reply to post by Karlhungis
I think the comment about the vacuum cleaner was not to be taken literally. I think it was a hyperbolic way to say that nuclear power would be
ubiquitous.
Now we all know that nuclear power plants have not lived up to their purported potential and in some cases have actually increased the price of
electricity.
However, we are now witnessing a resurgence of enthusiasm about nuclear energy that might lead to just about everything being powered by nuclear
generated energy, in one way or another.
As for the video, although I think some of the cited specifications were a bit much I think it will be possible to build something like that by 2020
or sooner, but the form-factor will probably not be ideal and some other miniaturized PC will be what we actually see.
For one thing, the cell phone industry has introduced a number of phones with non-tactile keypads, which have not been received very well, even if the
phones that sport them have been popular--think Razr.
I think that people will for the most part want to be able to input data without having to stare at the keypad. That's why touch-typing was invented
for the now-archaic typewriter.
I remember a quote by an electronics engineer back in the seventies who said that even if someone does invent a 100 watt amplifier that will fit in
the palm of your hand, you'll still need some place to put the knobs.
Well, for a while it looked like knobs had gone the way of the running board, but now I do think their making a comeback on some electronic devices,
because they're easy to find and easy to regulate.
Videos like this are not really meant to give us a picture of the future, but rather to make us hungry for the future.
[edit on 2008/5/5 by GradyPhilpott]