15 Reasons To Live For The Next 10 Years

The 2000s left us feeling battered, but the 2010s are looking awesome. Thanks to recent scientific research and an explosion of cultural interest in science fiction, there are at least 15 brilliant reasons to stick around for another decade.


Image by Dan Lydersen.

15. Lost returns
Sure, it may not last for the entire decade, but you can start the ‘tens right by feeding your confused and delighted brain with the conclusion to JJ Abrams’ time-twisting tale of an island that ripped the fabric of space-time. Lost returns Feb. 2 to begin its sixth and final season.

14. Molecular machines
As nanotechnology emerges from science fiction into the laboratory, one of the most promising nanotech applications is the molecular motor – an engineered molecule that can do anything from deliver a payload of medicine to a hard-to-reach part of the body, to crawl up your DNA to repair damage. Molecular motors might serve as cellular “prosthetics,” attaching to cells to augment their functioning (yes, you can overclock your cells). We’re pretty far from having replicators, but we may have ultra-tiny robots that can zoom through our blood and fix us up far more elegantly than the surgeon’s knife ever could.

13. Ridley Scott returns to scifi.
He peeled the top layer off our brains and eyeballs with scifi flicks Alien and Blade Runner, and then went on to make dramas without any spaceships or dystopian future cities in them. At last one of science fiction’s greatest cinematic auteurs has pledged to make the ‘tens the decade when he returns to the genre. He’s got movie versions of Joe Haldeman’s The Forever War and Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World in the works, as well as a prequel to Alien. Knowing these films are coming from Scott is going to keep us on the edge of our (movie theater) seats for the next ten years.


(image via Pana Stamos)

12. A follow-up to Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell.
With her brilliant literary fantasy novel Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell, Susanna Clarke changed both fantasy writing and what was considered acceptable in literary circles. She took a novel scientific-historical approach to her story of two magicians who become involved in politics and warfare in England during the Napoleonic Wars. Fans have been waiting for a sequel to the novel for quite a while, and insiders at Clarke’s publishing house says she’s definitely under contract to write one – supposedly a sequel set in the Middle East and Asia – but there’s no deadline for this author who might take up to 10 years to write a novel. Let’s assume optimistically that she’s already been working on it for a couple of years – that means sometime in the ‘tens we’ll get to plunge into another of Clarke’s amazing tales of magic and geopolitical history.

11. A much-needed population dropoff is imminent.
The US Census recently released its projections for global population expansion and decline over the next few decades. Although the population is growing, its rate of growth is entering a steep decline. Next decade may be the beginning of the end of the population explosion, which is good news for everyone – especially people who will be living on the planet 100 years from now.

10. Green development.
Over the next decade, we’ll start to see results from programs designed to foster green development, like Google’s major alternative energy initiative RE<C or the US Department of Energy’s investments in green resources. Electric cars could come to dominate the roads, and eco-friendly urban developments (like China’s delayed Dongtan) could start opening their doors to residents. What happens when old energy is challenged by new energy? Live through the ‘tens and you just might find out.


(image via yellow_bird)

9. Dubai skyline.
Pretty much every major construction project and architectural wonder is being planned for the insta-city of Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates. The world’s tallest building, the world’s roundest building, and the world’s most elaborate human-engineered islands are all part of Dubai’s future skyline and footprint. Though the Dubai government’s investment wing, Dubai World, is suffering a debt crisis, there is still ample time for it to be resolved with a bailout – and many of the region’s biggest projects (like world’s tallest building Burj Dubai) have continued despite financial setbacks. We can’t wait to see what the future looks like in the Middle East’s most cosmopolitan region.

8. Joss Whedon conquers the web
After the disasters of Dollhouse and Firefly last decade, Joss Whedon has sworn off television and pledged to take his dark SF/fantasy visions direct to the web. He’s already won our hearts with his first web series, Dr. Horrible’s Singalong Blog. As web series grow in legitimacy, and most people turn to their monitors to watch TV, we anticipate that this may be the smartest move Whedon has ever made. We can’t wait to set our phasers to interweb and watch the next thing Whedon’s imagination will spawn.


(image via Grrrod)

7. Alastair Reynolds’ 10 books in 10 years for Orbit.
A master of smart, intriguing space operas like Revelation Space, Reynolds has become over the past decade one of the most sought-after science fiction writers in the genre. UK publisher Orbit acknowledged his stature by offering the author an unprecedented book deal: £1 million to write 10 books over the next decade – approximately one per year. Reynolds is starting with what he calls an “African inflected” trilogy about how humanity will finally get offworld and start colonizing space.

6. Steven Moffat takes over Doctor Who
Writer of some of the new Doctor Who‘s strongest episodes, such as “The Empty Child” and “Blink,” Moffat is also known for creating the BBC series Jekyll, which wowed critics and viewers with its intense reimagining of the classic Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde tale. Now that showrunner Russell T. Davies has stepped down, Moffat is taking over running Doctor Who starting in 2010 with the new series’ fifth season. Saying that we can’t wait is a major understatement.

5. Exploring the asteroid belt with Dawn satellite.
Launched in 2007, the Dawn satellite is due to rendezvous with the large Vesta asteroids and with Ceres, the largest planetoid in the asteroid belt. Researchers believe that these asteroids will be packed with metals like nickel as well as ice. If we ever hope to send missions to the outer planets like Jupiter and Saturn (home to Titan, a moon that might support life), we’re going to need a stop-off point with a rich natural store of water (a source of oxygen, among other things) as well as metals. This mission, the first to examine the Vestas and Ceres up close, could help establish the asteroid belt as a massive rest stop for travelers in our solar system.

4. Synthetic life.
Last decade, genome warlord Craig Venter promised – and nearly delivered – an entirely synthetic bacterium, with DNA made from scratch (well, from polymers) in the lab. Meanwhile synthetic biology pioneers like Drew Endy have worked to make the tools of genetic engineering available to everyone who wants to experiment with DNA. Researchers have created DNA-controlled counters and students invented bacteria that can locate buried landmines for the annual synthetic biology iGEM competition at MIT. In the ‘tens, get ready for the first synthetic organism, quickly followed by the second through the twentieth. We probably won’t be getting pigs with wings any time soon, but we could get bacteria that eat pollution in the ocean.

3. Space opera conquers movies.
With JJ Abrams working on two sequels to his rebooted Star Trek series, Pixar’s Andrew Stanton (director of Wall-E) doing his John Carter of Mars movie, James Cameron contemplating other movies set in the Avatar universe, and Duncan Jones (director of Moon) signed on to helm several other scifi projects (including two more movies set in the Moon universe), it looks like space opera might be the new awesomeness in cinema. Instead of mutants and zombies destroying the Earth, spaceships and tales of astropolitics will be expanding our minds. And that’s something to look forward to.

2. Finding the Higgs boson particle.
The Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland is just getting started on the many physics experiments scheduled to zoom through its long underground tunnels. By far the most widely-anticipated experiment will (hopefully) reveal the elusive Higgs boson, a particle that scientists believe is responsible for giving mass to every object in the universe. Isolating the Higgs boson could help us understand where mass comes from, and why some particles (like photons) are massless. If discovery is the first step towards mastery, then who knows where the Higgs boson could take us?

1. The Mars Science Laboratory
Set to launch in 2011 and land on Mars in 2012, the Mars Science Laboratory is NASA’s latest effort to explore whether life like ours ever existed on Mars – and could be supported there again. The Laboratory is a robot rover called Curiosity, and is like a much larger and more sophisticated version of the two Martian rovers Spirit and Opportunity. According to NASA:

The rover will analyze dozens of samples scooped from the soil and drilled from rocks. The record of the planet’s climate and geology is essentially “written in the rocks and soil” — in their formation, structure, and chemical composition. The rover’s onboard laboratory will study rocks, soils, and the local geologic setting in order to detect chemical building blocks of life (e.g., forms of carbon) on Mars and will assess what the martian environment was like in the past.

So why get so excited about another Martian rover? Because what Curiosity discovers will help bring us closer to establishing a Martian base which could one day become the foundation for a thriving Martian civilization. And that’s the kind of future that we live for.

Ten gadgets that defined the decade

As 2009 winds down and we try to come up with new and clever ways of referring to the early years of this century, there’s really only one thing left to do: declare our ten favorite gadgets of the aughts and show them off in chronological order. It’s arguable that if this wasn’t the decade of gadgets, it was certainly a decade shaped by gadgets — one which saw the birth of a new kind of connectedness. In just ten years time, gadgets have touched almost every aspect of our daily lives, and personal technology has come into its own in a way never before seen. It’s a decade that’s been marked the ubiquity of the internet, the downfall of the desktop, and the series finale of Friends, but we’ve boiled it down to the ten devices we’ve loved the most and worked the hardest over the past ten years. We even had some of our friends in the tech community chime in with their picks on what they thought was the gadget or tech of the decade — so join us for a look back at the best (gadget) years ever!

Continue reading Ten gadgets that defined the decade

Ten gadgets that defined the decade originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Dec 2009 12:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Engadget Show – 004: The decade in gadgets, with special guest Peter Rojas!

What a crazy 10 years, right guys? It’s really flown past; the highs, the lows, the stuff in the middle that didn’t seem very impressive one way or another. For our final Engadget Show of the decade, we asked site founder Peter Rojas to join us for a look back at our picks for the most important and / or interesting gadget developments since 2000. A hardcore crowd came out just after a gigantic snowstorm to witness the proceedings, and now you get your chance to see how it all went down. This is a long one folks, so grab some popcorn and settle in for the show!

Update: The HD download is now live!

Hosts: Joshua Topolsky, Paul Miller, Nilay Patel
Special guest: Peter Rojas
Produced and Directed by: Chad Mumm
Executive Producer: Josh Fruhlinger
Edited by: Tony Chen
Music by: Bubblyfish
Visuals by: CJ
Opening titles by: Julien Nantiec

Download the Show: The Engadget Show – 004 (HD) / The Engadget Show – 004 (iPod / iPhone / Zune formatted)

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Continue reading The Engadget Show – 004: The decade in gadgets, with special guest Peter Rojas!

The Engadget Show – 004: The decade in gadgets, with special guest Peter Rojas! originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 Dec 2009 14:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ford to give Sync some App Store flavor, opening API to devs in 2010

Ford has already shown it can tie the controls of Sync-enabled vehicles to the music and contacts databases of drivers phones and PMPs and though it may take time before our emotions can be detected, the next step is extending that connectivity to downloadable apps on those devices. Since Sync first debuted, the explosion of the App Store concept has meant nearly every smartphone owner is packing plenty of ways to access and use information from the internet, but without an easy way to interact with it while driving. Extending access to vehicle controls could lead to programs like Pandora or Google’s turn by turn navigation letting users change stations with their existing stereo knobs, or listen to directions via the in-car system by simply updating their existing software. The first ones to get a crack at it? A few university students, check after the break to see what they came up with given just a few weeks to test system out.

Continue reading Ford to give Sync some App Store flavor, opening API to devs in 2010

Ford to give Sync some App Store flavor, opening API to devs in 2010 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Dec 2009 14:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Binary Snowjob – A History Of Cinematic Computers That Never Were

You’ve been deceived. All those computer interfaces you saw in the movies? They were made without CGI! Watch our video “The Binary Snowjob” to discover the terrible truth about computers that never were.

Purported Motorola roadmap uncovers Sholes Tablet, Motus and other mythical mysteries

Okay folks, this is the moment where hauling a spoonful of NaCl down the chute would be highly recommended. DialAPhone seems to have unearthed what looks like a Q4 2009 – Q1 2010 Motorola roadmap, and while the finds are certainly intriguing, we’re still hesitant to believe this thing is legit. For starters, this is obviously a European plan, so what we’re viewing here may never make the tedious journey across the pond anyway. Secondly, how many of you honestly believe Moto’s cooking up a Sholes Tablet? Exactly. That said, we’d be the first to drool should that device (or the Motus and / or Zeppelin) launch early next year, and you can bet your bottom dollar that we’ll be scraping the floor for details when CES kicks off in just a few months.

[Thanks, dejan]

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Purported Motorola roadmap uncovers Sholes Tablet, Motus and other mythical mysteries originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 14 Oct 2009 11:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Android rumor rodeo, starring Sprint’s first 4G phone, a delayed Eclair, INQ Mobile’s 2010 handset, and more

The gang at Android and Me seemed to have made quite a number of acquaintances on their sojourn through CTIA and MotoDev Summit. Specifically, there were three people along the way they reportedly talked to that led to the most tantalizing of rumors. First down the rabbit hole is a Sprint developer who claimed the first 4G (i.e. WiMAX) phone will be an Android device, which honestly wouldn’t be all that shocking given the company’s love for and recent history with the OS. Next up is a Samsung exec that intimated we shouldn’t expect Android 2.0 “Eclair” until Q2 2010 — interesting in its own right, but looks like those whispers of Sholes launching with anything beyond Donut isn’t gonna come to fruition now. Our third definitive individual is an INQ head employee who let slip its handsets would be finding its way onto a US carrier’s network in 2010 and would have a “pimped out” customized Android skin chock full of social networking the likes of Spotify, Skype, Facebook, etc. The rest of its report is much ado about nothing — no LG android phone this year, no TomTom app this year, and no standalone Google Maps navigation software. Yeah, that’s quite a number of Android rumors to digest, and unfortunately nothing definitive. Looking forward to the future?

[Via i4u]

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Android rumor rodeo, starring Sprint’s first 4G phone, a delayed Eclair, INQ Mobile’s 2010 handset, and more originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 13 Oct 2009 20:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung expecting OLED laptops in Q3 2010

It’d be about a year late according to an earlier roadmap, but Samsung at IFA this week proclaimed its intention to adopt OLED for its laptop lineup as soon as the screens are commercially available — “probably sometime Q3 next year” said Kyu Uhm, head of Worldwide Sales and Marketing for the company’s Computing Division. Unfortunately, the company was mum on any other details. We doubt it’ll look much like its 2008 prototype, but we can dream, can’t we?

[Via OLED-Info]

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Samsung expecting OLED laptops in Q3 2010 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 04 Sep 2009 11:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia Comes with Music US launch smartly pushed back to 2010

Not that most Americans could care, but Nokia is pushing back the US launch of its DRM-laden Comes with Music service into 2010. CWM, you’ll recall, is Nokia’s “free” all-you-can-eat music service that bundles the 12-18 month music subscription cost into the inflated handset price — although like any DRM music scheme, solutions already exist to break the CWM shackles. The delay is probably a wise move considering the weak state of Nokia’s US partnerships required to offset consumer costs, lukewarm response to its latest handsets, and the fact that most US consumers share a broad distaste for DRM music. We’d rather see Nokia launch late but with a compelling proposition than launch now in blind adherence to a timeline.

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Nokia Comes with Music US launch smartly pushed back to 2010 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Sep 2009 04:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Touchscreen-based Modu 2 coming in 2010, still not good enough for Americans

Modu finally came through with an actual product launch late last month, and already the company is preparing for the next best thing. According to a report over at Pocket-lint, a so-called Modu 2 should make its debut in a few corners of the globe next year. The handset will boast full touchscreen functionality and 3.5G connectivity, but in an effort to remain true to form, Modu will sell a QWERTY jacket that adds hard keys for those who just have to have ’em. To date, Modu has managed to move around 1,000 of its original handsets, but even the second one won’t soon see shelves in America. Why? According to CEO Dov Moran, the handset “just isn’t good enough for demanding Brits and Americans who like to surf the internet and stay connected.” Hey, at least the man’s honest.

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Touchscreen-based Modu 2 coming in 2010, still not good enough for Americans originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 17 Aug 2009 18:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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