future
Exploring the future of science today, while looking back on the achievements from yesterday. Science fiction is science future.
How machines can learn from human behaviour
In order to understand where we are and where we are going, we need to understand where we were first. - Susan Fourtane Could a human behaviour simulator be embedded into a robot or online avatar to the point that it’s hard to distinguish between a real person or artificial intelligence? Scientists have been upping the stakes in this “Turing test” for years, to the point that human-mimicking programmes are ready to answer tricky questions, assist people with online shopping or be companions.
By Susan Fourtané about 4 hours ago in Futurism
Pro AV Industry in Germany: Demand Across Corporate, Education, and Entertainment Sectors. AI-Generated.
The European audiovisual landscape is undergoing a strategic evolution, heavily driven by the enterprise shift toward advanced collaboration ecosystems and digital transformation. At the forefront of this shift, the Germany Pro AV market presents a highly stable and lucrative environment for B2B professionals, integrators, and strategic investors. Currently valued at $137.25 Million in 2024, the sector is experiencing sustained demand for scalable communication tools, high-resolution displays, and energy-efficient AV infrastructure. Understanding the underlying market dynamics, supply chain efficiencies, and revenue generation models is critical for stakeholders aiming to secure a competitive edge in Europe's largest economy. This report delivers an authoritative, data-driven analysis of the industry's trajectory and emerging opportunities.
By Joey Mooreabout 7 hours ago in Futurism
The $3,000 Experiment: Why Samsung Just Killed the Galaxy Z TriFold After 90 Days
The world of consumer technology is rarely defined by products that succeed by disappearing. On March 17, 2026, Samsung Electronics executed what can only be described as a controlled demolition of its most ambitious hardware project in a decade. The Galaxy Z TriFold—a device that promised to collapse the boundary between the smartphone and the workstation—was officially moved to "inventory-depletion" status.
By Tech Horizonsa day ago in Futurism
Mobile App Development Companies in Dubai: A Detailed Overview (2026)
Dubai has steadily established itself as one of the leading technology and innovation hubs in the Middle East. With strong government initiatives, smart city development, and a growing startup ecosystem, businesses across industries are increasingly investing in digital solutions.
By Apptunix usa3 days ago in Futurism
Is Elementor Pro Worth It in 2026?. AI-Generated.
Elementor is a WordPress page builder with over 10 million active installations in 2026. The free version is downloaded by millions of beginners every year because it makes page design accessible without any coding knowledge. At some point, most Elementor users encounter the same question: is upgrading to Pro actually worth the cost, or does the free version cover everything a typical website needs?
By Edward D. Longfellow3 days ago in Futurism
The Social Execution. Content Warning.
I woke up six months later in a sterile room that smelled of bleach and lost hope. Consciousness didn't return all at once; it arrived in agonizing increments, a slow-motion reconstruction of a man who had been shattered into a million jagged pieces. For weeks, the world was nothing but the rhythmic hiss of a ventilator and the fluorescent hum of a ceiling I hadn't designed. When I finally found the strength to open my eyes, I didn't recognize the landscape of my own body.
By Nathan McAllister4 days ago in Futurism
How to Choose the Right Hosting for Your Elementor Website in 2026. AI-Generated.
Elementor is a WordPress page builder with over 10 million active installations in 2026. It gives website owners full visual control over their page layouts, sections, and design elements. However, no matter how well an Elementor website is designed, its performance depends entirely on the hosting environment running underneath it. The wrong hosting choice produces slow load times, unreliable uptime, and poor Google search rankings that no amount of design optimization can fix.
By Shane Smith4 days ago in Futurism
Chance AI vs Google Lens: Understanding Art Instead of Just Identifying It
Artificial intelligence has made it easier than ever to learn about the world around us through images. With just a quick photo, modern tools can identify objects, places, plants, products, and even famous artworks. Two tools often discussed in this space are Google Lens and Chance AI.
By Madison Zhao5 days ago in Futurism
A Signal From Earth. AI-Generated.
The signal arrived at 02:17 ship time. At first, I assumed it was interference. Out here, space was never silent. It hummed with radiation storms, dying satellites, fragments of old civilizations drifting endlessly through vacuum. The receiver panels aboard the exploration vessel Aurora picked up thousands of meaningless transmissions every day—ghost echoes bouncing through the dark.
By Stephanie Edwards5 days ago in Futurism
The Future of Spatial Computing: Trends and Insights in 2026. AI-Generated.
Spatial computing has quietly evolved from a niche concept into one of the most transformative technological forces of the decade. Once associated primarily with bulky headsets and experimental prototypes, the field now encompasses a broad spectrum of technologies — from augmented reality glasses to mixed reality platforms that blend digital content seamlessly with the physical world. As we move deeper into 2026, spatial computing stands at an inflection point, poised to redefine how we work, learn, communicate, and interact with information. Understanding where this technology is headed requires examining the forces currently shaping its trajectory.
By Chaturbateme6 days ago in Futurism
Of Entropy and Chaos
The entry point wasn't a door; it was a wound in the city’s municipal memory. I crouched in the shadows of a service alley three blocks from the Central Library, staring at a rusted ventilation grate that had been paved over by three decades of asphalt and apathy. This was the "Dead Zone." In the late 1990s, the city’s urban planners had suffered a collective seizure of budget cuts and bureaucratic oversight, leaving a three-block radius of the underground poorly mapped and even more poorly maintained. During the seismic retrofitting of 2014, while I was drafting the stabilization plans for the library’s sub-basements, I’d found the discrepancy. According to the city’s digital map, this space was solid earth—a dense pack of silt and basalt. According to my memory, and the yellowed blueprints I’d stolen from the archives, it was a pneumatic waste corridor.
By Nathan McAllister6 days ago in Futurism







