As a car enthusiast, I can think of a good one, the Ford Nucleon.

During the 1950s and 1960s, there was considerable interest in nuclear power and its potential applications. This led to the idea of using nuclear energy to propel cars. The concept behind a nuclear car was to utilize a small nuclear reactor to generate steam, which would then power the vehicle’s engine.

Of course back in those days, this was extremely futurustic and some at the time thought this would be a game changer, but ultimately, the safety aspect was one of the biggest reasons why this idea was dropped, and I probably don’t have to explain why it may not have considered to be safe, I mean, it was using nuclear power, so even if the engineers tried to make it as safe as possible, IF something went wrong, it would have been catastrophic.

Ever since then, the interests in the automotive sector has shifted to Electric and Hydrogen.

Still, a very intriguing concept car and idea.

Outside cars, you have blimps, and I personally believe if we tried to make something like a hindenburg today with existing technology, we might have been a lot more successful than back then (as it goes way back to 1930s), there are still some blimps used occasionally, I also don’t believe those use hydrogen(?), but they are not the “game changer in air travel” it was once seen as, although we can’t rule out a comeback.

What about you guys?

  • sbv
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    1 year ago

    In the 1990s VR was right around the corner, but we didn’t have processors, network, it displays we needed to make it happen. Thirty years on, we have the hardware we need, but it remains a niche/enthusiast technology. Motion sickness remains an issue.

    Maybe that’ll change with Apple’s foray into AR.

    • Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      We’re now running into the soft problems of VR. Things like the weight of the device, the hazards and downsides being disconnected from the real world, the lack of large indoor spaces, etc. are showing the weaknesses in the model of VR we envisioned.

      Also, VR platforms are really tightly controlled. PCs got big because you didn’t need to use Dell or Gateway’s App Store to do things. Jail breaking is a thing but not for most people.

      Until VR stops feeling like a brick strapped to your face and has true AR capability I don’t think it will get big. And it definitely won’t get big with a bunch of closed ecosystems.

      • amio@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Most people love their proprietary walled gardens. They just don’t think like that.

    • paddirn@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      VR is probably the biggest I’ve seen it already. I got my son a Valve Index about 2 years ago now and it’s still seeing frequent use. There’s quite alot of games out there already. As interested as I was for Apple’s glasses, I’m not sure that it’s going to cause a big revolution in AR/VR. Maybe, it could, but their promo for it was a bit weird and the price seems crazy high for now.

      • Sabata11792@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I think the big hold up are the games. The good games require an expensive PC, expensive headset, and a dedicated space. They can’t get returns for big budgets until headsets are common and people wont dump big money unless they think its worth. The only option is the slow burn. It’s a lot of fun but selection is a bit dull once you burn though the big names.

    • TheArstaInventor@kbin.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      Yeah that’s certainly a good one, I am still wary of VR, due to how close it is to your eyes.

      I am more hopeful about AR though because you are not locked into a virtual world and that extremely close screen to your eyes, it’s basically like see through glasses with computer, hence I am guessing it might be better for your eyes than pure VR?

      Cost is going to be an issue for a good while though, and I still don’t think they will ever replace or be as big as phones, as some believe it could be, the portability is just unbeatable with smartphones (flip phones making that aspect even better), although maybe AR can compete with computers more?

      I’m personally skeptical but a very interesting and futuristic sci-fi tech for sure.