University of Maryland Brain Cap Technology Turns Thought into Motion (Photo credit: University of Maryland Press Releases) |
Lourdie Neurological Testing Calvin College March 08, 20111 (Photo credit: stevendepolo) |
The U.S. intelligence community is taking a look at the world of 2030. Future will have 3-D printed organs, Brain chips that would create superhuman abilities in Megacities.
National Intelligence Council meets the futurists every four or five years who anticipate the shape of future in two decades so as to enable the people working at strategic guidance for America’s security and economic policies. Global Trends 2030 was released, On Monday.
The rising ideas would be
- a bigger data cloud
- an ageing population,
- drones.
- human neurological system.
- link between man and machine more cyborg-
- replacement limb technology
- enhance their physical selves as they do with cosmetic surgery
- night vision enabled retinal eye implants
- neuro-enhancements
- superior memory recall or speed of thought,”
- “Brain-machine interfaces
- ‘superhuman’ abilities,
- enhancing strength and speed,
- embed himself in the robot.
- “Augmented reality systems
- enhanced experiences of real-world situations.
- Combined with advances in robotics, avatars sensors providing touch and smell as well as aural and visual information to the operator,”
- 3-D printing and other direct digital manufacturing processes.
- manufacturing and electronics — but people, as well.
- electrical circuits, antennae, batteries, and memory
- Though printing of arteries or simple organs may be possible by 2030,
- bioprinting of complex organs will require significant technological breakthroughs.”
- synthetic biology lethal weaponry
- Biology is becoming more and more like the open source software community,
- harder to track, regulate, or mitigate bioterror if not ‘bioerror.’”
- possibility of a “decisive re-assertion of U.S. power,”
- America is, relatively decline
- China is on the ascent.
- New megacities would be built from scratch.”
- natural gas