When the very first cars were built, only the rich could afford it, but now a large part of the population (in developed countries) has one or more.

What do you think will be such an evolution in the future?

  • sorebuttfromsitting@sopuli.xyz
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    11 months ago

    better to ask, what can the average family afford now, but it won’t be so accessible in the future?

    water.

    (where i am now, water costs money but is still doable)

    • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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      11 months ago

      The average person will always be able to afford water because if they can’t they will soon cease to be a person. Watch out for statistical effects like that because they might mask the true horror of the situation.

      • Gormadt@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        11 months ago

        That line, “Cease to be a person,” both applies to the sentiment of, “they won’t live long,” and, “when backed into a corner you see what someone can truly be.”

        Wars fought over drinkable water is not some far off fantasy but very well could (and likely will) become reality for many people.

        The future for our little mud ball drifting through space suspended on a sun beam is looking pretty damn bleak.

        • pensivepangolin@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          My grandfather told me that the next world war would likely be fought over clean water decades ago and unfortunately it looks like that was another example of what a smart man he was.

        • Yendor@sh.itjust.works
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          11 months ago

          Water for drinking isn’t the issue - that’s about 0.01% of all water usage. The issue is irrigation for food crops, which is >50% of water use in many places.

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              11 months ago

              I am a little, but compared to carbon emissions it’s not a big issue.

              It’s a localised problem, so affected areas can solve it without needing the entire planet to agree. And we already have both political and technical solutions available to us. The only reason we haven’t implemented the fixes, is because big agriculture lobbies government successfully and it costs them no votes. But if the average voter has to stop showering because of water shortages, you can bet politicians will “solve” the water crisis in short order.

        • redballooon@lemm.ee
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          11 months ago

          Where do you live? Where I am we were used to have drinkable water in abundance, and only now start taking about that maybe in summertime we need to restrict car washing or so… what you say is something else entirely.

          • sorebuttfromsitting@sopuli.xyz
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            11 months ago

            I live on the edge of one of the watersheds north of cincinnati. i know of two different rivers who would like you to turn your yard into a rock garden.

    • Ado@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      How is that better lol, it’s a completely different line of thought.

  • iamthewalrus@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Lab-grown meat.

    “In 2013, the world’s first cultivated meat burger was served at a news conference in London. It allegedly cost $330,000 to make. That figure has plummeted in the almost-decade since, but cell-grown proteins are yet to clock in anywhere close to the same price as conventional meats.” (Source: https://www.bonappetit.com/story/lab-grown-meat)

    The goal is to get the price down to a level the average supermarket shopper can afford, and if the science is successful it has the potential to revolutionize the food chain.

      • bitsplease@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        Totally agree - from an ideological standpoint I totally agree with Vegans/Vegetarians on the fact that meat produces unnecessary suffering and (more directly important to us humans) huge amounts of greenhouse gases and wasted calories. But from a practical standpoint I’ve just never been able to convince myself to make such a huge change to my diet - but lab grown meat is literally having your cake and eating it too in that regard.

        Hell I’d happilly pay 2x for a cut of meat that was lab grown instead of coming from an animal - and imagine how amazing you could make - for instance - a steak when you have 100% control over it’s fat/muscle distribution/ratio. Making a Wagyu steak, vs a typical cut would be as simple as tweaking some settings

      • weew@lemmy.ca
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        11 months ago

        I’m already fairly satisfied with the newer plant-based meat replacements. They just need to come down in price to below actual meat.

        • Dubious_Fart@lemmy.ml
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          11 months ago

          Not everyone can eat them though, for whatever reason it can cause extreme abdominal pain, diarrhea, nausea/vomiting, and more in some people.

          I know, because I’m one of those people. Took 3 impossible burgers before I noticed the pattern and looked into it.

          Felt like I was dying the first two times, felt like I was dying the third time too… but that was mollified slightly by recognizing the pattern and hating myself for doing it to myself.

      • cooopsspace@infosec.pub
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        11 months ago

        All I can think of is capitalism filling it with shit.

        Why make 50 beef burgers when I can add filler ingredients and make 100.

        Capitalism breaks everything.

        • Dubious_Fart@lemmy.ml
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          11 months ago

          I add fillers at home when I make burgers.

          Often times its just panko. Gets an extra burger or two out of the meat, and no one has ever noticed the difference. Still fantastic, juicy hamburgers.

    • richieadler@lemmy.myserv.one
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      11 months ago

      I don’t see it happening outside a reduced group of rich countries. They will probably license the method for a very high and unaffordable price.

      • iamthewalrus@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        I’m inclined to agree, at least initially. I suspect it’ll depend on how much demand and competition there is in the field once it’s democratized. The other consideration is extraneous factors (e.g. soaring price of meat due to climate change) that could make lab-grown the cheapest/best option eventually.

      • bitsplease@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        Would licensing matter outside of rich countries? I confess I know very little about patent law and things like that, but I’d imagine that if - say - Thailand wanted to use the same method as the U.S. Company, that the U.S. company wouldn’t actually be able to do anything about it, since they’re not under the same jurisdiction

          • bitsplease@lemmy.ml
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            11 months ago

            I know that, I also know that it has a relatively narrow scope, participation is by treaty and varies wildly from country to country, and often isn’t enforced well. Hence my comment

  • KaiReeve@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Free time.

    As more and larger industries become automated we will have all the free time we can handle. What we do as a society today will determine whether that free time is spent pursuing our personal interests, or fighting over the last scraps of a dying planet.

    • bitsplease@lemmy.ml
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      11 months ago

      I wish this were true, but frankly I don’t buy it. In the last 50 years, thanks to automation and technology - productivity has nearly doubled, and yet people have to work more than ever to make ends meet or buy a home. Automation just means that the ultra rich can produce more with the same workforce. The global economy is built on the idea that GDP has to be constantly growing, and the more growth the better. Why let perfectly good workers sit idle when they could be making you more money?

      Some industries get fully (or mostly) automated, sure and jobs dissapear from those industries, but new ones always pop up so that the folks at the top can continue profiting off the labor of those at the bottom. You think all the folks who used to have job titles like “Calculator” just retired at the age of 30 and enjoyed not having to work anymore? Nah, they were just forced to take new (often shittier, lower paying) jobs.

    • Barbacamanitu@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Everyone I know has to work multiple jobs and have roommates to be able to afford housing. What is this free time you speak of?

      • fatzgebum@feddit.de
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        11 months ago

        To archieve free time we have to reclaim our wealth from the rich. There is enough. We just have to redistribute.

        • Barbacamanitu@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          Agreed. I also believe we should all stop showing up for work until we are guaranteed health care, a living wage, and reasonable housing prices. We shouldn’t contribute to system that works against us.

    • teamevil@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      We have been hearing that for 35 years… production has gone up exponentially whilst labor requirements dropped yet we work more and longer than ever.

  • atlasraven31@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    Grow an organ for you from your own cells. No rejection or drugs; your body accepts it as its own.

      • snek_boi@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        A friend’s uncle paid to travel to an elite American hospital to get stem cell therapy instead of a knee replacement. While he did pay for the flight and the living expenses, he did not pay for the treatment because it was experimental. So yeah, it does cost a lot, but not because of the treatment itself. Of course, this coukd change when patents are applied and capitalism takes over the therapy.

        • suoko@feddit.it
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          11 months ago

          I wonder if patents have already been applied to the nanorobots use for treating diseases

  • haych@lemmy.one
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    11 months ago

    If electric cars follow this path and aren’t replaced with something else like enviro-friendly fuels, electric cars.

    I don’t have an electric car, I dislike how many artificially limit things like speed, it shouldn’t be a paid upgrade if the hardware is capable, the amount of tracking worries me too, like Tesla staff could see through your cabin cameras.

    I’d rather have environment friendly fuels that work with older cars, even if that requires a new ECU+Fuel pump.

    • fresh@sh.itjust.works
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      11 months ago

      Outside of the US and Canada, electric bikes look to be the future instead of mainly electric cars. E-bikes are not just massively more environmentally friendly, they’re also radically reshaping city design to be more livable. I hope the future isn’t just a different kind of car. I hope, for the sake of the environment and society, it’s a world with fewer cars.

      • theshatterstone54@feddit.uk
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        11 months ago

        But what about rural areas and long term travel? My dad, for example, has to travel about 80 miles in each direction every day to get to and from work. How long would it take him to get there with an E-bike?

        • fresh@sh.itjust.works
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          11 months ago

          This is why I said fewer cars, not no cars. Most people obviously do not drive 160 miles a day. With better infrastructure and public transportation, a 2 car family might go down to 1 car, or replace half of their car trips with other modalities, etc.

    • Walk_blesseD@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      11 months ago

      Not unless they come up with some new kind of battery tech. There’s simply not enough lithium for a global mass adoption of personal electric cars.

    • bstix@feddit.dk
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      11 months ago

      It’s already past the point where only rich people have them. It’s currently one of those things where it’s actually more expensive to be poor.

      I bought an EV because it’s cheaper over a few years than getting the cheapest gasoline beater car. It’s a bigger cost up front, but the total cost is smaller over few years.

      If anything, only rich people will be able to afford keeping the gasoline cars. Similarly to todays vintage lead fueled classics.

      • haych@lemmy.one
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        11 months ago

        I don’t know where you are, but in Europe it’s much cheaper to buy a used Gasoline car. I just got a 1L petrol car for the equivalent of $10k, I can’t find a good electric car for anywhere close to that.

        • kloppix@kbin.social
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          11 months ago

          Hello, fellow European. The starting price of electric cars is definitely the biggest issue (and there isn’t a sizable second-hand market yet).

          If you want to spend even less find out if you can convert your car to LPG. I have been driving with LPG for about 2 years and I couldn’t be more satisfied.

          According to the german Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Protection, there is not much difference in operating costs between an electric vehicle and a CNG/LPG vehicle. Source: PDF from June 2023

          But this does not take into account the price of the vehicle as such. In this case, lpg is much cheaper.

        • bstix@feddit.dk
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          11 months ago

          I am in Europe. You have to look past the purchase price.

          What I did was to compare the price of buying €3k beater cars throughout the next ten years versus getting an only slightly used EV for €21k that I expect to drive for the same period.

          The purchase price is 7 times higher, yes, but the savings on fuel, taxes and financing makes up for it it less than 6 years in my case.

          So in short, I had a pretty easy choice in getting an almost new EV instead of continuing buying and repairing scrap cars as I’d previously done for the same reasons.

          • haych@lemmy.one
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            11 months ago

            My car tax (VED) is £20 a year, Vs £0 on electric. Fuel and the extra £20 tax a year doesn’t equate to the cost of an EV just yet.

            EVs are definitely still a luxury, poor people aren’t going round with EVs.

        • Xanvial@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          Well that’s also what they said, electric cars have expensive upfront cost, but in the long run it’s cheaper (gas vs electric cost

    • illi@lemm.ee
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      11 months ago

      Afaik there are such fuels, but are much more expensive. From what I read it could shift and rich will be able to ride vehicless with combustion engines using eco fuel, while us plebs will drive electric

      • TheWeirdestCunt@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        It costs about £1.80 per litre to make your own bio diesel in the uk at the moment using supermarket vegetable oil (or even less if you bulk buy) so I don’t see eco fuels being so expensive that it’s unaffordable to anyone who can already afford a car.

        • illi@lemm.ee
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          11 months ago

          Not an expert, I just said what I heard. But how many people would be able to make fuel at home and be confident enough to pour it in their tank? I imagine there would also need to be some regulations on this.

          Buy again - not an expert.

      • root_beer@kbin.social
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        11 months ago

        Honestly, I don’t even care if that’s the case. Cars are becoming more like living rooms on wheels and less engaging overall (less about driving and more about being driven), so I don’t even care what I drive when the time comes, so long as it isn’t a piece of garbage with a shoddily-built interior. Hell, I’d rather just not have a car at all at that point, but we don’t have the infrastructure here (in the US) for that.

    • bitsplease@lemmy.ml
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      11 months ago

      it’s worth noting (not that this makes it better) - that artificially removing features isn’t a new thing with electric cars.

      It’s always been cheaper to build only the more expensive version of something, then artificially cripple it for the cheaper version. CPUs are a good example - most CPUs of a given series are basically the same hardware, it’s just that the cheaper versions will be down-clocked, or have some cores deliberately disabled.

      Before the tech existed to have heated seats be a subscription service, cars that were sold without that option, would often have the heating hardware still installed in the seats, it just wouldn’t be hooked up. Hell, sometimes literally the only difference between the model with heated seats and without was whether they installed the button to turn them on

      • Longpork_afficianado@lemmy.nz
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        11 months ago

        This statement about cpus isn’t entirely correct. In the manufacture of precision electronics, there is always a reasonable chance of defects occurring, so what happens is that all the parts are built to the same spec, then they are “binned” according to their level of defects.

        You produce a hundred 24 core cpus, then you test them rigorously. You discover that 30 work perfectly and sell them as the 24 core mdoel. 30 have between one and eight defective cores, so you block access to those cores and sell them as the 16 core model. Rinse and repeat until you reach the minimum number of cores for a saleable cpu.

        This is almost certainly not the case in car manufacturing, as while you could sell a car with defective seat heaters at a lower price point, what actually occurs is that cars with perfectly functional seat heaters have that feature disabled until you pay extra for it.

        • Perhyte@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          You produce a hundred 24 core cpus, then you test them rigorously. You discover that 30 work perfectly and sell them as the 24 core mdoel. 30 have between one and eight defective cores, so you block access to those cores and sell them as the 16 core model. Rinse and repeat until you reach the minimum number of cores for a saleable cpu.

          Except the ratios of consumer demand do not always match up neatly with the production ratios. IIRC there have been cases where they’ve overproduced the top model but expected not to be able to sell them all at the price they were asking for that model, and chose to artificially “cripple” some of those and sell them as a more limited model. An alternative sales strategy would have been to lower the price of the top model to increase demand for it, of course, but that may not always be the most profitable thing to do.

    • pjhenry1216@kbin.social
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      11 months ago

      I’d also rather have magic cars, but that won’t stop electric cars from being the next wave. At this point there’s so little advancement in new fuels that it’s effectively impossible to hope for that scenario to occur before ICE fades away.

    • vagrantprodigy@lemmy.whynotdrs.org
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      11 months ago

      Not all EVs are crazy expensive. Some of them are basically at price parity with what a gas version of the same vehicle would cost now.

  • Salamander@mander.xyz
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    11 months ago

    Full genome sequencing.

    The price of sequencing continues to decrease as the technology evolves. I have already seen claims of under $1,000 for a full human genome. I haven’t looked carefully into those claims, but I think we are around there. In some years full genomes will be so cheap to sequence that it will be routine. I want to buy one of those small Oxford Nanopore MinION sequencers in the future. I’ll use it like a pokedex.

          • Salamander@mander.xyz
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            11 months ago

            There is a theoretical future in which full-genome sequencing is performed exclusively by large companies, hospitals, and governments, and the data is stored by them and they can access it.

            But the technologies are becoming quite accessible. Unless regulations are introduced to force people to give up their genetic data, which I don’t think is so likely, there will be ways for us to get our sequences without the sequences being stored by a third party. I also think that there will be FOSS tools for us to run our own analyses.

    • huginn@feddit.it
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      11 months ago

      It should be like that in more places. Too much of America is built around the requirement to own and operate an expensive piece of heavy machinery just to participate in society. American cities should all go back to how dense they were prewar, when they were walkable and don’t have interstates bulldozed through their downtowns.

    • Obi@sopuli.xyz
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      11 months ago

      Singapore is definitely special in that regards (in a good way, imo). I can’t think of any other place going quite as hard on reducing cars.

  • cwagner@lemmy.cwagner.me
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    11 months ago

    Pretty much anything expensive but new & still rare. VR glasses or foldable phones are easy picks right now.

    • crr10@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      I got a used Motorola Razr 5G in perfect condition to use as a work phone for about $300 on eBay. Had it for about a year now and I absolutely love it. Definitely not just for the rich.

      • Dasnap@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        I thought we worked for decades to take moving components out of portable devices as they were the biggest point of failure?

        • plistig@feddit.de
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          11 months ago

          We did. Because of that people are using their phones for too long without replacing them. This makes Samsung and Apple sad, so they make new phones fail sooner.

          • Dandroid@dandroid.app
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            11 months ago

            Same. But there hasn’t been an improvement in technology worth a phone upgrade in like 10 years.

              • Dandroid@dandroid.app
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                11 months ago

                Well, that’s on the iPhone side, which was lagging significantly behind Android at that time. 2013 was the Galaxy S4, which had LTE (still good today), all the same sensors phones have today, 1080p screen, 4k video recording, 13 megapixel camera, and 802.11ac (5GHz) wifi. It even had a headphone jack, micro SD card reader, and a removable battery, which is better than most phones now.

                Drawbacks are that the RAM was low (2GB), the CPU is old, and the version of Android hasn’t been updated in a very long time.

                The only thing that has really upgraded in the last 10 years for Android phones is that that the RAM, CPU, and camera get incrementally better each year. There hasn’t been a new technology or feature that I have cared about or wanted since then. And honestly, I feel like the camera was good enough 10 years ago as well. I couldn’t care less if the camera on my current phone was the same as the Galaxy S4 camera.

      • titaalik@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        May I ask why? I would be scared 24/7 to break my phone with my fingernails or something because the screens are so fragile.

        • AnonymousLlama@kbin.social
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          11 months ago

          Be super keen for foldable devices overall. I just can’t get past the huge obvious fold in the middle of the screen. It’s gotten better but I’m hoping eventually it evolves to the point where it’s seamless. Being able to pull out a phone and then unfold it to get a tablet UI would be super handy for articles

        • bitsplease@lemmy.ml
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          11 months ago

          I have one so maybe I can elaborate on the benefits

          For one, they’re really not that fragile. I’ve dropped my Fold a shitload of times now, and it has 0 issues. That’s not to say people don’t have issues with them (ala black bar of doom), but they’re not as prevalent as you might think, for the usual reason that you’re always going to hear more about the fail cases than the people who just buy the phone, and have it work fine.

          As for the “why do you want one” - it’s basically like having a phone and tablet in one, and all in a form factor that is basically as compact as your typical smart phone (a bit thicker ofc, but still perfectly reasonable to carry every day). When I’m just doing “basic smartphone stuff” like texting, checking emails, etc - I just use the small screen and it works just like any other phone, but when I’m browsing social media, watching TV/Movies, or playing games - it’s absolutely awesome. I have an MG-X Pro that i use with mine, and streaming games from my PC feels like playing on a steam deck, it’s also an amazing emulation device thanks to the big screen.

          I can definitely see why some people wouldn’t want one, but personally, I can’t see myself ever going back to a “flat” phone

  • Instigate@aussie.zone
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    11 months ago

    If the news about LK-99 has any element of truth to it, then superconductor-based technologies and maglev transport will become much more affordable in the future.

  • randomTingler@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Any type of technology that brings equality.

    A perspective from India. 20+ years ago before ATMs were implemented, the bank officials treated each customer differently. A worker with dirty clothes would be treated poorly than a person who wears a tuck-in shirt.

    Situation now: ATMs don’t know who is rich and who is poor. All people are equal.