Quote: (08-11-2012 03:30 PM)Roosh Wrote:
Yup, 3d printing will be a major disruptor.
What the internet did to music/movies and eventually books, 3d printing will do the same to physical products. Download schematics and print.
Will this change day to day life much? 3D printing is interesting, but I've never felt the need to own more rapidly built pieces of plastic. It seems like the main benefits are cutting down the time and expense of doing something we're already doing. It's revolutionary to anyone in related industries, but is it revolutionary for consumers? For all the hubbub about media piracy, is the actual media being pirated much different for it?
A lot of these technologies fit into this category of 'revolutionary for producers, but consumers may never notice.' Eg, even if wind power magically became competitive today, would it change your life much? I'm guessing not.
Or, they're entertainment technologies that are just more efficient forms of '
circus.' I don't think these will
make us any happier or genuinely improve our quality of life. They just suck people in more effectively - eg, World of Warcraft, Xbox Live, Kinect, etc.
Also, I'm surprised no one mentioned education. If employers start hiring people on the basis of credentials earned online, or tests completed, that would be something. See Coursera, Udacity, EdX, Khan Academy.
Being able to produce high quality meats and produce for less money would also be a major breakthrough.