cycle, round relationship, not a straight line.
It seems that of all the people who responded to this video, know very little about Arthur C. Clarke. Clarke was not merely science fiction writer. He attained first-class degrees in mathematics and physics from King's College London, (the highest honors classification and indicates high academic achievement.)
He wasn't "predicting" anything. He knew what was coming, because he obviously knew what was being developed (most likely one of the many few that did at that time). Technology is developed many many years in advance of what we get in the market place, but a lot of people just don't get that.
Of course he was predicting. While these things were being developed, there are countless dead ends along the way that require a truly intelligent mind to distinguish between. For example, it was difficult to imagine in 1969 that humans would become so disinterested in space travel that development along that front would stagnate so severely. Technological development requires investment, and investment requires public interest. A futurist has to know not just what can be done, but when it will be done.
I can imagine the majority of people who were living in 76 calling Clarke a "quack"....we'll, think about the current tech visionaries and how we accuse them of the same thing :)
If this wows you, look up a 1947 short story called "A Logic Named Joe," in which the Internet society is EXPLICITLY presented, the author just gets the terminology wrong. It includes streaming video, cyber crime, and the unwritten rule that all Artificial intelligence functions like a member of 4chan.
where do you think apple, google, amazon etc were "shared" the ideas? This man gave the ideas to the great American companies. He predicted that the transistors were going to be so small that everything he says would be possible.
He said travel would decrease....so far, folks use their communications devices and travel vehicles at the same time around here.🙄 He missed it on satellite communications too. Underwater cables carry international communication. Aint gonna be no space aliens either.
Everyone is speaking about this man's foresight with all of our technology but I think most if not all of it already existed. It was invented for and used by the military. There are countless interviews with Military people who are now retired and speak of the public always lagging 50-100 years behind what has already been researched and developed. All of it thanks to our tax dollars of course.
It must've been painful knowing that you are aging during the cusp of a technological explosion. Like if you asked me if I would have preferred the culture and experience of growing up in the 80s-90s vs 2000s, I would choose 2000s for the technological changes we've experienced.
I remember when Clarke was nominated for a Knighthood, one of the UK tabloids saw that he was a single gay man living in Sri Lanka and assumed the worst. (This was while the Gary Glitter scandal was ongoing - but Clarke was moved to Sri Lanka because he loved SCUBA diving.) Investigations found nothing suspicious, and Clarke was formally Knighted by Prince Charles in 2000.)
0:40 -- Facetime video
0:45 -- Jpeg, spreadsheets
0:50 -- Amazon Prime
0:55 -- iPhone; iPad, etc.
1:10 -- Email
1:22 -- Google Alerts
1:45 -- decline of newspapers
2:15 -- End of daily commuting (Oops, sorry. Not quite.)
2:50 -- Single worldwide timezone. (Nope)
3:15 -- Communication satellites.
3:50 -- Contact with non-terrestrials
4:35 -- SmartWatches
5:00 -- Downsides of technology
Not a bad record as a prognosticator.
Frank Drebbin he predicted the Internet in 1964 I think he invented a time machine 😂
Frank Drebbin fix 2:15 !
@@dotslashsatan was about to say that!
@@dotslashsatan yup it's now happened ..
3:50 1977 - Close Encounters, 'Einstein was one of them.' And, this Gent, too.
Clarke was absolutely brilliant... and cleverly witty. One of my favorite quotes is,
"I don't believe in astrology; I'm a Sagittarius and we're skeptical."
Nah. Just a science FICTION author.
@@nyccollinHe was a skilled military radar operator and instructor who wrote a non-fiction book critical to the Berlin Airlift years later. 💁🏻♂️
👉🏻@@nyccollin 👈🏻
I've checked your channel. Lots of bullshit. No science all nonsense. Why do you continue to rant about the flat earth?
It's amazing how this man had so much foresight. He right
This man was a futurist about 40 years ahead of his time .. wow
39 years ago Arthur C. Clark predicts... well, today.
To be fair, he saw the early stages of the Internet before anyone even knew what a cpu network even was. People don't remember that AT&T/Bell Labs were once at the forefront of networking.
Cameron Owens What is a cpu network?
Technically you are right, I misused the acronym CPU, but typically people use CPU to represent a computer as a whole. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_processor
Today we don't have mars colony, conscious computers, etc. Clarke was wrong.
@@guilhermesilveira5254 none of which were even mentioned in this interview. Here he is stating what he thinks will happen over the next few decades, and he was absurdly accurate
Even as a little girl, I listened to this man very carefully. I knew he was stating facts that would come true later on. ...and wow thankfully I listened. I was more prepared than I thought I would be about the technological advances Dr. Clarke was describing here. Extraordinary man. Ahead of his time.
A true futurist. So much respect.
Nah he didn’t know shit. Just a good science fiction author.
@@nyccollin He predicted the internet, search engines, video calls, smartwatches and smartphones which tbf were similar to concepts already in many pieces of sci fi like star trek but he also predicted at how society would be changed drastically by this invention(look at a post iPhone world) he also predicted how due to all these systems people would not need to travel and could work at home through video chat and computer software through all of these inventions and wouldnt need to travel along along with many other predictions.
i got recommended this in 2021.folks hope you are all ok. arthur c clarke was amazing. now I'm reading his books on an electronic device. he would be proud.
Clarke was a great ambassador for science and technolgy in popular culture. He's like your favourite uncle who can discuss groundbreaking ideas in a way that you'd imagine you'd talk to someone over a cup of tea. I'm sure he had a far more in depth grasp of many technolgies than he presented in many of his novels (so as not to overwhelm more casual readers than some them - probably in technology industries or academia, etc.).
You might say that, considering he more-or-less invented global communication geostationary satellites in 1945.
@@d4b To onvent something = to figure out how to build it. He did not, only phantacized about them. Albeit on solid tchnical basis, surely.
@@ehgerritszoon1621 that is the greatest spelling of fanta-sized i have ever scene, well done sir!
He is such an amazing person.
Of all the wonders of the modern technology. This video is one of the top mind-blowing of them all!
He also predicted virtual reality and gaming in his 1956 in his masterpiece "The City and the Stars"
Relax people. What Clarke is stating here was already then mainstream discussion topics among computer science academia. These are not his prediction nor ideas alone. Alan Kay had already envisioned portable Tablet computers 5 years prior.
Most important, Douglas Englebarts groundbreaking lecture showcasing the first real graphical user interface in 1968. He made a video conference call, showed off the keyboard and mouse combo, introduced a file system, monitor, word processor, real time editing and much more. It was called "the Mother of All Demos." and it changed everything.
upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/1/16/Teslathoughtcamera.jpeg
Umm, we are relaxed. Please provide links to back up your argument. Next you're going to tell me that satellites were a common subject in the scientific community in 1945.
Additionally, inspired by the fiction of Jules Verne, Tsiolkovsky theorized many aspects of space travel and rocket propulsion. He is considered the father of spaceflight and the first person to conceive the space elevator, becoming inspired in 1895 by the newly constructed Eiffel Tower in Paris.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Konstantin_Tsiolkovsky
I didn't know this video, thanks.
Kamakiri Sassorichan Google "the mother of all demos" and you will see in 1968, what the mainstream press was discussing regarding Computer Science. This interview is 7 year after THAT
3:08 dat smile after the far out joke. Arthur C Clarke thought of everything Apple and Google did. Good stuff.
Arthur C. Clarke looks more cogent every year. Amazing foresight!
One of the best.
Imagine all the newspaper executives laughing at Mr. Clarke for saying they'd be replaced by digital media.
Wow! And to think this interview is from 1976. He was spot on with his predictions.
Yeah but satellites are fake. They really don’t exist.
👉🏻@@nyccollin 👈🏻
Explain how you got this reply to your comment then. I'm waiting.🤔
This guy was a visionary. Some would say mistakenly a prophet, but he was only way ahead of the people of his time. Probably he helped to shape the future that is now our present. Unfortunately one of two, we do not see people like him nowadays or we are not inteligent enough to recognise them.
Awesome to see this! Thanks for posting!
Maybe he was just good at concealing his time traveler identity.
I worked for Western Electric (Allentown Works) 1977 to 1989. People don't realize how many things were brought to them by the Bell System.
What an insightful man he was a genius!🤨📱💻🖥️
Clarke being prophetic as usual!
The man was brilliant.
Well, he did live long enough to see the rise of the Internet and Google, and smartphones. It just took 30 years after this interview to do it.
Because these technologies were exported from ETs and know when he lived.
5:00 Wow!!! THIS GUY IS A GENUINE Genius! mobile phones not even invented yet and hes talking about how people are just going to ignore phone calls and the social implications of that. I kinda wish we would have received a alien transmission so this guys dream could have come true.
Your name is Conan. That's awesome.
+Conan read his books stop wasting ur time
its not like he was the first one Nikola Tesla talked about the same stuff in 1905
Conan *You show your age very well by your Comment....*
And before Atari games!
This man was a genius.
1976 was the year when the company was founded that would create the "ideal device" envisioned by Clarke: Apple Computer.
This is a really good intrerview. He predicts the internet, cell phones and HD TV. :-)
Very informative and entertaining!
I met him several times. He used to come to the same swimming club as I did.
Did he touch you
Holt Shit watching this on my smartphone feels weird :D
Interviewr: Did people think your idea about communications satellites was far out?
Arthur C. Clarke: Well they are far out, 36,000km out!
Brilliant!
That's is a Dad joke.🥱
@@dmull6776 yes, the best type of joke :)
Sorry but it’s all fake. I know space seems fun and all but it’s all fake.
@@nyccollin There's no space?
@@nyccollin 👈🏻🤣what a moron🤣
amazing. watching this on my smartphone.
I actually read his book on the transatlantic telephone cable.
Very interesting
Wow, best futurist that ever was
Only the 'not commute' part did not come true. The rest is astonishingly true. That has just inspired me to read more about Arthur C.Clark, so I'm off to read now...
The Covid era has proved the "not commute" statement true. People are working as efficient from home and some travel to work from leisure clubs.
This guy blew my mind with the today things that were pouring out of his mouth.
Let's not forget that the then amazing Teletext was launched in 1974, two years before this interview. That was Ceefax on the BBC.
Wow, futurist author Arthur C. Clarke was already an old man even in 1976! Amazing!
I am seeing it from my smartphone..xoxoxo!
Clever ain't the word!
"Will I dream Dave?"
HAL 9000
"Don't commute, communicate".
when this interview happened there was already a rudimentary internet. look at the history of the internet. called the ARPANET the first connection was from UCLA to SRI (Stanford Research Institute) in 1969. by 1971 they had 14 nodes in operation by years end they had 19. 10 more in 1972. ethernet demonstrated in 1974 (everything was using coaxial cables up to this point). 61 nodes in 1975 (they were also using satellite communication from NORSAR [Seismic monitoring and modeling seismic data] to SDAC [Seismic Data Analysis Center]). by 1976 computer scientists at UC Berkeley are revising a Unix system to incorporate TCP/IP protocols (the main internet protocol we use now). someone that had their mind facing towards the future, knowing what was already available at the time, could easily see what can and will come about.
He was predicting that the internet will used by everyone, not just the military and high class elitist areas. >_>
He's talking about smart phone way before
20 years before the internet. His vision of what the future could become is amazingly accurate.🤯
Pretty sure, that stumped investors, in the late 80's & 90's just looked back to this guy, and said, "ok, he's right! That would be pretty cool! Let's just try do do what he said!"
And along came the internet and cell phones.
He should get more credit for his ideas, Kubrick turned his book into 2001 a Space Odyssey. Long before the internet Clarke's ideas were being fed to an enthusiastic audience. Truly a mentor of genius.
How did he know about HD TV? And why are we still commuting?
Be a visionary! Dare to dream big, work hard, and life will follow.
he is the smartest
Still watching in 2021
I wish he could have seen an Apple Watch
The Dick Tracy reference was obvious to anyone that had a flip-phone back in the mid 90's. This was released about the time of the smartwatch. I'm guessing holographic projecting wearable devices will shadow the Apple watch before the next decade.😁👍
1945, sees into the future and realises that a communications satellite is feasable, total genius.
It’s all made up.
👉🏻@@nyccollin 👈🏻
Is this a fake reply?🤔
1:53 Don't commute, communicate.
The global pandemic put that to a test. Telecommuting proved that many tasks can be accomplished by a wide variety of workers. Not all occupations have come up to speed yet.
@@nickrich56 Moving the tasks that can be completed to homes frees up transit capacity for those who must travel.
What are some examples of occupations that you've found that can't be WFH or "work from zone" where the zone is a place near home where people can converge to do the work?
@@nickrich56 Those are occupations just waiting to be put out of business by those willing to embrace the digital transformation.
Did Mr. Clarke happen to give us the solution how to connect a flash drive to the Ipad and have the contents of that stick show on the screen?
🤣🤣🤣 the good ol days
In all honesty he COULD have "predicted" such things, BUT, does anyone think that it's possible that people that ended up creating these big businesses of such technology that we have today originally got their ideas from things like this? Because in all seriousness I feel as though he is SPOT ON with literally everything he said, almost so much so that it leads me to believe that that is the case.
Good question! I think a lot of engineers and inventors are inspired by science fiction in a way, and vice versa.
in the end it doesn't matter if innovators and scientists got inspired by people like this. 40 years in the future is too long a time to be able to control the result. two many variable parameters introduced for such a long time. this guy makes amazing predictions and obviously had great accurate visions of the future.
noiserrr Yea making those things a reality is one thing, I was just talking about the generalized ideas of those types of products and services that he was talking about.
Dr. Clarke got most of his predictions from watching and listening to what was already around him. Star Trek was showing up and Mr Clarke based on what he saw at military and science labs was that someday the everyday person will be able to enjoy such technological luxuries too. Before people thought these technologies would only be for the elite and the military, but Dr. Clarke took it a step further and said that these technological advances will be available for all. In other words, science fiction do inspire scientists and inventors, and the technologies that scientists and inventors make also inspire science fiction writers to be more creative. It is wonderful really, otherwise we wouldn't have the dynamic so aw-inspiring science fiction world we have today and the technologies that came out of them. It is really a cycle, round relationship, not a straight line.
😂 😂 😂 I love how the interviewer pretends like she understand what he is talking about. She is probably thinking “What a nutjob!”. 😂 😂 😂
maybe she does, and it's just you assuming she doesn't
Holy balls this guy was on point.
Cool, will it ever happen?!
The nerd in me really enjoyed this.
L. Ron?
Go to work! Slacker!!
It seems that of all the people who responded to this video, know very little about Arthur C. Clarke. Clarke was not merely science fiction writer. He attained first-class degrees in mathematics and physics from King's College London, (the highest honors classification and indicates high academic achievement.)
He wasn't "predicting" anything. He knew what was coming, because he obviously knew what was being developed (most likely one of the many few that did at that time). Technology is developed many many years in advance of what we get in the market place, but a lot of people just don't get that.
Of course he was predicting. While these things were being developed, there are countless dead ends along the way that require a truly intelligent mind to distinguish between. For example, it was difficult to imagine in 1969 that humans would become so disinterested in space travel that development along that front would stagnate so severely. Technological development requires investment, and investment requires public interest. A futurist has to know not just what can be done, but when it will be done.
How many are the "many few"? Or how few...?
Nah he was just a time traveler. If you ever needed proof here it is.
Kelo60 My thoughts exactly, also Derren brown is a witch
wow signal was a year later than this interview.
Wow, I love that guy
That's rather creepy!!! 0:33 just got way more creepy! I think he is from the future.
Arthur clark is light years away from asimov
I can imagine the majority of people who were living in 76 calling Clarke a "quack"....we'll, think about the current tech visionaries and how we accuse them of the same thing :)
he must have a DeLorean in his garage ...
Wow what a guy ..
If this wows you, look up a 1947 short story called "A Logic Named Joe," in which the Internet society is EXPLICITLY presented, the author just gets the terminology wrong. It includes streaming video, cyber crime, and the unwritten rule that all Artificial intelligence functions like a member of 4chan.
There was a radioplay adaptation of that story for the show X-Minus One in the 50s. The acting is not bad. You can download it with your logic device.
1:37 he didn't predict Internet Porn though
He was right now i guess we need to save the rainforest or something
where do you think apple, google, amazon etc were "shared" the ideas? This man gave the ideas to the great American companies. He predicted that the transistors were going to be so small that everything he says would be possible.
Well I can't see any of those predictions happening...
😄! Maybe you are blind and that's y u can't see
Newspaper. He was correct!
Look up Nikola Tesla's predictions for a real shock.
He said travel would decrease....so far, folks use their communications devices and travel vehicles at the same time around here.🙄
He missed it on satellite communications too.
Underwater cables carry international communication.
Aint gonna be no space aliens either.
We get all that, *AND* the junk.
i don't think we'll ever have a singular time zone. it doesn't make any sense to have one
I wish she had asked why not now?
Everyone is speaking about this man's foresight with all of our technology but I think most if not all of it already existed. It was invented for and used by the military. There are countless interviews with Military people who are now retired and speak of the public always lagging 50-100 years behind what has already been researched and developed. All of it thanks to our tax dollars of course.
It must've been painful knowing that you are aging during the cusp of a technological explosion. Like if you asked me if I would have preferred the culture and experience of growing up in the 80s-90s vs 2000s, I would choose 2000s for the technological changes we've experienced.
not me
DAE hate Comcast?? Lol Xd
wow this is amazing, but its a shame this will be posted on reddit and the video will be fucked
lol Apple Watch ! Sir Clarke, love u !!
Shame he was wrong about 2001......
Wow..I wonder can he also pick out lottery numbers
Anyone else tripping balls right now, because I am.
OMG put the subtitles on and skip to 4:46. He predicted much more than technological advancement! Prepare your tinfoil hats!
Beam me up Scotty.
He never lived to see humans contact aliens .
Wow
I remember when Clarke was nominated for a Knighthood, one of the UK tabloids saw that he was a single gay man living in Sri Lanka and assumed the worst. (This was while the Gary Glitter scandal was ongoing - but Clarke was moved to Sri Lanka because he loved SCUBA diving.) Investigations found nothing suspicious, and Clarke was formally Knighted by Prince Charles in 2000.)
Homophobes are morons. Who gives a shit what people do in private. It is the 21st century afterall.
jesus christ these comments are stupid. just enjoy the video instead of poking holes in it too fill some kind of validation fro yourselves
That reporter had no idea what the fuck he was talking about 5:20
LONG. LONG. BEFORE TODAY. THEY KNEW
And in the end all the technology you were excited would come turns out to be the method by which the oligarchs are instituting a police state.
well...he is wrong about when he says we won't be getting junk
Star track was on then .beem me up bitch.
1976="You're an insane conspiracy theorist!"
2021="You're a genius!"