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Computer Expectations of Today, and a Decade Hence?

Luciq asks: "The other day I was cleaning out my closet and started reminiscing about all the good times I had with my 33Mhz 486DX. I got the machine 10 years ago just as the first Pentiums were coming out. With a 33Mhz processor, 212MB hard drive and a whopping 8MB of RAM, I could surf the net at 2400 baud, manipulate photos and even play games with full-screen video like The Seventh Guest. Today I use an Athlon XP 2400, 80GB HD, 512MB [not 512K!] RAM. While I can do some neat things with it, I must say that it's fallen short of the wonderous expectations I had for such a system in 1993 (no immersive VR?, no seamless voice recognition?). What expectations did you have for today's PC, 10 years ago and how does the reality match up? What do you expect from computing, 10 years from now?"

8 of 864 comments (clear)

  1. Games gotten better? by calebtucker · · Score: 5, Interesting

    10 years ago I expected some truly breath-taking an immersive 3D games with excellent gameplay for the present. However, I often times find that today's games are simply breath-taking in a graphical sense but really lack in the gameplay. Am I just spoiled or does anyone else feel this way? Maybe it's just that I'm remembering my childhood playing those side scroller games for hours.

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  2. I YAM THE VOICE OF THAA COMP-YEEWWW-TURR! by Ab0rtRetryFail · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I expect (hope?) that text-to-speech will start sounding natural in 10 years. I'm sick and tired of the bland TTS that still sounds like it did in the '70s. Here's hoping. :)

  3. short list by john_smith_45678 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    - OLED displays that are like paper (thin and flexible)
    - fuel cell batteries that provide power for quite a bit longer
    - 64 bit computing (arriving now - wonder what the next step would be - 128 bit?)
    - Windows to require 30 terabytes of disk space

    I hope somebody invents a better mouse (or whatever it might be called) ;).

    I also wonder if we'll still be using hard disks ten years from now.

  4. A Funny Fortune... by oGMo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A decade ago or so, I saw this fortune:

    Imagine that Cray computer decides to make a personal computer. It has a 150 MHz processor, 200 megabytes of RAM, 1500 megabytes of disk storage, a screen resolution of 4096 x 4096 pixels, relies entirely on voice recognition for input, fits in your shirt pocket and costs $200-$300. What's the first question that the computer community asks? "Is it PC compatible?"

    It was funny at the time. Those specs were ridiculous!

    Today I've got a 200MHz+ Zaurus with 64MB of RAM builtin, plus about 512MB worth of CF cards. And you can get 1-2GB CF microdrives. And it costs about $300.

    It's like "Unix! I know this!" line from Jurassic Park... reality caught up, and it's not funny anymore. :-( ;-)

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  5. Re:My expectation? by killthiskid · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Oh yeah, add a decent protable long lasting, easily rechargable power source to my list... something like a fuel-cell that can be recharged with butane or gas... whatever, as long as it is light, long lasting, and easily refilled... and prefereably doesn't explode or kill people at will.

  6. In Ten Years... by sfe_software · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Given that:
    While I can do some neat things with it, I must say that it's fallen short of the wonderous expectations I had for such a system in 1993...

    always seems to be the case, my expectations for 2013 are as follows:

    - Computers will be much, much faster
    - Operating systems will be much, much more bloated
    - Our demands will have gone up
    - Mozilla will have become sentient, and will be its own project maintainer

    And the end result will be roughly the same. Except that last part, that will be new.

    Alpha-blending at the OS-level will be not just standard equipment, but nearly required. Games will be more beautiful, but will come on 3 DVDs and take 3 or 4 minutes to load up, giving about 30-50 FPS on a "fast" machine. (Seriously, load up UT2K3 on a "fast" machine, it looks nice but is very slow...)

    The video card will be about the size of the motherboard, and will require more cooling than the CPU. Audio cards will come with fans (if that sounds weird, what if I told you, in 1993, about fans on video cards, water-cooling, or heat-spreaders on RAM modules? Case-mods, LED-fans, ...)

    We'll keep hearing about how magnetic media is coming to an end, reaching the end of Moore's law, even while Maxtor is releasing 4.5 TB disk drives, and Seagate (among others) announces a new standard to replace the SATA that we'll have all become quite familiar with.

    ... in other words, nothing will change, except that we'll then take certain CPU-intensive tasks for granted, much as today compared to 1993. But just like encoding/ripping/sharing MP3s was very labor-intensive in 1993, such is the case with video now, and we'll see that whole cycle again with video via DivX...

    Video capture/tuner cards will be standard equipment (like audio today), and maybe -- just maybe -- by then we'll have some kind of industry standard on digital broadcast (cable/sattelite). Eh, probably not...

    IMO anyway.
    --
    NGWave - Fast Sound Editor for Windows
  7. Things I could not have imagined that did happen by DigitalDreg · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Ten years ago I had a 486DX/2 running at 66Mhz with 16MB of RAM, 400MB HD, and a 14.4 modem. My 17" IBM running 1280x1024 in 256 colors was the envy of my friends.

    Rather than being dissapointed by what didn't happen, here is what I'm pleased about that did happen, that I didn't expect.

    - T1 download speeds into my house. My cable modem does 1.5Mbits down and 256Kbits up. That never occurred to me.

    - Back then my machine could play back video from CD. Now I can do it in real-time off the Internet.

    - Back then my computer chirped. Bill Clinton's voice coming from the White House web page in 1996 was scratchy. Now my entire music collection is on it.

    - I can make my own CDs. Data, music or both.

    - My machine serves as a digital darkroom.

    - My machine lets me communicate with other people through email. (More of a social change than a technological change - back then I had email, but nobody to write to!) IM, IRC, etc. are also common now.

    - Home networking.

    - A powerful version of Unix in my house, free, with a lot of great applications. (Including MYSQL, which I'm toying with now.)

    - Wireless capability so I can work where I want to, not where the computer is.

    We've come a long way in 10 years ...

  8. 1983, 1993, 2003, 2013 by Arandir · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Just trying to remember stuff off the top of my head. Probably off a few years on some of these.
    • 1983

    • IBM PC, 8088, 4.77Hz, 256K+ RAM, $10,000. Language of choice is BASIC. Video is CGA, but only if you can afford the card, MDA otherwise. Removable storage is the 5-1/2" floppy holding 320K. Some people get wise and punch their floppies to make them double sided.

      The OS was PC-DOS, and fit on part of a floppy. Small, fast and feature-less.

      Game I remember distinctly was "Gato" (came out about 1985 I think), a submarine hunt game. It fit on a floppy, and was awesome fun!

      All PC software had to fit on (and run from) a single floppy.

      Networking? Not on the PC! Of course, the PC makes an excellent (but expensive) terminal for a UNIX system, from which you can access the ARPAnet.
    • 1993

    • Packard Smell, i486, 66MHz, 2Mb RAM, $3,000. Language of choice was Turbo C, although some Turbo Pascal diehards (myself) still lingered. Video is VGA and a smattering of SVGA, XVGA cards. Removable storage of choice was the 1.44Mb 3-1/2" floppy. Some people have CDROMS, but not many. Harddrives are the norm, and their typical sizes are about 100 to 500 Megs.

      The OS for most people was still DOS, now version 5.0. People are running this cheesy environment called Windows 3.1 on top of it. I rebel and use OS/2. I need 8M RAM to use it, but it had a UI that GNOME and KDE are barely approaching ten years later.

      My games of choice were Civilization and SimCity. They came on floppies, but a lot of other games are starting to come out on CDROMS, which pisses me off since I can't afford one. They also tend to use more RAM and Video than I can afford either.

      Software in general is bloating. Stuff that takes up 5 to 10 Megs of disk is common. But I'm not bitching much, since they're adding a lot of features, not counting the GUI.

      Networking has arrived! 14.4K modems are becoming standard. If you live in the right area, you can get an internet account. Otherwise AOL and Prodigy are somewhat suitable substitutes.
    • 2003

    • Home Built, P4, 2.8GHz, 1Gig RAM, $1,000. Language of choice is C++, although several dozen other major languages are common. There are no video standards anymore, but the minimum resolution anyone can put up with is 32-bit 1024x768. GPUs are more expensive and have bigger fans than CPUs. Removable media of choice is the CD-R, with USB memory sticks becoming popular. But the 1.44M floppy is still king. It will probably remain standard equipment until the typical BIOS can boot from USB devices (guesstimate of one year).

      The common operating environment is still Windows, but fortunately, the current incarnation runs on top of NT instead of DOS. WinXP recommends 512M RAM. UNIX is making strong headway into the desktop market. Even the most basic Linux distro requires a minimum of 16M RAM, with most recommending 64M.

      I haven't bought any games in a couple of years. The last one was Civilization III. (My how things change!) The game market has become dull. My prediction from ten years earlier, that game developers would start scaling back and produce games that would run on systems that the public actually owned, proved false. Instead, the public eagerly upgrades their RAM and GPU's every six months. I see that the many new blockbuster games require video cards that haven't been on the market more than six months.

      Software in general has long since passed the bloat stage, and has become quivering mounds of fat reminiscent of dead whales washed up on the beach. This isn't limited to the Windows world. I don't see much increased functionality with OpenOffice versus the Lotus SmartSuite of ten years earlier.

      Highspeed internet connections are considered a human right in some regions. You hide your head in shame if you're still using a dialup modem or ISDN.

    Okay, now time for 2013 predictions:

    Sun Home Workstation, 128-bit i986 class, 1

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