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73 comments
  • Manual typewriters. You did not precised the age of the technology in question!

    Do you knew that there are an average of 1'800 parts in a typewriter? That it can print in two colors, with different margins, different interlinear space, tabulations and that some even have things like word count? It's a marvelous and yet understandable piece of technology. Someone technically inclined can understand 100% of the working of a typewriter, nobody can understand 100% of a word processor.

  • Zero knowledge proofs. I've worked in the industry for a couple years now, and I've got a lot of hope it will actually help us fix the internet, stop spam bots, and allow for people to interact with better control over their data.

  • With home IPL (laser hair removal) being easily accessible now, I'd like to see other useful lasers developed for home use as I have a tattoo I'd like to remove.

    I'm not particularly following this technology though, just moderately hopeful, which is as excited as I can get these days, that it'll come along and be affordable before civilisation collapses.

    (It's not a tat of anything shameful, I just don't like having to go outside or talk to people if I can possibly avoid it.)

  • 3D printed buildings and neighbourhoods.

    The design implications are endless and including modular rough-ins for water, power, and HVAC, which would make design accessible to all. Get an AI engineer to test the design and a human engineer to double-check the results, and you can get printing.

    Hopefully, the type of concrete is getting less specialized and more sustainable. If we can jazz up the exteriors, that would also help.

73 comments