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PHOTOFEST |
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JET PACKS: These backpacks were supposed to be a new way to travel in style |
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| What's Always Next? |
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Predictions are dicey. Past prognosticators vowed that these innovations would change our lives. A sampling of the future that wasn't |
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By Rebecca Winters |
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Posted Sunday, August 24, 2003; 2:31 p.m. EST
VIDEOPHONES
Engineers said the Picturephone, unveiled at the 1964 World's Fair, would replace standard phones by 2000. Forty years later, consumers still balk at the high priceand at losing the ability to take calls in their underwear.
A MOON COLONY
The New York Times in 1960 predicted "a flourishing civilization on the moon twenty or thirty years hence." The first moon landing was in 1969, and we're still waiting for the place to go co-op.
FOOD IN PILLS
Those apple-pie pills the Jetsons popped sure looked neat. Butunless you count PowerBarsfood that's purely functional hasn't taken over store shelves.
CARS THAT DRIVE THEMSELVES
The idea of an "automatic vehicle" first showed up in concept cars of the 1950s. Sensors in the road and the car were supposed to do all the work, but they have never moved past prototype. Unlike, say, seat warmers.
JET PACKS
After the test pilot of a rocket-propelled backpack told Popular Science magazine in 1969 that the machine made him "feel safer than I do driving the family car in traffic," it seemed Buck RogersÐstyle travel for everyone was imminent. But a mass-market model never managed to fly.
MOVING SIDEWALKS
They were part of the '64 World's Fair "City of the Future." An exhibit of scooters and Rollerblades would have been more prophetic.
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