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    Today in Tech

    Life under glass: Corning’s vision of the future

    If all the crazy and awesome innovative designs we've seen lately come to fruition, the future is going to be a pretty interesting place. If melting buildings aren't your thing though, check out this vision of the future proposed by Corning, makers of everything from cookware to high-tech specialty glass products.

    In this utopian world, glass is everywhere, and every surface is an interactive touchscreen. A smiling teenager uses the wall of her bedroom to choose an outfit to wear before heading to school with her sister and father, who smiles indulgently when she uses her tablet to change the glass dashboard display of the family car to a pink heart-filled theme. In the classroom, the teacher uses the glass wall display to explain color theory, then moves to a tabletop display, where the children pull circles of color to mix and match.

    Corning also has grand visions of interactive glass displays being used in hospitals to help diagnose illnesses and collaborate with other physicians around the globe. A trip to a state park which has long walls of glass between visitors and the forest includes a thrilling look at what the forest might have looked like when dinosaurs roamed between the trees (we hope the glass walls are just there for display purposes, and that the entire park isn't walled off from visitors). Later, the happy family laughs over video the children took of their day with the dinosaurs.

    Many of the innovations shown in Corning's vision of the future aren't far from reality now. Windows that adjust their tint with a swipe of a finger, tablets that connect to a shared network, and photovoltaic glass solar panels that could cover roofs and provide much-needed green energy don't seem like much of a stretch. Others seem like something out of The Jetsons. Even if only some of the innovations Corning suggests actually get to mass market, it will certainly make for a fascinating experience. Though it does give new gravity to the suggestion against throwing stones in glass houses!

    [via Cnet]

    This article was written by Katherine Gray and originally appeared on Tecca

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    11 comments

    • jmyates  •  St Louis, Missouri  •  3 mths ago
      keep in mind that without good data and communications/connectivity and a little software it is all just an expensive slab of quartz. And bad data and/or bad software makes for incorrect/unintelligible results
      • TOO OLD 3 mths ago
        GIGO
      • Eric 3 mths ago
        Jmyates, while I agree with you overall (and a shoutout to Too Old for a classic acronym), the glass needed for the displays in the video - especially the larger ones - is a tad bit more than "just an expensive slab of quartz." While the basics are in place now, the ability to manufacture the large seamless panels, let alone the window and park displays (which are not supported by a wall), is a few years off.
      • John S 3 mths ago
        Quartz...?
    • Edward  •  Winfield, Kansas  •  3 mths ago
      Definitely seems like Corning has some good ideas about where the future might be headed, and if they can deliver on some of these products it would be a great place to live.
    • Leon  •  Georgetown, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      buy stock in Windex!
      • StevenC 3 mths ago
        Its anti everything man did you watch? lol
    • Micky  •  Lansing, Michigan  •  3 mths ago
      Cool!
    • Cool Guy  •  Buffalo, New York  •  3 mths ago
      Actually an interactive display on glass would offer an ultimate experience in your own plot of a movie. Can you imagine walking down the Yellow Brick Road with Dorothy and the Tin Man to Oz and encounter her adversaries for returning to Kansas. Hologram effect anyone.
    • Peter Sabian  •  New York, New York  •  3 mths ago
      is the national debt going to be fully paid off by then?
      • Joe 6Pack 3 mths ago
        No. Republicans will win, and run up more massive debt with rich-guy tax giveaways.
    • bobby  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  3 mths ago
      Yay, give those a s s hole little punk kids something to really break. I was one when I was growing up, so I could only imagine how some kids would look at this as an experience of a lifetime.
    • Paul R  •  Eagle, Idaho  •  3 mths ago
      Bee ess! It's the systems and the programming that will determine what functions are incorporated into the glass. The very best that Corning can do is make the glass easier to accept a touch interface. These folks are acting like the glass will be the computers. As cool as that would be, as long as the universal law of energy conservation is still in effect, there would be no way to power the devices without some sort of external energy source.
    • Ed  •  3 mths ago
      Just like the 1950's.....no poop anywhere.
    • Zeb  •  3 mths ago
      Before I clicked on the video I had a feeling that it wouldn't have any talking in it. It seems to be a growing trend in technology advertisements.

      Traditional human interaction is the antithesis of modern technology.

      ...and yes, I'm aware of the irony.
    • Roastednuts  •  3 mths ago
      I bet china owns all of our glass rights, and if not we will just send all of the glass to china to be manufactured and sold rite back to you and i.

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