5 everyday technologies inspired by sci-fi

Sci-fi is more than just a popular genre of fiction. It can also give an amazingly accurate insight into the future.

Published by Joel Willans on October 7, 2012

Science fiction isn’t all phalanxes of tentacled aliens and star ship battles. In fact, from the creative brains of science-fiction writers and directors have come some of the 21st century’s most important technologies. Engineers, it seems, sometimes need the imaginative spark of the non-scientist to germinate an idea.

Lasers

Take lasers. We use them in DVDs, eye surgery, forensic fingerprinting, printers, hair removal, industrial processes and weapons; they’re a staple of modern science. Einstein wrote about  in 1917, but way back in 1898, science-fiction author HG Wells described a familiar-sounding ‘heat-ray’ in War Of The Worlds. What’s more, in 1925, Russian writer Mikhail Bulgakov wrote, in Fatal Eggs, about an intense red light that stimulated growth – long before the first experiments into laser bio-stimulation took place in the late 1960s.

Satellites

Then there’s Arthur C Clarke, science-fiction God, the man behind the film and book, 2001: a Space Odyssey, as well as a stack of other brilliant things, and all-round genius. Back in 1945, Clarke wrote an article for the magazine Wireless World, outlining a new idea – which turned out to be the geostationary communications satellite. So thanks to Clarke, we got long-distance phone calls and satellite television. These days, geostationary satellites allow people in very remote areas access broadband internet.

Tablets

Clarke also, in Space Odyssey (1968), came up with a gadget called a newspad – a flat-panel screen that allowed its users to read Earth’s newspapers from afar. Tablet computer or e-reader? You decide!

Debit cards

Even the humble debit-card has its roots in science-fiction. In 1888, Edward Bellamy published Looking Backward, a novel that described ‘a piece of pasteboard’ that corresponded with the monetary holdings of its owner and was accepted by shop-clerks in lieu of cash.

Smartphones

Finally, smartphones aren’t light-years away from the handheld communicators that used to wow us geeks on Star Trek. These devices certainly inspired mobile phone developers to create clamshell designs like the Nokia 7200. While the locator functions on Star Trek communicators are also very similar to smartphone mapping software we all take for granted. And if this wasn’t proof enough of Star Trek’s influence, in 2009, Nokia actually designed a mobile phone prototype to exactly resemble the communicator. Sadly, for us Trekkies it never made it to market.

Needless to say, there are probably plenty more examples. If you can think of some we’d love to hear about them. In the meantime, we’re going to grab some popcorn, sit back and enjoy Blade Runner, happy in the knowledge that not all sci-fi predictions come true.

Image credit: JD Hancock

Comments

  • http://twitter.com/sarinsuares Sarin Suares

    Nice.

  • http://twitter.com/tammikibler Tammi Kibler

    Wow, I love that early tablet in 2001: Space Odyssey. I had forgotten about that. Now I can call all those hours I spend watching Sy-Fy research.

  • http://twitter.com/strategyplanone Strategy Plan One

    Awesome to pull out those examples. There will always be a debate on whether ideas like these in movies and books shape the future inventions, or if those ideas are far advanced thinking that technology has to catch up to. Interesting post.

    • http://www.facebook.com/joel.willans Joel Willans

      Yeah, there’s definitely something of what came first, the chicken or the egg. But I think it’s got to help spawn ideas when popular culture introduces technologies to society, don’t you?

  • http://twitter.com/haroldlgardner Harold Gardner

    Where the imagination leads. science follows.

  • Robert Riley

    I would add replicators being the predecessor of 3D printers.

  • http://www.facebook.com/MarkAReynolds Mark Reynolds

    I have always contended that most (or at least the best) Science Fiction are exercises in sociology and philosophy. They take a “what if” scenario, and extrapolate it to postulate what outcomes might arise and how society might respond. Science Fiction is also an exercise in forward thinking about what problems future society might face and what solutions might be required to resolve them, and of course forward thinking about what kinds of technology might evolve out of current technologies and human needs. It is no surprise, then, that Science Fiction is often a predictor of future technology, or that technology takes its ideas from Science Fiction, since Science Fiction applies a great deal of thought to human needs and their potential solutions.

  • http://www.freenclearstuff.com/ Amber Taylor

    Yep – I remember Kirk using a tablet to look over the daily status report on Star Trek. There is no wonder why geeks love Sci-fi. It really is a glance into the future – or inspiration to create.

  • http://www.facebook.com/volary.musicfriends Volary Musicfriends

    How come Jules Verne didn’t rate a mention?

  • http://twitter.com/SuiEmpireAvenue Sui

    John Elfreth Watkins prediction about TV : “Man will see around the world. Persons and
    things of all kinds will be brought within focus of cameras connected
    electrically
    with screens at opposite ends of circuits, thousands of miles
    at a span. The instrument bringing these distant scenes to the
    very doors of people will be connected with a giant telephone
    apparatus transmitting each incidental sound in its appropriate
    place.”

  • http://twitter.com/UrServiceCoach Dan Murray

    Interesting perspective!

  • http://twitter.com/mbazaluk Mike Bazaluk

    if you can imagine it, 10 years time they’ll make it! (still waiting for Nokia star trek communicator!)

  • http://www.newsmeback.com NewsMeBack

    Once it was all sci-fi and today it’s lifestyle

  • http://twitter.com/1Claudiu Claudiu Gabriel

    a social tech mobile life

  • http://www.facebook.com/goldiedust2012 Goldie Dust

    Arthur C Clarke really was an amazing man. He predicted a ton of stuff including the Internet. I think Star Trek also inspired sliding doors. We have a lot to thank them for :)

    • http://twitter.com/Hdrules Hradayesh

      yep Arthur C Clarke was an innovator for sure.

  • http://twitter.com/Sheridan01 Richard Dorman

    You have to remember two more writers, a Czech writer who came up with robots and of course the great Isaac Asimov who came up with robotics

  • Christopher Gerard

    Amber is right, if you watch any of the Star Trek series you will see tablets & future iPads used.

  • http://www.facebook.com/michael.ament.14 Michael Ament

    I just read an article on WARP DRIVE research that boggled me.