Quote:
Originally Posted by El Duderino
One thing that’s been absent in this autonomous/ride share discussion is the idea of new technology that does not yet exist becoming viable in the nearish future. I’m not suggesting that we’ll be teleporting or using hover boards by 2025, but with the increasing pace of technological breakthroughs, thinking only in these terms narrows the reality of what’s (likely) ahead.
I don’t pretend to know what’s to come, but speaking in all these absolutes is whatever. I have a funny feeling 20 years from now we’ll be living with a bit of a lot of different modes (with increasing stratification based on income and geography).
|
Depending one ones age, 20 years can mean a lot of change or not so much (meaning the 20 years between 10 and 30 are usually a lot different then from 30 to 50), but thinking back in my life over the last 20 years there's the usual human events like marriage/divorce, jobs, health, politics, and more of this, less of that, but other then communication changes (computers, the internet, and cell phones), I can't say the way the world works has changed that much. Is having 500 TV channels really that big of a change from having 10, just to mention one area of change.
Youth always looks forward to what might be, and age looks backwards on the lost possibilities and dreams.
On this forum I'm surprised that there isn't more conversation about how the industry of building buildings might or should change. Other then changes in curtain wall construction, watching a building going up today isn't all that different from 80 years ago. Yes, today we have poured concrete and longer spans of steel, and welding and bolts instead of rivets, and tower cranes make construction easier, but largely its still a lot of manual labor.
Can the forces behind self driving cars change the construction business?