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|    rec.arts.sf.misc    |    Science fiction lovers' newsgroup    |    3,290 messages    |
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|    Message 2,463 of 3,290    |
|    Bernard Peek to J. Clarke    |
|    Re: cases where SF has predicted scienti    |
|    17 Jan 14 08:02:12    |
      XPost: rec.arts.sf.written, rec.arts.sf.science       From: bap@shrdlu.com              On 17/01/14 00:35, J. Clarke wrote:                     >> Perfect application for a pod system. If your fridge forgets to order       >> the milk you can just order it online. It should be delivered in less       >> time than it takes to drive to the store.       >       > Since it takes me zero time to drive to the store that I am passing on       > the way from work, how will this help? And how much will the individual       > pod delivery add to the cost?              That's certainly true now. With a pod system in place that local store       probably won't be there, there wouldn't be enough trade to justify it.              As to cost, the closest we have ti it right now is the postal system. So       my best guess is that a pod delivery will probably cost about the same       as posting a letter. Having all of your weekly groceries delivered in       one shipment might cost twice that.                     --       bap@shrdlu.com                            >       >>>> Hell, we already have       >>>> approximations of this with companies like Amazon. The main thing       >>>> stopping progress on improved logistics are the dopes who keep thinking       >>>> they need to drive everywhere in cars to do things manually.       >>>       >>> The thing that is stopping progress is shipping charges. It's cheaper       >>> for me to go a half mile out of the way on the way home than it is for       >>> the grocer to deliver.       >>       >> Of course if the grocer used self-driving vehicles delivery charges       >> would be a lot less.       >       > Why would delivery charges be a lot less? The gas to get from the store       > to my house and back costs more than the milk.       >       >>>>> When I can park the plane in the lower level of a       >>>>>> multilevel underground parking garage get back to me.       >>>>>       >>>>> That one might be possible if a flying car can be a normal       >>>>> car too. The cost of getting the wings stowed well enough       >>>>> so it can operate like a normal car in the highest density       >>>>> situations like a parking garage would be a real challenge tho.       >>>>       >>>> Again, such a future is a fool's dream.       >>>       >>> The flying cars currently in development in Israel can be parked in a       >>> typical garage., so it's hardly a "fools dream".       >>>       >>>> Like I said, if I work on the       >>>> 20th floor, it makes no sense for me to have a flying car that forces me       >>>> land it and park some distance away, walk to my building, and then get       >>>> in an elevator to get me back up into the sky.       >>>       >>> The car doesn't force you to do that, the building does. You really       >>> think that they're going to tear down the Empire State Building and       >>> replace it with something that accomodates flying cars just for your       >>> convenience?       >>>       >>>> That's stupid thinking       >>>> that fails to actually do the world building exercises that create a       >>>> believable future.       >>>       >>> No, the "stupid thinking" is thinking that a city can be rebuilt       >>> overnight at no cost to accommodate a change in transportation.       >>       >> That's true, which is why I have difficulty seeing the transition state       >> between what we have now and what is technically possible with even       >> today's technology.       >       > That's because you see "either/or", not "in combination with". You see       > "all cars are self-driving or no cars are self-driving" when the reality       > is that self-driving cars for a long time will share the road with       > regular cars and if they can't survive in that environment then they       > will not be marketable. You see "all cars are flying cars or no cars       > are flying cars" and when the reality will be that some wealthy people       > will have flying cars that share facilities with regular cars and that       > the number will gradually increase as economies of scale come into play.       >       > Everything that is technologically possible is not beneficial or       > desirable you know. It is technologically possible to turn the entire       > planet into a radioactive wasteland for example. Just because we _can_       > do something doesn't mean that we _should_.       >       >              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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