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Some Hopeful Predictions for 2018 (nbcnews.com) 75

NBC asked 15 "top science and tech leaders" for their predictions for 2018. Despite arguments that technology has "created a monster," one anonymous reader sees their answers as a reason for hope: NBC notes the detection of gravitational waves in 2017 (predicted almost a century ago by Einstein) and the creation of genetically modified human embryos. And a professor of molecular medicine at The Scripps Research Institute points out that in 2018, more than 10 different medical conditions are now also moving forward in gene-editing clinical trials, including rare eye diseases, hemophilia, and sickle cell anemia. He predicts that in 2018, deep machine learning "will start to take hold in the clinic, first in ways to improve diagnostic accuracy and efficiency of doctors' workflow."

Former ICANN head Esther Dyson predicts we'll also begin using big data not only to reduce healthcare costs, but also social problems like unemployment, depression, and crime. "With big data, and more data available through everything from health records and fitness apps to public data such as high school graduation rates and population demographics, we are increasingly able to compare what happens with what would have happened without a particular intervention...with luck, some communities will lead by example, and policy-makers will take note."

The head of the atmospheric science program at the University of Georgia notes that already, "We now have technology in place to provide significant lead time for landfalling hurricanes, potentially tornadic storms, and multi-day flood events." And Dr. Seth Shostak, the senior astronomer at the SETI Institute, predicts that in 2018 "it's possible that a replacement for Pluto will be found," while an astrophysicist at the American Museum of Natural History adds that in 2018 the European Space Agency's Gaia Mission will determine "distances to over a billion stars and velocities for several million," creating "an exquisitely detailed 3D map of our home galaxy."

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Some Hopeful Predictions for 2018

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  • by rainer_d ( 115765 ) on Monday January 01, 2018 @09:31AM (#55843119) Homepage

    the Alien spaceships they've been hiding all the decades.

    If not that, 2018 will show a trickle of news-stories that will help sink in the notion to the general public that there's something out there, but as long as there's stuff on Netflix and breakfast-TV, people can carry on...

    Why do you think there's been this recent surge of superhero films?

    In 2001, when "24" showed a black POTUS, I read a story where somebody was quoted with the sentence "The American public can only imagine what they already saw on TV".
    They could only elect a black president because they saw it on TV.

    • 24 also predicted a woman president after a black president. Unfortunately, that did not happen.

      • We got an orange president.
      • It was close, though. At least, from a number of votes point of view.

        The problem was Hillary being Obama's side-gig for a while and messing up too much at that job and then having that aura of being entitled to the presidency, like it's some sort of throne and she's the heir. That doesn't run too well with the general public not in the US and not so much elsewhere.
        You can be a heir - but then you have to have a spotless job-record.

        Also, the makers probably underestimated the divide between large cities and

    • If we had alien space ships, Trumps would have spilled the beans in the first month. If people had hid it from him, by now they would have been replaced with people that would not spill the beans.

  • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • I have little hope for 2018. Tech advances aren't going to solve the major issues we have, and the increasing prevalence of things like Big Data are likely to make them even worse.

It was kinda like stuffing the wrong card in a computer, when you're stickin' those artificial stimulants in your arm. -- Dion, noted computer scientist

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