Don't be ridiculous, fingers are to stubby and inaccurate to be used as an input device for a highly precise peace of technology. What lunacy will you suggest next, speak to the machine and it will do what you say?
I loved tomorrow’s world . I discovered it at a very young age perhaps 5 or 6 as it was on before top of the pops ,our U.K. chart program featuring current bands . There was always something of interest on tomorrow’s world even for the very young
Beautifully presented by Judith Hann, like a graceful swan on a nightmarish technological lake, at any moment disaster could strike, but she just keeps gliding along ;-).
One thing I appreciate about this is that she doesn’t exagerate and oversell the thing. She isn’t overexcited and screaming, she isn’t claiming that in the future we will even wipe our asses with touchscreens. She even said that it’s not gonna replace keyboards. They really tried to understand what touchscreens could be good for and made a report of it. I wish every tech journalism nowadays would be like this.
used to watch the gadget show and wondered how much of it was legit and how much of it was an advert, just garbage trying to sell things. turns out what I was really looking for was tomorrow's world!
@@luminaspargo4630 Everything back then was for giving information or for giving entertainment. Now both those thing combined and a your news station tries to entertain you as much as it informs you however those interests conflict because if your country is left wing it'll but unpopular or un-entertaining to hear pro right wing content and viceversa. More views = More money = More corruption
I remember a store in the early mid 90s where you could make your own personalized greeting cards and they had a touch screen greeting card maker, the first touchscreen I'd ever seen. It was mind blowing 🤯
Yeah I remember something like that too. It was basically a pen plotter with a window where you could watch it draw the card. I was about 10 and absolutely fascinated with it.
At a shopping mall near me around 1995 they had a touchscreen with a map of all the stores and some other info. We were completely amazed, although it would be quite pathetic by today's standards.
I've never seen an old show predict the future of technology so persicely. Usually depictions of the future from the past are off by a mile, and even though this wasn't too long ago, it's still very impressive.
I remember a Horizon programme to mark the Queen's Silver Jubilee by looking at the next 25 years of her reign. I'm pretty sure they predicted that we'd have flat screen TVs by then. Only about 5 years out.
Well, having lived though the evolution of tech from the 70s to now.. She'll be impressed by the computing power and capabilities, but will also say it was inevitable.
There have always been tech savvy women and there will always be. The same very much goes for men. Women did all the programming on the moon lander, and women coded large parts of the technology used in the internet.
smartphone?? Huh?? Don't you mean iPad or Android tablet? All the uses she describes are available on iPads and iPad Pro with Apple Pen. I would be showing her that instead of a smartphone. A smartphone is a personal device while tablets are used commercially from couriers to cafe's.
I find it interesting at 5:12 when she talks about an electronic cheque book communicating with the bank. Often when people make predictions about the future, they can only see current practices improved slightly - having the computer read your signature - rather than completely new things, like passwords or fingerprints replacing the need for a signature at all. I find that quite interesting, how hard it is for many people to think of entirely new ways of doing things.
Before the time of planes and cars, the fastest way to travel long distances was by way of boat. They imagined a time when boats could fly or float above the surface of the water. They didn't realize at the time that the car or plane would become a thing.
I remember way before the iPhone was announced, people were speculating that Apple would make a phone, and some of the mockup pictures I saw on Google Images were... a bit off. One of them had a touchscreen with a simulation of the iPod click wheel on it
These kinds of shows are being explained to an audience that doesn’t have the capacity to see future applications. They want to know how these technologies would improve their current life at this moment. Passwords and fingerprints were too far into the future and they don’t have any working mechanical examples to demonstrate to their audience, like they’re doing on this show. Viewers need something tangible they can see and be amazed by and not theories that are too far beyond what is available.
I can tell you what the future is , well it is happening today with a select few but one day SOON you will have YOUR THOUGHTS monitored, or more to the point AI will be monitoring your thoughts. Look up "Remote neural monitoring". You can check out the victims of this technology by youtubing TARGETED INDIVIDUALS , In short they are victims deep state harassment and directed energy weapon attacks. I am not joking and I know what I am talking about.
@@Daniel-xv5jq Not only that, TV then actually treated you as if you had intelligence. Now it's just spoon-fed garbage. Even the documentaries are pretty shallow.
I miss the feeling that I had back then... when anything was possible, just before I learned that corporations kill people for money and you can build objects to last forever, but built-in obsolescence was needed, to keep the economy going. No hope for the human race.
I remember "playing" on my mom's PalmPilot all the time. It had absolutely nothing on it remotely interesting for a kid but just playing with the device itself was a thrill.
I grew up watching this. Great stuff. Every Thursday just before Top of the Pops? They should bring it back, I need help keeping up with all the latest stuff. It's all happening so fast.
Tony Fisher TW Was not just about electronic gadgets.I remember because as a youngster I used to hate the sections in it,that were about medicines and new ways of operating on people.It was as much about science as it was technology.The gadget show is all technology.
I was born in 1991, and only in the last few years have I seen a restaurant server using iPads to take orders. Most of the things she is talking about have happened in the last 10 years. Amazing.
@@ohmygahdbilly Yup, but I tend to agree with Jobs on this point. Stylyses are a terrible primary input device. Before the iPhone many PDA/Smartphones needed a stylus to input data or make choices. Now they are completely optional for most people.
@@jackkraken3888 oh believe me I'm with you there, If I need to use a stylus I'll just use a notepad instead, I don't want to have to keep more shit charged than I already do.
@@ohmygahdbilly yup I mean I don't agree with everything Apple died but their design for the iPhone was definitely revolutionary. They solved a very hard problem that many companies tried and failed to solve.
@Gilgamesh Sorry dude but that's not fair. Sure Jobs didn't craft the iPhone with his bare hands but he basically lead the teams to the final products. This in itself is not an easy task. Many have tried and failed to make mobile computing popular.
Some of the chain restaurants near me have touchscreen devices for ordering and paying now. I think what Tomorrow's World missed was the idea that if your order is being taken on a touchscreen device, you don't actually need a waiter to stand there and do it for you - you can just use the touchscreen yourself.
If you think about it, the more we hear about useless technology, the more we’re advanced. What else can we invent aside from the things we already have?
Ever since I was in middle school in the mid to late 80s I dreamed of having a pocket computer some day. In 1993 I had a palmtop computer that was monochrome bluish green screen. Three years later I had a full color one. Then in 2003 I had a Sony Clique (or whatever it was called) which was basically a prototype of a Smartphone 4 years before they were available but 7 years before they were ubiquitous. Its great seeing the evolution of technology ... better still to see it match & exceed my expectations!
And here we are, 25 years on, with those much beloved little computers that your cheerful parcel man hands over to you, along with a an old biro that's standing in for the long lost stylus, so that you can have a jolly time fighting the lag as you attempt to put anything remotely resembling your signature on it's horrendously scratched up and battered old screen. It's a fine line between practical and a practical joke.
Delivery (WinCE, Psion) handhelds do not need to be iPad quality, they are a tool to execute a job, and they are tried and tested (and yes, often old) technology - if your parcel wasn't tracked correctly due to a bug in some fancy schmancy new device, I am sure your impatient old self would be MORE annoyed. What do you *expect* a device that is a TOOL, to look like - mollycoddled and pristine? It's a TOOL, not a stroked and polished consumer toy - it's SOLE purpose is to get the job done, not to make you coo and fawn over how sleek it is. You get your parcel, what does it matter? It WORKS, and there's an old saying which is pertinent to this example: _"If it ain't broke don't 'fix' it"_
+unlokia - Yeah, I was kinda joking. Awkward. I do find it funny though how you have a bit of a go at me about slagging off the efficiency of old computers, yet four minutes before doing so you leave a comment on here echoing exactly what I said about the lag... "By the time that screen catches up with the stylus it will BE TOMORROW, therefore that appointment she scheduled would be redundant... whoops!"
97channel The computer being used in the video IS NOT what couriers use, it is ancient. You were referring to the perceived "downsides" with *current* devices, which seems a total non issue. Anything else?
plus, the computer the delivery driver uses is designed to take the worst punishment that any driver can throw at it: bouncing around in his truck's map pocket, dropped onto hard concrete or Macadam/Asphalt, be used in harsh weather conditions where water can get onto it, and it usually has to connect to a database that is at least 5-10 years behind the latest technology, the latest iPad can't hope to survive any of that outside of a 3rd party case. case in point: my employer (a VERY well known Big Box Store) still uses Mototola MC9000 series mobile computers running Windows CE for inventory management. a lot of them look like crap, but they all still work for what the company needs.
TDCatTech here in Australia we’re getting our first 4K TV channel on a pay TV over Satellite from October 2018. The techs are very busy installing dishes on the roofs of houses and apartment buildings in HFC cable areas. The HFC cable will be used for the internet.
Reminds me of the purchase mistake I made back in the day when VHS was all the rage - sold the telly to pay for it. I also bought Windows 95 because 'everyone should have it' , did not realize you needed a computer to go with it. Same with going into cyberspace, did not realize that was the same as the World Wide Web but I needed an upgrade before I could get internet?? I asked the internet guy asked what plan I wanted, I asked if I could have several kilos of internet a per month then just laughed and I don't understand why??!!? Like my computer repair person was also joking with me saying there where chips in computers...haha...how many fries do you want with your typerwriter board...some people...back in my youth we didn't even have telephones, you had to write down in the book at the post office to use it and pay for it. You kids with your SeeDeeROMs and modems and portable cordless phones don't know how easy you have it. I had to walk 2 miles to make a phone call.
I remember that the pharmacy here had some kind of touch-screen game of whatever inside the waiting area (no idea why or what it could do, I was 4 or so). That was 1992. But those were overlays on top of a normal CRT, which were far more common already as far as I know. As it was more broken than in working order, I have no idea what it could do. The difference is that this was an integrated thing ánd did not need a CRT.
+Derek Leung I don't think these 'computers' will ever become anything, but this white thing this man had in his hands, with this rocket shaped thing that put black points on this neat white sheet, what was that?! Amazing!
now I'm watching this live at my parents home with my younger self. It was pretty funny when people sent me to psychiatric wards because I was telling everyone about my cool friend who every now and then would come out of nowhere just to watch tv with me when I was alone. Took me years inside those walls to realize the thing is: I just, for some reason, can travel back and forth in time and also take my extra degree of freedom given by the 4th dimension to move around in space as I will.
OK, a few questions that might arise because of my comments: Q1) How did you get such "powers"? A1) I do not now yet, but this information is (or will be, to you folks living in 3d) available in April 5 2032. I just chose not to look at it, nor do I intend to watch my death. Q2) The way you are describing yourself as a 4-dimensional who can also meet itself in different times, are you not just talking about the time-travel problem? A2) No, as I understand where such question might come from, I can tell you that 3-dimensional beings (or even inanimate objects) exist individually in each 3-dimensional space of the infinite 3d spaces that exist along the 4th dimension. What I do is take my 3d body and mentally observe the 4 dimensional space. Then, what is left is to focus in one point of the 4th dimension axis (or an instant in time, if that nomenclature suits you more). My 3d body then leaves that 4d point e goes to the other one I chose. Q3) So... you could just make a massive army of different temporal instances of your 3d body? A3) Yes, but there is an agreement to not pursue such methods anymore. Great wars occurs (or occurred, depending if you are a 4d'er) in 200 BC in australia, no one could win, since everybody's army was infinite. Right now, looking as far as the year 3000 AD it seems like the agreement still stand. But that can change.
There was a 'touchscreen' type interactive display at the Science Museum I visited in grade school, probably around _1980._ As I recall, it was set up so that you could draw on the screen with up to 16 colors. I was impressed.
Probably a crt, with a pen connected to the screen. It worked somewhat how dunkhunt worked on crt, but instead of blanking the target, the screen got scanned and if the pencil pickedup the right signal, it would know where you would have pointed to the screen.
We used touch plasma screens with laser pens for our time clock and showing when work was completed at McDonnell Douglas (Florida Production) back in 1984. Each work step had a bar code and we would wand in when it was completed.
Wow, it's amazing to see how far things have come in just 3 decades. I may have lived through it (Tomorrow's World used to be 1 of my favourite shows), but it's only when look back at something like this that you really feel how far things have come.
I'm very proud of the people who've worked hard to create/ upgrade these amazing inventions from the beginning of time. If not for them, we would be trying to figure all this out today and not have what we have yet. 🙂
Industrial operator interfaces are almost all resistive touch screens and were actually one of the first widespread uses of touch screen technologies. They work with gloves and are wildly cheaper than the elaborate and inflexible array of buttons and indicators they replaced.
Back then I never dreamed that the the technology that amazed me most in 2020 was I can track the pizza delivery guy from pizza hut in real time, and know exactly where my pizza is after it leaves the store
um, lots of people use stylus pens to write onto Samsung notes and I wished that my police phone had a stylus and handwritting recognition software to write statements and notes of police jobs I attended, but no, had to type everything in on the on the touchscreen keyboard.
Always a 'must watch' in our house from soon as I can remember watching TV. Was sad to see it go. This should be brought back in some form or other by the BBC. So much crap on the all channels these days, it would be good to have an intelligent and informative programme once in a while. There HAS to be room for it surely !
My thoughts exactly! As a kid who wasn’t particularly into science, this programme always fascinated me and totally agree it should be bought back with actual experts not high energy yooth presenters though! 😅ps there is a program on bbc news called Click and the beeb would probably reply that’s the replacement 😕
“Not likely to replace keyboards” I like that bit. The two exist together and at the same time, I’m even using one on a touch screen to type this out. It’s nice to think about.
I loved Tommorrows World, I watched Judith Hann and co as a kid, and as a teen the Howard Stableford (sigh!) and then the fab Phillippa Forrester. It was never patronising, always entertaining and accessible, and gave a tech and science interested kid like me a palpable look into the near future. They got the odd thing wrong, but they mainly got it very right. They did a reunion show fairly recently which I thoroughly enjoyed. BTW some commenters don't know what a chequebook is, well it was a rectangular book with detachable pages printed with your bank details and you'd sign them with an amount on to pay someone with.
Ha ha, can't believe that there are adults who don't know what a cheque book is! I guess in years to come there'll be adults who don't know what cash money is.
It’s fascinating and crazy to watch this knowing that this hi tec has already been and gone and is now even more advanced. I was surprised to hear them already calling it HD rather than high definition. Back then broadcasters were still saying television instead of TV.
I remember seeing touchscreen technology in the film 1995 Clueless where Cher got a computer to match up her outfits and thought it was really cool as a nearly teenager. Now it is an intrinsic part of our lives in the modern world and we could not be without it. My flate father was a computer engineer and said he had used touchscreens in the 1970s at a job he had which amazed me it was used that far back in terms of how technology was capable of doing things.
1991 feels so recent, yet the future tech they're talking about looks so ancient, you forget how advanced our current tech actually is considering the time frames we're working with
While computer technology advances at a phenomenal rate, the stylus (including handwriting recognition, etc.) took so long to develop and mature that we had a generation of people who were so used to using other input methods that the stylus was outdated. You can use your finger to point, or if you need to write you can type faster than writing.
Thursday was such a good evening to watch tv. Best of the week. TotP, Tomorrows World. Usually some comedies, then Horizon would clash with Fawlty Towers.
The pen-based computer being shown at the Jaguar plant is a GRIDpad, the first commercially available handheld pen computer, which was introduced in 1989. It uses a conductive grid printed on glass and a conductive stylus. It was designed by Jeff Hawkins, who was at the time the vice president of research at GRID Systems, and later founded Palm Computing.
In 1974 when I was 12 I had a dream that I was holding my tv in my lap and pushing my finger on the screen where the little characters on the screen would move to where my finger had touched the screen.
So weird, I was born in 91 so I remember growing up with the transition to all the new technology, but now we are so used to it 4K television, touch screen devices etc it’s hard to remember ever not having it
They have been around since the 60'ies. Been working with touch screen controlled industrial equipment built in 1979. It was quite impressive back in 2010 that they had been around for such a time...
I still remember seeing a Tomorrow's World segment on Bluetooth and how it was going to be put in toasters and ovens and fridges to allow them all to talk to eachother.
It's really not all that wild when u realize all this stuff started being developed in secrecy in the 60s and 70s. It's not like the 90s was just full of "predictions." They knew what was coming bc they were creating it.
Well, I think that the difference is that technology has turned around so much: back then, new technology made things easier. These days, it seems that technology is only making things more complex...
This is such a cool idea. If they can make it small enough to fit in your pocket and add color to the screen then they will sure to have something huge going. Keep it up !
I know we are making a lot of jokes here but realize this, in 28 years we have nearly perfected something that was thought to be impossible. Just imagine what we think is impossible now. Whatever you think is impossible now, will be on shelves at your local Walmart for $49.99.
Yeah, it's a tough one because we seem to have pretty much plateaued with the form factors we have. Cellphones couldn't get much thinner, we already have paper thin, foldable touch screens. Surely someone will finally work out how to make holograms a thing
JSMachineWorks Well they still haven’t, even the iPad has had a keyboard option available for quite a few years now. Typing just simply doesn’t hold up without any physical feedback.
When I went to Disney World in 1989 as a kid, they had a color touch screen with a videophone to help you navigate across the park. I was amazed by it. Outside of Disney World, which had fancy futuristic gadgets, nothing like was that around in the regular world. Makes me wonder what is in Disney/Epcot Center today.
@@AtheistOrphan LOL! I also went to DW in 1989 (my third time actually). I don't remember the touch screens in the park, but I'm pretty sure I do remember them being around in various places. I can't give any specific examples though. Maybe museums?
@@TheAbandonedAccount7 I was 16. As I say, it was my third time. The others were when I was in primary school. I live in the UK. I don't think I appreciated at the time how lucky I was jetting off on holiday to all these far away places. I have two bothers, but they are much older than me, so we didn't really grow up together. I was jetting off to Florida, St. Lucia, Tenerife and Malta and their typical family holiday was a caravan in Wales! LOL!
I've watched Click but see it as nothing but a low budget tech highlight show, and I expect a lot more from my £145.50 when the last few years literally the only BBC show I've watched is Doctor Who.
Presenter in 1991: We’ll be using touchscreens with pens having handwriting recognition from now on. And soon afterwards, in 2015 - Apple Pencil is released.
Meh, Most everything we have today existed in the year 2000. Cell phones, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, laptops, Flat screen televisions... We now have better versions of those things, but everything was there... Except tablets. Those weren't a thing.
@@DonVigaDeFierro Self driving cars, drones, 3D printers, fully automated warehouses, and checkoutless shops. All exist today but didn't 20 years ago and all will be commonplace in 10 to 20 years ago, all vastly improved on what we have now. The reason you say meh is because you aren't looking forward to what is coming, but back at what has already been with us for quite some time now.
I am a Guitar teacher and for my Master Thesis, I am writing a paper on New Digital Media in Guitar Tuition, using music Apps in my lessons? I seem to remember an episode of Tomorrows (early 90s) world where they mentioned about one day , being able to fit a whole music library on a device the size of a pack of plying cards.
1991 = people using touchscreens productively
2019 = people using touchscreens to watch videos of people in 1991 use touchscreens productively
Haha. Meta!
Don't forget using pens, now poking at things on Facebook endlessly scrolling.
Just what i was thinking 😁
New meTa
😂😂😂
“These will not replace keyboards, but will certainly revolutionize the way we use computers”
Wow, she was spot on.
Ever thought maybe all of this is preplanned
A conspiracy by the keyboard companies working alongside Tomorrow's World
@James Declerk Yes, it was spot on.
@@boskee bet you James Declerk watched the video and typed his comment on a touchscreen device i.e. smart phone/tablet.
In fact it did somewhat replace the keyboard, it became the keyboard.
Touch screens... HA! what's next... wireless internet?
What's an internet?
a series of tubes?
quantumcomputer a car can drive by itself and a talking car, a talking phone, a thin computer in the size of a notepad called iPad or tablet
What's the internet?
tishtash321 a herd about that it's a new fad it'll never take off 😉
I personally found it amazing that she was making videos for youtube in 1991.
r u stupid
@@TheOnlyGamingMC r u?
@@TheOnlyGamingMC no u r
😂
Wth haha
But what if you lose the pen? What are we supposed to use, our fingers?!
the pen was attached to the device...it wasn't wireless then
The King Slayer You don't get the joke, do you?
now i get it
Don't be ridiculous, fingers are to stubby and inaccurate to be used as an input device for a highly precise peace of technology. What lunacy will you suggest next, speak to the machine and it will do what you say?
Billy Hicks What, like some kind of filthy animal??
It took less than 2 decades for touch screens to take over, but we've been waiting on flying cars for almost a century.
KaibaCorp HQ or that run on water or better, urine
I would not want to live in fear 24/7 of some drunk asshole crashing through the living room ceiling in his new flying car.
already available but not affordable
@Jean Kleber no, safety is not the reason. Practicality and economics is.
Why flying cars? What problem they could solve that planes and helicopters haven't?
They really should bring this show back. It was, quite literally, ahead of its time.
I loved tomorrow’s world . I discovered it at a very young age perhaps 5 or 6 as it was on before top of the pops ,our U.K. chart program featuring current bands . There was always something of interest on tomorrow’s world even for the very young
The BBC has click which has replaced it
@@thomasdoran8604 Well the name definitely isn't as cool.
Yeah i loved TW! it broadened my horizons when i was a young lad, now i have a diploma in computer graphics.
Beautifully presented by Judith Hann, like a graceful swan on a nightmarish technological lake, at any moment disaster could strike, but she just keeps gliding along ;-).
One thing I appreciate about this is that she doesn’t exagerate and oversell the thing. She isn’t overexcited and screaming, she isn’t claiming that in the future we will even wipe our asses with touchscreens. She even said that it’s not gonna replace keyboards. They really tried to understand what touchscreens could be good for and made a report of it. I wish every tech journalism nowadays would be like this.
Well the Brits arent known for being loud and exciting. Thats what Americans from the U.S. are known for. 😀
Nope this is downplaying stuff
used to watch the gadget show and wondered how much of it was legit and how much of it was an advert, just garbage trying to sell things. turns out what I was really looking for was tomorrow's world!
Totally agree with you. She was quite pragmatic about the whole thing throughout never once attempting to sensationalise the product.
Still waiting on the 3 seashells
I feel like I'm in the future when I watch this...
We are in the future.. the present is in the 90s
Stupid comment
Wooosh?
@@diegofernandez2618 no we're in the past
Its because you ARE in the future right now. And even more and better is coming, it is ready and about to smash our faces with amazing very soon.
Can’t see it catching on myself.
Sent from my iPad
Hahahahahahaha
The Tech Giant I’m on iPad too.
"Wow, that comment is so retro."
-Sent back in time from my nose controlled iCoral in 2090
The legend says this ipad will be a trash in under 20 years from now
Lol, you forgot to remove the "sent from my iPad". Idiot 🤦♀️
2:02 "There's no keyboard or disk drive, so it's easy to use on the move"
Dude's got a cinderblock strapped around his neck...
There's STILL no keyboard or disk drive...
Ville Pakarinen ok zoomer
Haha. Been laughing at this comment for 10 mins now!
Wait no disk drive? Does it alteast got hard drive?
what neck
I appreciate how down to earth Tomorrow's World was. They didn't exaggerate or mislead, just stuck to the facts and realistic possibilities.
Those were the days, concise, accurate programmes delivered by articulate professionals. Gone forever!
If they had it now they would arguing about what is a woman.🤦♂️
RIP
TV was a source of info back then. Now you have pc so it's up to you to find good content. Hard, but feasible.
@@freespeechisneverwrong9351 Pftt.
@@luminaspargo4630 Everything back then was for giving information or for giving entertainment. Now both those thing combined and a your news station tries to entertain you as much as it informs you however those interests conflict because if your country is left wing it'll but unpopular or un-entertaining to hear pro right wing content and viceversa.
More views = More money = More corruption
A screen I can touch? Outrageous! I'm not getting electrocuted.
sounding like anti vaxxers and anti maskers
@@2cool0 vaxxers
We're all gonna die!!
Karen's in the 90's
She specifically said to use a pen. Kid’s this days and their suicidal way. Preposterous.
"I bet I'll have this job forever" car paint checking dude.
Elon Musk: hold my beer....... Cybertruck!!!!!!
Abner Chaves what
@@supacook2000 i guess you don't understand what comment above said
Bosnian Turkey Leg the cybertruck is made from steel which doesn’t need a paintjob. It comes in the silver color that it’s manufactured in
Kicks in automation systems
I remember a store in the early mid 90s where you could make your own personalized greeting cards and they had a touch screen greeting card maker, the first touchscreen I'd ever seen. It was mind blowing 🤯
Yeah I remember something like that too. It was basically a pen plotter with a window where you could watch it draw the card. I was about 10 and absolutely fascinated with it.
At a shopping mall near me around 1995 they had a touchscreen with a map of all the stores and some other info. We were completely amazed, although it would be quite pathetic by today's standards.
@@Georgije2 malls today still have touch screen maps.
@@MikeJ2023 I know, but today that's nothing special, but in 1995 it was extremely cool, especially for us kids :)
Clinton’s Cards. Used to love using that machine
I've never seen an old show predict the future of technology so persicely. Usually depictions of the future from the past are off by a mile, and even though this wasn't too long ago, it's still very impressive.
I remember a Horizon programme to mark the Queen's Silver Jubilee by looking at the next 25 years of her reign. I'm pretty sure they predicted that we'd have flat screen TVs by then. Only about 5 years out.
She said trump would win 2024
Watch the original star trek and be amazed....
I miss the flip-phones Star Trek predicted.. : /
@@mulletman1705 Name checks out. Someone find his Grindr profile!
I wish I had a time machine and travel back in time and show this lady my ultra-modern smartphone and see her reaction :)
Well, having lived though the evolution of tech from the 70s to now.. She'll be impressed by the computing power and capabilities, but will also say it was inevitable.
She is a smart woman, and sadly most of the women today are not so smart when it comes to technology.
There have always been tech savvy women and there will always be. The same very much goes for men. Women did all the programming on the moon lander, and women coded large parts of the technology used in the internet.
smartphone?? Huh??
Don't you mean iPad or Android tablet?
All the uses she describes are available on iPads and iPad Pro with Apple Pen.
I would be showing her that instead of a smartphone. A smartphone is a personal device while tablets are used commercially from couriers to cafe's.
Tablets are passé. The big money and big tech these days is in phones. But of course there's also the middle ground, like a Note 4 or something.
This program is really well made. All the transitions through tennis field to studio via TV, everything is summarized and shown in practice and so on.
coz people knew how to explain & communicate properly without shouting either, unlike most tutorials u see on YT
It's almost like it was made by professionals instead of TH-camrs..
I find it interesting at 5:12 when she talks about an electronic cheque book communicating with the bank. Often when people make predictions about the future, they can only see current practices improved slightly - having the computer read your signature - rather than completely new things, like passwords or fingerprints replacing the need for a signature at all. I find that quite interesting, how hard it is for many people to think of entirely new ways of doing things.
Before the time of planes and cars, the fastest way to travel long distances was by way of boat. They imagined a time when boats could fly or float above the surface of the water. They didn't realize at the time that the car or plane would become a thing.
I remember way before the iPhone was announced, people were speculating that Apple would make a phone, and some of the mockup pictures I saw on Google Images were... a bit off. One of them had a touchscreen with a simulation of the iPod click wheel on it
@@Fuzy2K that iPod thing was an actual apple prototype
@@divyamthakur Oh wow
These kinds of shows are being explained to an audience that doesn’t have the capacity to see future applications. They want to know how these technologies would improve their current life at this moment. Passwords and fingerprints were too far into the future and they don’t have any working mechanical examples to demonstrate to their audience, like they’re doing on this show. Viewers need something tangible they can see and be amazed by and not theories that are too far beyond what is available.
Loving the way the Jaguar quality controller rests his paperwork on the car whilst he fills it out. The Irony.
Al Da Keys How many paint faults on that diagram though ? 😂 Hundreds 😂
Never buy a Jag
🤣
Noticed the same. I am just a detailing weekend warrior but even on my standards that was very unprofessional move
Al Da Keys noticed that 2
paint is set and dry at that point. do you really think its so bad that ballpoint paint is going to crack it through a piece of paper?
Who else would love Tomorrow's World on TV in 2022?
For some reason it has been renamed to Black Mirror
Yves Nyfeler Ph.D. nice one
@@yvesnyfelerph.d.8297 nice
It would be terrifying.
I can tell you what the future is , well it is happening today with a select few but one day SOON you will have YOUR THOUGHTS monitored, or more to the point AI will be monitoring your thoughts. Look up "Remote neural monitoring". You can check out the victims of this technology by youtubing TARGETED INDIVIDUALS , In short they are victims deep state harassment and directed energy weapon attacks. I am not joking and I know what I am talking about.
I miss Tomorrow's World. There was always a sense of wonder and excitement I felt as a kid watching it.
That's because you were a kid back then. Cynicism comes with getting wrinkles and receding hairline...
@@Daniel-xv5jq Not only that, TV then actually treated you as if you had intelligence. Now it's just spoon-fed garbage. Even the documentaries are pretty shallow.
@@dcarbs2979 1000000% !!
I miss the feeling that I had back then... when anything was possible, just before I learned that corporations kill people for money and you can build objects to last forever, but built-in obsolescence was needed, to keep the economy going. No hope for the human race.
We only had 4 channels on the TV back then, this was definitely one of the top shows not to miss.
I remember "playing" on my mom's PalmPilot all the time. It had absolutely nothing on it remotely interesting for a kid but just playing with the device itself was a thrill.
I grew up watching this. Great stuff. Every Thursday just before Top of the Pops? They should bring it back, I need help keeping up with all the latest stuff. It's all happening so fast.
BNCA70 just watch CNET or The Verge technology channel's
They did. It's called the gadget show.
Tony Fisher TW Was not just about electronic gadgets.I remember because as a youngster I used to hate the sections in it,that were about medicines and new ways of operating on people.It was as much about science as it was technology.The gadget show is all technology.
@@TonyFisherPuzzles 'The Gadget Show' is for brainless dicks.
There's Click on the BBC news channel
I was born in 1991, and only in the last few years have I seen a restaurant server using iPads to take orders. Most of the things she is talking about have happened in the last 10 years. Amazing.
Oh yes 💤
I really appreciate how her image on the screen looks back at him while he speaks at the end. Just a small detail but it shows attention to quality
I noticed it too..very clever
She was spot on with the “not replacing keyboards” and the writing on the screen.
true. i think people will prefer using a keyboard for a long time yet
"We will soon be communicating with machines using pens"
Steve Jobs: "Not so fast."
Imagine pretty much all modern phone's key design basically being due to some guy who hated styluses.
@@ohmygahdbilly Yup, but I tend to agree with Jobs on this point. Stylyses are a terrible primary input device. Before the iPhone many PDA/Smartphones needed a stylus to input data or make choices. Now they are completely optional for most people.
@@jackkraken3888 oh believe me I'm with you there, If I need to use a stylus I'll just use a notepad instead, I don't want to have to keep more shit charged than I already do.
@@ohmygahdbilly yup I mean I don't agree with everything Apple died but their design for the iPhone was definitely revolutionary. They solved a very hard problem that many companies tried and failed to solve.
@Gilgamesh Sorry dude but that's not fair. Sure Jobs didn't craft the iPhone with his bare hands but he basically lead the teams to the final products. This in itself is not an easy task. Many have tried and failed to make mobile computing popular.
3:15 pen casually sliding off.
linus
it even had a sound effect
7 years later, it gets noticed
haha
yesss haha
2:49 Twenty Nine years later, guess what waiters use?
Pen & paper
Where I used to work, we used ipads to take orders. They constantly lost connection to the wifi and we ended up going back to notebooks and pens.
Still quicker to use to be honest
this is only for tills...
Some of the chain restaurants near me have touchscreen devices for ordering and paying now. I think what Tomorrow's World missed was the idea that if your order is being taken on a touchscreen device, you don't actually need a waiter to stand there and do it for you - you can just use the touchscreen yourself.
while the customer using the touchscreen smartphone to work out if the tip was right or not..😂😂😂
Absolutely loved Tomorrow's World.
It was one of the reasons I got into product design.
1991 : Touchscreens are the latest invention in Modern Technology.
2020 : Wow, we have a new dog filter on instagram!
If you think about it, the more we hear about useless technology, the more we’re advanced.
What else can we invent aside from the things we already have?
@@ks_ig2728 More instagram filters lmao
@@ks_ig2728 Quantum warp drive and space travel baby!
Lmao
the only technologies that are developing right now and will change the world are autonomous machines and VR
26 years later and I STILL rarely if ever see waitstaff at restaurants using any kind of digital interface to enter orders, touch screen or not.
Garth Palmer it’s actually pretty common here in Europe
In McDonald's restaurants its standard😉
Yeah almost all restaurants have a digital pos system a lot use iPads as an interface , pen and paper at table is still more practical tho
The future is always overestimated
I live in a relatively small town and most local businesses/restaurants use iPads
I would start calling my smartphone "Personal computerized assistant"
It is!
It really is that. "Phone" is just one of it's built in functions
Or PAD like in ST:TNG
only retarded people would need a smartphone.
Siri will be offended
Ever since I was in middle school in the mid to late 80s I dreamed of having a pocket computer some day. In 1993 I had a palmtop computer that was monochrome bluish green screen. Three years later I had a full color one. Then in 2003 I had a Sony Clique (or whatever it was called) which was basically a prototype of a Smartphone 4 years before they were available but 7 years before they were ubiquitous. Its great seeing the evolution of technology ... better still to see it match & exceed my expectations!
I always wanted the calculator watch for my maths classes and weekly maths tests lol
This really increases my appreciation of the fact that I can scroll down and comment while still watching this.
Without a pen!!!
Technically scrolling up.
Touchable screens? Yeah right! Next they'll tell us that we'll be able to have handheld phones that we can carry!
thats just silly ;)
The video was from the 90's, they already had cell phones.
cleetose yes, good point. Although they hardly in wide use.
they already had them back then
urbex2007
I always wanted to use one of those...
And here we are, 25 years on, with those much beloved little computers that your cheerful parcel man hands over to you, along with a an old biro that's standing in for the long lost stylus, so that you can have a jolly time fighting the lag as you attempt to put anything remotely resembling your signature on it's horrendously scratched up and battered old screen. It's a fine line between practical and a practical joke.
funny stuff. I find it amusing that there are databases full of squiggles; rubbish signatures.
Delivery (WinCE, Psion) handhelds do not need to be iPad quality, they are a tool to execute a job, and they are tried and tested (and yes, often old) technology - if your parcel wasn't tracked correctly due to a bug in some fancy schmancy new device, I am sure your impatient old self would be MORE annoyed. What do you *expect* a device that is a TOOL, to look like - mollycoddled and pristine? It's a TOOL, not a stroked and polished consumer toy - it's SOLE purpose is to get the job done, not to make you coo and fawn over how sleek it is.
You get your parcel, what does it matter? It WORKS, and there's an old saying which is pertinent to this example: _"If it ain't broke don't 'fix' it"_
+unlokia - Yeah, I was kinda joking. Awkward.
I do find it funny though how you have a bit of a go at me about slagging off the efficiency of old computers, yet four minutes before doing so you leave a comment on here echoing exactly what I said about the lag...
"By the time that screen catches up with the stylus it will BE TOMORROW, therefore that appointment she scheduled would be redundant... whoops!"
97channel The computer being used in the video IS NOT what couriers use, it is ancient. You were referring to the perceived "downsides" with *current* devices, which seems a total non issue.
Anything else?
plus, the computer the delivery driver uses is designed to take the worst punishment that any driver can throw at it: bouncing around in his truck's map pocket, dropped onto hard concrete or Macadam/Asphalt, be used in harsh weather conditions where water can get onto it, and it usually has to connect to a database that is at least 5-10 years behind the latest technology, the latest iPad can't hope to survive any of that outside of a 3rd party case. case in point: my employer (a VERY well known Big Box Store) still uses Mototola MC9000 series mobile computers running Windows CE for inventory management. a lot of them look like crap, but they all still work for what the company needs.
A really well made programme. Touch screen devices and wide screen HD TVs, all things considered they were pretty much spot on.
Watching this on my HD enabled, widescreen, touch screen phone 28 years later.
I love this stuff. :-) Good to see it only took us 15 years to adopt HD.
Well it only took 9 years till we got widescreen TV.
TDCatTech here in Australia we’re getting our first 4K TV channel on a pay TV over Satellite from October 2018. The techs are very busy installing dishes on the roofs of houses and apartment buildings in HFC cable areas. The HFC cable will be used for the internet.
Reminds me of the purchase mistake I made back in the day when VHS was all the rage - sold the telly to pay for it. I also bought Windows 95 because 'everyone should have it' , did not realize you needed a computer to go with it. Same with going into cyberspace, did not realize that was the same as the World Wide Web but I needed an upgrade before I could get internet?? I asked the internet guy asked what plan I wanted, I asked if I could have several kilos of internet a per month then just laughed and I don't understand why??!!? Like my computer repair person was also joking with me saying there where chips in computers...haha...how many fries do you want with your typerwriter board...some people...back in my youth we didn't even have telephones, you had to write down in the book at the post office to use it and pay for it. You kids with your SeeDeeROMs and modems and portable cordless phones don't know how easy you have it. I had to walk 2 miles to make a phone call.
God I miss weekly programmes like this and Krypton Factor. TV was much better then!
programmes? This is America!
I know what you mean. There was no love island, strictly or in a celebrity back then. Television was a proper mix of entertainment and education.
Check out the Fully Charged channel on TH-cam, it's the closest thing we have
Wow, I'd forgotten about The Krypton Factor! I hope Gordon Burns is still alive.
Ok boomer
This really did predict a lot of how we use them its honestly impressive to me, i didnt know they had this tech back in 91
I can’t remember when the Apple Newton came out but I recall using a lightpen on the screen of my Vectrex back in 83/84.
I remember that the pharmacy here had some kind of touch-screen game of whatever inside the waiting area (no idea why or what it could do, I was 4 or so). That was 1992. But those were overlays on top of a normal CRT, which were far more common already as far as I know. As it was more broken than in working order, I have no idea what it could do.
The difference is that this was an integrated thing ánd did not need a CRT.
Lol just think of all the inventions shelved.
Nikola Tesla gave us free energy over 100 yrs ago.
@@TheSilverMeridian Yeah right. 'Free' energy...
Amazing to think how far technology's come in just my lifetime
Actually forget that, I wasn't born till 6 years after this lol
yeah, just think about how gta evolved from the year you was born till 2017
I'm watching this on an HD handheld portable tablet.
that's great. must feel amazing saying that watching a 20 year old video.
+Derek Leung I don't think these 'computers' will ever become anything, but this white thing this man had in his hands, with this rocket shaped thing that put black points on this neat white sheet, what was that?! Amazing!
I'm watching this as it is being recorded, in the studio, since I can move across the 4 dimensions.
now I'm watching this live at my parents home with my younger self. It was pretty funny when people sent me to psychiatric wards because I was telling everyone about my cool friend who every now and then would come out of nowhere just to watch tv with me when I was alone. Took me years inside those walls to realize the thing is: I just, for some reason, can travel back and forth in time and also take my extra degree of freedom given by the 4th dimension to move around in space as I will.
OK, a few questions that might arise because of my comments:
Q1) How did you get such "powers"?
A1) I do not now yet, but this information is (or will be, to you folks living in 3d) available in April 5 2032. I just chose not to look at it, nor do I intend to watch my death.
Q2) The way you are describing yourself as a 4-dimensional who can also meet itself in different times, are you not just talking about the time-travel problem?
A2) No, as I understand where such question might come from, I can tell you that 3-dimensional beings (or even inanimate objects) exist individually in each 3-dimensional space of the infinite 3d spaces that exist along the 4th dimension. What I do is take my 3d body and mentally observe the 4 dimensional space. Then, what is left is to focus in one point of the 4th dimension axis (or an instant in time, if that nomenclature suits you more). My 3d body then leaves that 4d point e goes to the other one I chose.
Q3) So... you could just make a massive army of different temporal instances of your 3d body?
A3) Yes, but there is an agreement to not pursue such methods anymore. Great wars occurs (or occurred, depending if you are a 4d'er) in 200 BC in australia, no one could win, since everybody's army was infinite. Right now, looking as far as the year 3000 AD it seems like the agreement still stand. But that can change.
There was a 'touchscreen' type interactive display at the Science Museum I visited in grade school, probably around _1980._ As I recall, it was set up so that you could draw on the screen with up to 16 colors. I was impressed.
Probably a crt, with a pen connected to the screen. It worked somewhat how dunkhunt worked on crt, but instead of blanking the target, the screen got scanned and if the pencil pickedup the right signal, it would know where you would have pointed to the screen.
We used touch plasma screens with laser pens for our time clock and showing when work was completed at McDonnell Douglas (Florida Production) back in 1984. Each work step had a bar code and we would wand in when it was completed.
Lightpen.
@@AndrewHelgeCox this
Lmao foreshadowing digital art since the 80s.
Uncanny.
Hard to imagine that TH-cam was launched closer to the date that this was filmed then 2022.
Linking computers by radio? not in my life-time.
Enter WiFi and then bluetooth, NFC and a myriad of other proprietary techs...
@@krashd They had it in the early-90s but it was much more brand proprietary and there wasn't yet a standard.
Tomorrow World was a great programme. I remember them doing a piece on computer mice. Great stuff.
It's funny how much this programme got right about the future.
Wow, it's amazing to see how far things have come in just 3 decades. I may have lived through it (Tomorrow's World used to be 1 of my favourite shows), but it's only when look back at something like this that you really feel how far things have come.
1991 = “These are not likely to replace keyboards...”
2019 = uses touch screen keyboard to comment.
@Michael Ortiz dang son I have some pills and they have the word “chill” written on them. I think you need to take a couple of those
Michael Ortiz Did someone take the jam out of your doughnut son? 😢😂
it's 2020 now, wake up
Tete The original comment wasn’t written “now”, in fact, it was written in 2019! There’s a lot of salty, jamless doughnuts in here tonight!
It wasn't 2019 two weeks ago, you wrote that comment in 2020.. what kind of drug are you on, son?
this feels like rick and morty's interdimensional cable
Geez, Rick that’s kind of harsh
In what sense?
honestly all old English tv shows feel like interdimensional cable
She even looks alien wtf
Every home has a plumbus...
I'm very proud of the people who've worked hard to create/ upgrade these amazing inventions from the beginning of time. If not for them, we would be trying to figure all this out today and not have what we have yet. 🙂
I'll pass. Y'all can have the touch screen back. It didn't work out as intended. Ain't praising anyone who causes this many issues in life
@@TheAbandonedAccount7 poor comprehension, eh?
Industrial operator interfaces are almost all resistive touch screens and were actually one of the first widespread uses of touch screen technologies. They work with gloves and are wildly cheaper than the elaborate and inflexible array of buttons and indicators they replaced.
Back then I never dreamed that the the technology that amazed me most in 2020 was I can track the pizza delivery guy from pizza hut in real time, and know exactly where my pizza is after it leaves the store
Only if you order overpriced pizza
Thats just a prediction, it would be too impractical to correctly track a pizza
This looks impressive but I bet it will cost a lot when its released. Still might buy one.
Hugh Mungus Is this sexual harassment?
Buy one what? BUY ONE WHAT?!?! Are you implying that I am for sale? *IS THIS SEXUAL HARASSMENT?!?!!*
Some wouldn't get it
Jus flood the market bruh
hugh mungus!
Interesting they were thinking handwriting recognition was the most natural way to type in a touch screen. But today we use a onscreen keyboard
um, lots of people use stylus pens to write onto Samsung notes and I wished that my police phone had a stylus and handwritting recognition software to write statements and notes of police jobs I attended, but no, had to type everything in on the on the touchscreen keyboard.
Because most people don't know how to use a pen these days! I can dictate to my phone and you've been able to dictate to computers for 20 years.
I use my stylus, I find it more natural.
@@domskinner7887 sry call old fashioned but I prefer pen n paper
@@FoxzyD009 pen n paper
Always a 'must watch' in our house from soon as I can remember watching TV. Was sad to see it go. This should be brought back in some form or other by the BBC. So much crap on the all channels these days, it would be good to have an intelligent and informative programme once in a while. There HAS to be room for it surely !
My thoughts exactly! As a kid who wasn’t particularly into science, this programme always fascinated me and totally agree it should be bought back with actual experts not high energy yooth presenters though! 😅ps there is a program on bbc news called Click and the beeb would probably reply that’s the replacement 😕
Clearly this is just smoke and mirrors
Carl Zimmerman hahahaha this made me crack up
Watching this on a note 9. How far we've come eh
“Not likely to replace keyboards” I like that bit. The two exist together and at the same time, I’m even using one on a touch screen to type this out. It’s nice to think about.
Using touchscreen mobile to watch this video. How time flies.
I loved Tommorrows World, I watched Judith Hann and co as a kid, and as a teen the Howard Stableford (sigh!) and then the fab Phillippa Forrester. It was never patronising, always entertaining and accessible, and gave a tech and science interested kid like me a palpable look into the near future. They got the odd thing wrong, but they mainly got it very right. They did a reunion show fairly recently which I thoroughly enjoyed.
BTW some commenters don't know what a chequebook is, well it was a rectangular book with detachable pages printed with your bank details and you'd sign them with an amount on to pay someone with.
Lol my dad still uses his :D
Ha ha, can't believe that there are adults who don't know what a cheque book is! I guess in years to come there'll be adults who don't know what cash money is.
Still eagerly awaiting that electronic chequebook to come out!
A step too far for banks 😂
It’s fascinating and crazy to watch this knowing that this hi tec has already been and gone and is now even more advanced. I was surprised to hear them already calling it HD rather than high definition. Back then broadcasters were still saying television instead of TV.
I remember seeing touchscreen technology in the film 1995 Clueless where Cher got a computer to match up her outfits and thought it was really cool as a nearly teenager. Now it is an intrinsic part of our lives in the modern world and we could not be without it. My flate father was a computer engineer and said he had used touchscreens in the 1970s at a job he had which amazed me it was used that far back in terms of how technology was capable of doing things.
I didn't realise widescreen TV's were around as early as '91.
They were not around until the day after the programme was made..
The initial, analog high definition standards were widescreen.
+RPKVids I remember seeing them a few years later in the UK, or to be more specific England.
RPKVids My first wife died in 1991 of cancer. She was only 31 years old
I'm sorry to hear that.
I wonder if she's still alive today and was able to see her prediction. Hello 2020!
@Bob Mathews Woahh!! 🤯
She's using iphone now
You are joking? People don't drop dead just because they reach the age of 40. Judith Hann is still working 29 years later. See: judithhann.co.uk/
@@nevillemason6791 wow that's great. Haha
@@nevillemason6791 She was 49 in 1991, but is 78 now, so questioning if she was still alive was certainly justified.
1991 feels so recent, yet the future tech they're talking about looks so ancient, you forget how advanced our current tech actually is considering the time frames we're working with
it really isnt that advanced...lol.
@@shamsarefin5204 it literally is the most advanced it’s ever been
While computer technology advances at a phenomenal rate, the stylus (including handwriting recognition, etc.) took so long to develop and mature that we had a generation of people who were so used to using other input methods that the stylus was outdated. You can use your finger to point, or if you need to write you can type faster than writing.
"advanced"
@@dualnon6643 relative to what? LOL!! 😂
Thursday was such a good evening to watch tv. Best of the week. TotP, Tomorrows World. Usually some comedies, then Horizon would clash with Fawlty Towers.
The pen-based computer being shown at the Jaguar plant is a GRIDpad, the first commercially available handheld pen computer, which was introduced in 1989. It uses a conductive grid printed on glass and a conductive stylus. It was designed by Jeff Hawkins, who was at the time the vice president of research at GRID Systems, and later founded Palm Computing.
In 1974 when I was 12 I had a dream that I was holding my tv in my lap and pushing my finger on the screen where the little characters on the screen would move to where my finger had touched the screen.
Wow, great imagination
Some perspective though: Touchscreen were around in the early 1980s, albeit on CRTs. Pointing devices like light pens were used in the 1960s.
Capacitive touchscreens were invented in the mid-60s. Not sure if the originals used pens or not, but I see no reason why they would need to.
So weird, I was born in 91 so I remember growing up with the transition to all the new technology, but now we are so used to it 4K television, touch screen devices etc it’s hard to remember ever not having it
I fucking LOVED this show as a kid. Devastated when it ended.
They have been around since the 60'ies. Been working with touch screen controlled industrial equipment built in 1979. It was quite impressive back in 2010 that they had been around for such a time...
I still remember seeing a Tomorrow's World segment on Bluetooth and how it was going to be put in toasters and ovens and fridges to allow them all to talk to eachother.
It's really not all that wild when u realize all this stuff started being developed in secrecy in the 60s and 70s. It's not like the 90s was just full of "predictions." They knew what was coming bc they were creating it.
30+ years later - still no better input device than a physical keyboard.
Will there ever be one?
Back when we used to embrace modern technology, and looked positively into the future ahead of us. Those were the days!
"The end of history", they called it. I wouldn't trade growing up in the 90's for anything else.
Ok boomer
@@SurinderKaur-cm4ww Look up what a Boomer is my dude. This video was from '91...
Well, I think that the difference is that technology has turned around so much: back then, new technology made things easier. These days, it seems that technology is only making things more complex...
@@SurinderKaur-cm4ww Regurgitating internet memes, is so cringe
This is such a cool idea. If they can make it small enough to fit in your pocket and add color to the screen then they will sure to have something huge going. Keep it up !
No My large Android tablet is where it's at, I bought somthing online from My tablet yesterday.
We're all 90's yuppies now!
What a dreadful thought.
1:43 using the car as a writing surface is causing all the defects 😂
I know we are making a lot of jokes here but realize this, in 28 years we have nearly perfected something that was thought to be impossible. Just imagine what we think is impossible now. Whatever you think is impossible now, will be on shelves at your local Walmart for $49.99.
cold fusion powered jetpack
holodeck
5 senses virtual reality headset
mind uploading
inter galactic flying car
wormhole teleporter
@@nat0106951 Quantum computer. Oh wait...
@@nat0106951 damn man.
Ah yes, my ‘local’ Walmart which would be roughly 4.5k miles away.
If there are Walmarts.
I'd love to see Marques Brownlee reviewing this tech. 😂
Cool tech! I can't wait to use it in my Flying car!
Careful you don't crash. Using your computer pen thing while piloting a car is a serious offence.
This video proves how much we’ve improved technologically since then. We use touchscreens all day, all night nowadays...
So in conclusion, 1991 people says that stylus is going to be the mouse of touchscreen.
Steve Jobs with his iPhone: *"who needs a STYLUS?"*
LG in 2007 "Who is this Steve Jobs and why is he ripping off our touchscreen phone design?!" 🤔
Me with my note 20 ultra, fcking very good phone, I can't whine
You don't need stylus if you don't think different.
If the BBC brought back Tomorrow's World, could we even begin to imagine how today's technology would appear in 30 years' time?
Actually i thing its still hidden😅😅😅😅
We'd probably still have paper. Pens. Cars. food on plates, and walk maybe more than we do now
We'll probably be living in Mad Max thirty years from now.
Yeah, it's a tough one because we seem to have pretty much plateaued with the form factors we have. Cellphones couldn't get much thinner, we already have paper thin, foldable touch screens.
Surely someone will finally work out how to make holograms a thing
@@TheTruthKiwi well holograms do exist,it's just that no one has figured out what to do with them outside of digital aquariums and concerts.
"these are unlikely to replace keypads"
*_*chuckles_**
JSMachineWorks Well they still haven’t, even the iPad has had a keyboard option available for quite a few years now. Typing just simply doesn’t hold up without any physical feedback.
Even the latest Macbook keyboards are annoying to type on, they haven't got to the point where they can replace a keyboard with depth in the keys.
Computers still use keyboards It's a long time before we ditch them definitely not this decade
They haven't and never will
I mean we still have them so I guess she is half right.. maybe soon we will have a full replacement like voice activated AI like siri and alexa
When I went to Disney World in 1989 as a kid, they had a color touch screen with a videophone to help you navigate across the park. I was amazed by it. Outside of Disney World, which had fancy futuristic gadgets, nothing like was that around in the regular world. Makes me wonder what is in Disney/Epcot Center today.
I also went to Epcot Center in 1989 (my first time visiting the USA). Must dig out the old photos from then!
@@AtheistOrphan LOL! I also went to DW in 1989 (my third time actually). I don't remember the touch screens in the park, but I'm pretty sure I do remember them being around in various places. I can't give any specific examples though. Maybe museums?
I went to Disney world in 89 also. I was only -5 years old, what a wild time
@@TheAbandonedAccount7 I was 16. As I say, it was my third time. The others were when I was in primary school. I live in the UK. I don't think I appreciated at the time how lucky I was jetting off on holiday to all these far away places. I have two bothers, but they are much older than me, so we didn't really grow up together. I was jetting off to Florida, St. Lucia, Tenerife and Malta and their typical family holiday was a caravan in Wales! LOL!
“Yuppie accessory”
Laughed hard
I wish they'd bring Tomorrow's World back but the BBC does almost nothing good anymore.
we have click thst shows new tech ect
ahh yes, Click....the never ending round the world jolly for Spencer Kelly.
I've watched Click but see it as nothing but a low budget tech highlight show, and I expect a lot more from my £145.50 when the last few years literally the only BBC show I've watched is Doctor Who.
Michael Parker they like keeping shows like doctor who running instead
k ly And they managed to kill Top Gear and BBC3 which were the only other things I enjoyed.
I found the HDTV CRTs piece very interesting. I had know idea that it was in its infancy that long ago.
Presenter in 1991: We’ll be using touchscreens with pens having handwriting recognition from now on.
And soon afterwards, in 2015 - Apple Pencil is released.
PalmPilot with Stylus pen in the 90's?
I bet the car paint checking dude would've not realized that his feedback is going to replace his job completely in the future.
His job is still there; and they use an ipad!
@@ChoobChoob it hardly takes weeks to find solvent spits on a paint booth side machine or robot. We still use paper anyway.
Imagine 2020's kids will look at 1990's technology and feels like what the hell is this 🤣🤣🤣
Tech will be the same in 2020 tho. Nothing has change they all still use touchscreen since the 1991😂😂
Meh, Most everything we have today existed in the year 2000. Cell phones, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, laptops, Flat screen televisions... We now have better versions of those things, but everything was there... Except tablets. Those weren't a thing.
Lmao don't you realise it's 2019
@@theMF69 2020 kids will live in 2030 ....in ten years technology will be 10x cooler
@@DonVigaDeFierro Self driving cars, drones, 3D printers, fully automated warehouses, and checkoutless shops. All exist today but didn't 20 years ago and all will be commonplace in 10 to 20 years ago, all vastly improved on what we have now. The reason you say meh is because you aren't looking forward to what is coming, but back at what has already been with us for quite some time now.
I'll stick with my quill and parchment thank you very much
Pfft, my slate and chalk is where it's at!
I prefer my cave paintings your modernist scallywags
I am a Guitar teacher and for my Master Thesis, I am writing a paper on New Digital Media in Guitar Tuition, using music Apps in my lessons?
I seem to remember an episode of Tomorrows (early 90s) world where they mentioned about one day , being able to fit a whole music library on a device the size of a pack of plying cards.