Fictional technology is proposed or described in many different contexts for many different reasons:
- Exploratory engineering seeks to identify if a prospective technology can be designed in detail, and simulated, even if it cannot be built yet - this is often a prerequisite to venture capital funding, or investigation in weapons research.
- Propaganda often emphasizes a speculative potential of a specific technology in order to stimulate investment in it, or a counter-technology. This is a common motivation in any society dominated by a military-industrial complex. See also militarism, technological escalation, arms race.
- Advertising which emphasizes some amazing potential of some technology that is "under development" (usually without any specific timelines) by a company that is seeking simply to present itself as being competent with technology. See also vaporware, persuasion technology.
- Science fiction which explores the social or political or personal impact of some technology through storytelling.
- List of emerging technologies a more serious field.
Examples of such fictional technologies are:
- Reversible cryonics
- Simulated reality
- Mind uploading
- Molecular assembler, Universal constructor
- Faster-than-light Travel, Warp drive
- Tachyonic antitelephone
- Time travel
- Space elevator or Skyhook, although Google was revealed to be working on plans for a space elevator at its secretive Google X Lab location.
- Transporter
- Terraforming
- Dyson Sphere, Matrioshka brain
- Star lifting
Many technologies were fictional for a long time before they became real, such as:
- hypertext, e.g. the World Wide Web
- rocket pack
- atomic bomb
- expert system
- genetic engineering
- radiological weapon
- mobile phones
- Quantum computer
- Artificial intelligence
There are also technologies that have been proven to work beyond question, but currently are not practical given the alternatives, i.e. there is a more appropriate technology for that purpose:
- General purpose robots (only economically feasible with rather drastic energy and material subsidy, or in extremely hazardous applications that, arguably, no one should really be doing at all). However, note that specialized robots are widely used in industrial production.
- death ray (there are easier methods of execution)
- jet pack (as yet impractical)
- antimatter weapon (with current technology, antimatter cannot be produced in sufficient quantities to be used as weapons)
Proposals for further development of these are thus more and more likely to be seen as fictional, misleading or amusing. Robot toys for instance have become popular. One could argue that the atomic bomb, given the consequences of its use, also belongs in this category.
Other articles related to "technology":
... Randolph instituted a Bulletin Board System, enhanced by the donation of a 1200 baud modem in 1984 by local television station WAAY-TV ... The bulletin board was entirely custom software running on the PDP-11 ...
... Theories of technology often attempt to predict the future of technology based on the high technology and science of the time ...
... National Taipei University of Technology (國立臺北科技大學), one of the most prestigious universities in Taiwan, is located in the Daan District of Taipei City, Taiwan ... renamed Provincial Taipei Institute of Technology (臺灣省立臺北工業專科學校) in 1948, and served as a junior vocational technical college ... In 1981, it was renamed National Taipei Institute of Technology (國立臺北工業專科學校), and in the 1990s upgraded its junior college status to that of a university, resulting in the final name ...
... Graphic Arts Communication Industrial Education Technology Application and Human Resource Development Institute of Applied Electronics Technology* Mechatronic Technology ...
... reasoning by James Rest Dehradun Institute of Technology, Dehradun - a premier engineering college of India Delhi Institute of Technology Detroit Institute of Technology Dublin ...
Famous quotes containing the words fictional and/or technology:
“It is change, continuing change, inevitable change, that is the dominant factor in society today. No sensible decision can be made any longer without taking into account not only the world as it is, but the world as it will be.... This, in turn, means that our statesmen, our businessmen, our everyman must take on a science fictional way of thinking.”
—Isaac Asimov (19201992)
“Our technology forces us to live mythically, but we continue to think fragmentarily, and on single, separate planes.”
—Marshall McLuhan (19111980)