What modern technology amazes you?

The Ovaltineys
The Ovaltineys Forum Participant Posts: 196
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edited February 2017 in General Chat #1

I'll start the disussion with Bin wagons reading water meters

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  • Kennine
    Kennine Forum Participant Posts: 3,472
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    edited February 2017 #2

     Good Opening Post. 

    In my case I am amazed by driverless cars.  -- Doesn't mean that I think they are safe, But it's a good bit of technology.

     

    Cheers......................K 

  • Spriddler
    Spriddler Forum Participant Posts: 646
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    edited February 2017 #3

    CT yell

  • Cornersteady
    Cornersteady Club Member Posts: 14,426 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2017 #4

    A memory card around the size of my thumb in my 25MP camera can store over 7000 photographs that can have enough resolution to be easily be printed A4 (or bigger if I had a bigger printer) at home in minutes. For someone who remembers 36 exposure film and a week's wait at Boots (and I thought one hour printing was pretty good) this never ceases to amaze me!

  • Hakinbush
    Hakinbush Forum Participant Posts: 286
    edited February 2017 #5

    How our NHS still manages to work..

  • DSB
    DSB Club Member Posts: 5,666 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2017 #6

    The Internet generally.  The ability to share information. e.g. I share my diary with my wife and vice versa (through Google).  If I am out and about and need to add something to the diary, I can see at a glance if there is anything else going on (either in my diary or my wife's).  I can add something to the diary and my wife knows instantly although I might be 200 miles away - she can do the same.  Furthermore,  I can share appropriate bits of my diary with other people who need to know and I can pick up the appropriate bits of other people's diary.  e.g. I can see instantly if my parish priest has added a funeral or wedding to his diary when he is likely to want me to play the organ.  I can then add copy it to my diary - he can then see if I have added it, to make sure I have it down - it minimises errors and is a very efficient way of working.  Gone are the days of a calendar pinned to the fridge door - it all comes up on my phone instantly!  (as do emails, texts, messenger messages, new appropriate facebook posts and twitter tweets!!!)

    David

  • allanandjean
    allanandjean Forum Participant Posts: 2,401
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    edited February 2017 #7

    I agree with all the above but as I think electricity is akin to magic that's no surprise!

    Calendars that update across devices are good and even better for me is the same thing with pictures.

    I do think that we have all become so used to the next great thing 'techy' thing that we hardly notice what is possible but, if I had to choose what does amaze me, it would in medicine and surgery.

     

  • cyberyacht
    cyberyacht Forum Participant Posts: 10,218
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    edited February 2017 #8

    The way food appears on the table. I think it must be wifi as I never see any trailing cables. wink

  • Bugs
    Bugs Forum Participant Posts: 480
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    edited February 2017 #9

    Social Media - being able to chew the fat with fellow human beings and bypass the selective spin on "news" offered by the mainstream media.

    Youtube - 'nuff said!

    Virtual Reality - wow!

    The speed at which technology is developing - and as a result how quickly the devices we buy and the software we use becomes old or out of date.

    Bugs

     

  • Goldie146
    Goldie146 Club Member Posts: 2,448 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2017 #10

    The "enquire  within"  nature of the Internet. All that stuff out there, just at the click of a mouse.

  • Rocky 2 buckets
    Rocky 2 buckets Forum Participant Posts: 7,101
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    edited February 2017 #11

    Bluetooth/NFC, I can have my device 30' away set to play my downloads yet I sit with B/tooth headphones listening to the music I've setcool. Touching my Camera on my Tablet to transfer a whole bunch of photos. Astounding technology, & it just gets bettersmile

  • SteveL
    SteveL Club Member Posts: 12,302 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2017 #12

    The ease and speed of modern communication. I can pick up my phone  and video call someone half a world away, with a few touches of the finger. For someone who remembers the first live transatlantic TV pictures sent using Telstar, which because it wasn't geostationary could only transmit for a few minutes, it is truly amazing.

  • volvoman9
    volvoman9 Forum Participant Posts: 1,053
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    edited February 2017 #13

     For me its the technology that has gone into batteries.I have a collection of vintage mobile phones from the 80,s and 90,s and the change in not just the physical size but the staying power of the modern battery is nothing short of incredible.Its technology that has been driven by the ever increasing need for mobile electronic devices and they are still developing even smaller longer lasting examples.Almost all the devices we use owe there usefullness to the modern battery.

    v9

  • dmiller555
    dmiller555 Forum Participant Posts: 717
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    edited February 2017 #14

    The ability to turn it all off and chill out whilst trying not to worry if the world is still working correctly without my input. 

  • Oneputt
    Oneputt Club Member Posts: 9,144 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2017 #15

    The abacus

  • IanH
    IanH Forum Participant Posts: 4,708
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    edited February 2017 #16

    You mean despite the gross inefficiencies within it?

    Anyway, it doesn't appear to be working, if their publicity agent (the BBC) are to be believed.

  • IanH
    IanH Forum Participant Posts: 4,708
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    edited February 2017 #17

    I remember watching the James Bond film 'Goldfinger' where he was tracking the villain across Europe using a screen in his Aston Martin, which also showed where he was himself.

    Despite being a massive fan of those early films, I still remember thinking "Naaaahhh! That would never be possible.......it would require something way up in the sky to track them".

    Now we have sat-nav for less than £100.....

  • Nuggy
    Nuggy Forum Participant Posts: 512
    edited February 2017 #18

    SteveL, you have just said what I was going to say. Old fashioned I am, but the telephone for me. Yesterday I reached out for my phone, dialed and with a second I was talking to a lady in a pub 100's of miles away to arrange a meal.  Also, my grandson phoning me, he is only 18 months old and his mother had no idea what he was doing.

  • EmilysDad
    EmilysDad Forum Participant Posts: 8,973
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    edited February 2017 #19

    A few years ago we were on holiday in French France while No 1 daughter was in Ghana. We spoke on mobile phone from our field to her field as though we're at home. 30 odd years ago I used to have to use phone exchanges to make a call home from Spain, Denmark etc ...... Post Stanley was via a satalite phone & was bl00dy expensive

  • JCB4X4
    JCB4X4 Forum Participant Posts: 466
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    edited February 2017 #20

    The Vacuum Flask

    Not exactly a modern technology (invented by Sir James Dewar in1892 and originally known as the Dewar Flask)

    If you put Ice-cream in it, it comes out Cold  wink

    but if you put Tea or Coffee in it, that comes out Hot. wink

    As it has no power source, no switches or programmable settings.

    How does it know ???  undecided

  • cyberyacht
    cyberyacht Forum Participant Posts: 10,218
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    edited February 2017 #21

    Like IanH, I recall the early 007 films showcasing new tech. I remember his 'extra curricular activities' being interrupted by a pager. Of course more recently Pierce Brosnan was driving a BMW with a phone. Although set up with a hidden driver, it is now actually feasible.

  • SteveL
    SteveL Club Member Posts: 12,302 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2017 #22

    For me it was the Man from UNCLE series in the sixties, and Illya Kuryakin asking to open channel D and speak to Mr Waverley a continent away on a pen like device. Science fiction at the time, but now possible for any of us with the right tech from our watch.

  • Rubytuesday
    Rubytuesday Forum Participant Posts: 952
    edited February 2017 #23

    I agree with you all .....W W W .  Has to be the top , and Goole my  best friend , tells me everything .

    now looking to the future , personally I would like a PILL instead of a MENU , I'm a person who cooks because I have to NOT because I want to or likes to 

  • Cornersteady
    Cornersteady Club Member Posts: 14,426 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2017 #24

    that's an interesting point Steve. You probably grew up watching the same programmes as myself. The thing is I never doubted that the things I saw would eventually happen. Most of them have or the theory is there. I often wonder if things like that are invented and produced now because people saw them in programmes like that and developed the technology to make it happen? 

  • The Ovaltineys
    The Ovaltineys Forum Participant Posts: 196
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    edited February 2017 #25

    I used to watch Wonder Woman!  laughing

  • EmilysDad
    EmilysDad Forum Participant Posts: 8,973
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    edited February 2017 #26

    We're all still playing catch up to Star Trek cool

    Star Trek

  • EmilysDad
    EmilysDad Forum Participant Posts: 8,973
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    edited February 2017 #27

    That's for a different forum ... wink

  • Cornersteady
    Cornersteady Club Member Posts: 14,426 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2017 #28

    That is a fantastic link there MM!

    It's amazing how many of the things in Star Trek have become reality! Interestingly enough there's only a few things still to catch up on, but even some of those are being done, We even have a universal translator on this website - English english to american english if you set it right of course wink The money less society is slowly getting there with contactless and with the app to use your phone. Holodecks too with the VR glasses now being sold! 

    Beam my caravan to the site direct please, Scientists, make it so.

  • EmilysDad
    EmilysDad Forum Participant Posts: 8,973
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    edited February 2017 #29

    but you cannae change the laws of physics capt'n ..... cool 

    I only found out about the ability to pay by an app the other week. My son went to buy Calpol for his daughter, the chemist didn't accept payment by app, he'd no cash on him ....... good old bank of Mum & Dad cool

  • Cornersteady
    Cornersteady Club Member Posts: 14,426 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2017 #30

    that's what mums and dads are there for!

    On Thursday I was in my local Morrisons when all their systems failed and they couldn't process card payments. Luckily i had cash so sailed through. However on the other tills tey were doing the card payments the old fashioned way - by placing the card in a holder , piece of paper on top an sliding the handle across. (Took me back to my first Access credit card, still see odd shops with that Access sign up) the queues were quite long. 

  • N1805
    N1805 Forum Participant Posts: 1,092
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    edited February 2017 #31

    Guess the staff cashing up the tills at Morrison’s had to work late that night.

    For me it’s the sheer speed at which technology has moved during my life time.  [the human brain works in amazing ways to develop such things].  For the OH it’s the microwave, so she can buy chilled meals to heat up when we’re away.