150 years later: back in the 2020s, a supercomputer used to occupy two tennis courts that operate at exaflops and costing $300 million, but now, we have implantable cheap neural computer devices that as small as a neuron can operate at 500 yottaflops and only cost $30.
no 150 years later: the people in the tv literally are are real and come out of the tv but not like 3d but u can actually touch them and they feel real and everything
@@TrueMrMilk GOOGLE SEARCH HOW MANY YEARS IT TAKES!!! GOOGLE: Ralph and Coop calculated that these shared segments showed ancestors stretching back some 3,000 years, or 100 generations.
Phones are really underrated. Imagine having a device in your hand that can calculate basically anything, show any information you need, can communicate to your friends, and have access to freaking all of the thousand years of humanity's knowledge..
I love to see how technology has evolved throughout the years. Thanks to the engineers and geniuses that we have and had in the past. It's so fascinating to see where it all came from and how it was built in the past. Such an amazing experience of knowledge.
Yeah, constantly being tracked and recorded by everyone. More and more people's jobs being replaced by technology. And soon everyone will be able to create their own viruses at home!
I believe we owe gratitude to those who built the foundations for our improvements and hope to one-day also be appreciated by those who further build on our improvements
Awesome to see how far we've come in technology. I can already imagine how soon in the future 1 TB computer hard disks will be considered low-storage disks lol.
@@thomaskrol8574 but the storyline becomes crappier, repetitive, more microtransactions, downgraded from what it was advertised cause companies care more on money than its fan's desires.
@@YourAverageDrama I agree but if you buy an apple for $1.00 because it has a pretty package rather than a similar apple for 30c then it ain't so good for your health.
The iPhone 11 has a "whopping" 265gb (which you have to pay extra as basic storage capacity is 64gb) yet my android phone has 128gb as standard and it only cost me £250
It's nice to see how far we've come with electronic technology, especially considering that it's a pity that people take a lot of stuff for granted these days.
Yeah I’ve had a car for 6 years and a good amount of time I’ve spent with it I’ve always hated how rough it is when I go over bumps but all that changed when I started learning how to ride horses now I honestly will never complain about how rough my car is
I think we take for granted how well we had before all the tech became so assessable.....people don't connect so much anymore as much as they do to their phones and computers....and everyone is just words on a screen....we don't really see the person anymore...so many times and people don't connect in person as much.....and hounding see kids out playing like they used to....
well no but actually no, sci-fi movies today portray technology prob 100 years from now so if u were born in 1921 today would be considered sci-fi to you :)
@@thatoneleaf9895 there was a time traveler who predicted the future once want it finally happened he disappeared also there are no records about him being born for any kind of origin except for the time-traveling truck that he hidden that day nobody believes him until he disappeared at a room where he is being watch and then suddenly disappear 🙄 i can't believe it but it still has proof 🧾 that he was there once....
I think they forgot about Samsung having a 108mp camera in their latest phone, and even being able to cram a stylus into their phones, as well as making iconic foldable phones. 😓😡
Mr. Jeff you are right. As we all saw in the video it took so many disks and things to get at least 2 or 3 megabytes. And now we've got 1 Terabyte in just a tiny little sd card.
Smartphones should be completely free, because they generate insane profit for a lot of enterprises in very shady ways. Actually people should rather get paid, for participating in this transparent person experiment.
90's? Try being born in 81 and seeing every piece of technology around you shrinking by 10% every year that passes. Every week there was a newer and smaller piece of equipment being advertised on TV and in shop windows. Bigger and higher quality TV's and newer arcade games with much better graphics in every arcade. Phones got smaller and more functional and computers became affordable for the average home by the mid 80's. It was the closest to time travel I've ever experienced in my life. You had to be there to understand how quickly things moved back then. The 80's even had a version of internet that was sent to your TV for free. It was called Ceefax or Teletext. You could play games. Make bets, get sports results and TV guides. The 90's were an awesome time to live and grow up in but the 80's was better. One thing. The technology was groundbreaking and fantastic. They also came with a huge price if you wanted it and no-one could realistically afford it on the average income of the time.
I remember when the wife and I bought our first computer in 92 or 93. It was a 486 D or SX2, 50 Mhz, with a whopping 8 MB of RAM, and a 450 MB HDD. It came with a commercial from Microsoft, from the man himself, saying that 450 MB was the most hard drive space one would EVER need. Now, even my smallest thumb drive is 256 GB. I remember getting a multimedia upgrade that came with a 2x CDROM, speakers and an additional 8 MB of RAM. I later upgraded to a 100 Mhz system. Oh, and this was before computers came with modems, so when dial-up became a thing, I had to buy one of those too. I believe the first one I got was a 9600 kbaud. It's so funny, if you ask a kid today what a baud rate was, they'd probably assume you meant something about the human body.
2:20 As an IT student I have to say you're wrong and it hurts my eyes terribly 😱 1 TB = 1024 GB = 1,048,576 MB 2^10 B = 1 KB 2^10 KB = 1 MB 2^10 MB = 1 GB 2^10 GB = 1 TB Basics that even 8 yo child should know And also 2^10 TB = 1 PB (Petabyte) 2^10 PB = 1 EB (Exabyte)
5 years ago, underscreen fingerprint reader was a dream. Now its common. In 2001, we had an computer which had storage capacity of 10 gb. In 2016, we had an laptop with 2 tb storage. It was a gaming laptop under 600$
@@Miku_x_Luka "a whoping 256gb of storage" (samsung had the 512gb version since mid 2018) he just doesn't seem to know much about smartphones or just doesn't care
The storage of old hard drive has only 3.75 mb who was now only equevalent to a one song if you download it.. what an amazing technology being so upgradable each decade.
@@anotherlostsoul9793 they can call it whatever they want to call it, they still buy their screens from Samsung. The display in the iPhone 4 that Steve Jobs called the Retina display was made by LG and was only 3.5 inches where Samsung was rolling out a 4 inch screen. Keep up with the innovation there Apple by renaming another company's tech and then charging even more for it! Even the iPhone X still uses an OLED tech screen invented by Samsung lol.
OK, for the record, the first eBook system was written by Glassbook, Inc. in Waltham, MA and deployed in 2000 with the availability of the Stephen King novella "Riding the Bullet". The book was readable on computer, laptops, and early tablets. The e-Ink technology had not been invented and affordable LCD screens were not available. Books were delivered by a web-based platform called the Content Server (I wrote it) later operated by Overdrive Inc. The company was sold to Adobe and the eBook client software, including DRM, was merged into Adobe Acrobat Reader, renamed Adobe Reader, but later retracted. There are the facts. Amazon... pffft.
I'm surprised you forgot to mention something. Early mechanical TV models were the 1st ones on the market with their really crapy 40 line screen. But, other than the Nickelodeon, it was the only game in town. However, their later models were given a boost technologywise in order to compete with the newer technology that their competitors were now using. Their competitor's models now having many more lines and a much better picture, manufacturers of mechanical sets, went up against their competitors by making the very 1st color tv's in the 1920's. Yes, the 1920's! The picture was much more primitive in clarity , but it was in color! So, that was something that kept them in business, for a few more years anyway.
@@AlecsNeo Depends what, I like apple, I have a Iphone se and a ipad 5th gen, The ipad still has up to date ios and it works just as well as when i got it 4 years ago
Growing up in the 80s I: Still washed dishes by hand Had to roll up/down the garage door by hand Used a non-electric typewriter Used a rotary dial phone hand wrote my music song lists cooked popcorn on the stove top and cooked dinner in the oven (fried chicken and other frozen foods) played vinyl records and later cassettes, without giving future of music storage a second thought and yes... still watched B&W TV. How my life has changed in 35 years.
All of this reminds me of how far video games have come. I remember dreaming of the day when games would look as good as they do now. What’s funny is I showed my little cousin who was somewhere between seven or eight the time an old PS2 game I recently started playing again & she had this disgusted confused look on her face 😂. She played & eventually had fun, but her expression said it all.
I remember having to save all my school work on a floppy disk for classes, by the time I graduated college we were upgraded to using USBs for saving work
My PC's CPU calculates using floating point operations. After watching the section at 8:36 I now want a CPU that can handle flowing points. They sound much nicer.
I thought Alan Turing designed the first stored-program computer? I think crediting Babbage is like crediting Leonardo Da Vinci with inventing the helicopter...
Alan Turing made turing machine and it is a complex version of Babbage's analytical engine improved with technology and computing capabilities. So it's still fair to say tht Charles Babbage invented computer. And also Da vinci made the concept and sketch of wht a helicopter is and it is beleived to be capable of lifting off the ground
Just 2 years later and it’s already out of date on the high end of technology. Excellent video; it takes a lot of time & work to put something like this together. Thanks for posting.
"It is so fast that it's measured in FLOPS" That line hurts. That it's PETAflops is the special thing, not that they use FLOPS as a unit. That unit must be as old as the transistor itself if not older and is used for pretty much every kind of processor, including comparetively weak microcontroller and literally every PC CPU, not just supercomputers.
I am so glad tech has advanced this far! I enjoyed my cassette tape collection, but my phone collection has more songs and I can carry it with me where ever I go!
Sometimes I like to take it a step back and carry just an iPod with me it’s so great when you can break away from modern tech it’s like a breath of fresh air
10:38 Don’t think Mac’s as a faster laptop/computer, and they have less support for apps. Mac’s newest operating system is MacOS Catalina, which only support 64-bit apps. And you know there’s a lot more choices of Windows laptops which has a laptop/computer designed for gaming, video editing and a lot more. (No Offense People In The Apple Ecosystem) ( I really got triggered watching this video)
You forgot ZIP Drives (100 and 250 MB), Jazz Drives, Orb Drives, and similar "high capacity" removable disk drives of the '90s. Also, CDs with 650-700 MB of capacity...not generally rewritable but a decent capacity before Flash Drives and SD Cards.
Past : TV doing its own job, Phone doing its own job, CD player doing its own job, Computer doing its own job. Now : Smartphones doing most of the thing mentioned above. 2050 : A tiny chip doing more than the things mentioned above.
It's easy to take things for granted now days. Specifically technology like phones. Where people always want the next upgrade as to not feel left out but they don't even realise how little time they spent with their previous phone to take advantage of all its full capabilities and software. That's why I appreciate videos like these, looking back in history you see how hard and limited technology was it makes you feel somewhat relieved that that's not have it is now and we've advanced it so much, but also makes you feel exited and proud to how fast things will advance in what seems to be a shorter amount of time. And it doesn't only apply to technology, the best way to improve is to look at the past but also acts as an examples of how to avoid making the same mistakes.
When it comes to computers he didn't mention how far we've come in other components like cpu's and gpu's in more detail. Just 20 years ago from the time this video was published the best gpu's and cpu's were the Nvidia's Geforce 2 with 200mhz clock rate and 128mb video ram, ATI Radeon 256 clock rate 200mhz 128mb video ram, Intel Pentium 4 1 core 1 thread clocked at 1.5GHz and AMD's Athlon Thunderbird 1 core 1 thread clocked at 1.2GHz. To put that into perspective the best gpu's and cpu's at the time of this video were Nvidia's RTX 2080 Ti which had a boost clock speed over 1635 mhz 4352 cuda cores and 11gb video ram, AMD's Radeon VII had a boost clock speed of 1905 mhz 3840 stream processors and 16gb video ram, Intel core i9 9900K 8 core 16 thread, boost clock speed 5Ghz, AMD Ryzen 9 3950x 16 core 32 thread, boost clock speed 4.7Ghz. GPU's went from 128mb's in 2000 to 24gb's with the RTX 3090 in 2020 and consumer cpu's went from 1 core 1 thread in 2000 to 64 cores 128 threads in 2020.
@@LiquidSnake690 I have a 5950 on my gaming PC and it's pretty good but not worth the price IMO. It has 16 cores (32T) but most games if not all can barely use 4 cores. I used to have a Intel i5-6600K overclocked to 4ghz and that was really really worth the price. This CPU combined with a SSD drive would load RDR2 and GTA5 crazy fast. It's the CPU i recommend the most for the price for people who like to overclock the hell out of their CPUs
@@stephanietremblay9851 Red Dead Redemption 2 and GTA V aren't the most cpu intensive games. There are newer AAA games that are using at least 6 or more cores. If you're talking about most esports and indie games not using more than 4 cores then you'd be right. I know games like the Division 2 will use up to 16 cores if you got them but it doesn't need 16 cores but it does indicate that future games will need more cores. For example Alex from Digital Foundry found out from running the Unreal Engine 5 Matrix Awakens demo that his i9 10900K was bottlenecking his RTX 3090 at 1440p. Alex also ran his hardware in Halo Infinite and discovered you'd need better than an i9 10900K to get frame rates higher than 120 fps.
How's Apple considered a innovator for the release of the iPhone 11, boasting a 6.1 inch screen and whopping 256 gb storage? So sick of Apple fan boys, do you not realize cheaper phones out their have bigger screens and more storage? The iPhone 11 although alright is far from innovative.
Teacher to class, "no, you may not use a calculator, you never know when you're going to be able to utilize the functions of a calculator...so put your cellphones away"
Because Anti computer virus software exists it is possible that the people outside of our computer simulation at we live in. Have Anti computer virus software too also 8:19.
My dad was born in 51, and there for saw the first personal computer hit the market, much like me born in 92 saw the arrival of the smart phone. That is kinda crazy to think before my fathers life there was pretty much no tech that the average person could use let alone do anything we can do today.
8:07 The 1.5 TB is correct, but it is the MEMORY that is 1.5 TB. The storage can be a whopping 8 TB! You need 99,999,999 8 inch floppy disks to hold all that!