The Century's Top Engineering Challenges
coondoggie writes "The National Science Foundation announced today 14 grand engineering challenges for the 21st century that, if met, would greatly improve how we live. The final choices fall into four themes that are essential for humanity to flourish — sustainability, health, reducing vulnerability, and joy of living. The committee did not attempt to include every important challenge, nor did it endorse particular approaches to meeting those selected. Rather than focusing on predictions or gee-whiz gadgets, the goal was to identify what needs to be done to help people and the planet thrive, the group said. A diverse committee of engineers and scientists — including Larry Page, Robert Langer, and Robert Socolow — came up with the list but did not rank the challenges. Rather, the National Academy of Engineering is offering the public an opportunity to vote on which one they think is most important."
How is that an engineering feat? Seems more like a people feat.
'Number-memorizing Chinese people.'-Anon
Getting funding for the top 14 engineering challenges.
"To those who are overly cautious, everything is impossible. "
that's what I would like to see. DARPA's list. Of course, that's probably classified. as for the NSF's list, "access to clean water" is not so much an egineering challenge as a bureacratic and resource management challenge. Same with preventing nuclear terror. I would much rather add "creating a functioning AI" (though not sure this is engineering), improve baterry techology, and redesign propulsion methods.
-- All this knowledge is giving me a raging brainer.
I would add: An electric battery with an energy density comparable to gasoline.
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* Prevent nuclear terror
how exactly should we do this, hmmm? get rid of all the nuclear weapons on earth, destroy all knowledge relating to the atom, and shoot all nuclear waste into space? Better extinguish the sun while we're at it, and ignore that goal of fusion power since it is "nuclear" fusion. Why not just pick a less ambiguous goal like "end uphappiness."
* Secure cyberspace
* Enhance virtual reality
1996 just filed a lawsuit for trademark infringement.
* Advance personalized learning
* Engineer the tools for scientific discovery
W00t! Buzzword bingo!
There are some decent goals in there, but like so many projects laid out for engineers, they are engineering projects laid out entirely by non-engineers. There's no thought to implementation here, just feel good "hey we oughta" crap.
There are some people that if they don't know, you can't tell 'em.
* Develop carbon sequestration methods
No thanks, I'd prefer real alternative energy solutions.
* Restore and improve urban infrastructure
Could you be any more vague?
* Prevent nuclear terror
I thought these were engineering challenges.
* Advance personalized learning
Give me a break.
First, diamonds are *not* a rare commodity. That is a myth that the De Beers diamond cartel has spent a century trying to create. De Beers tightly controls the supply, so that they appear to be rare. It's also a self-reinforcing myth - people think diamonds are rare, so they don't sell old family heirlooms, and thus there is no secondary market for diamonds.
Second, we already have the technology to create diamonds in a lab. See the wikipedia article on the subject. (At this point, I should mention that De Beers also tightly controls the diamond cutter workforce -- any diamond cutter who cuts for a company other than De Beers is immediately cut off from doing any De Beers work)
To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
--E.C. Stanton
The declared nuclear states (and Israel with it's undeclared undeclared weapons) and their delivery systems and willingness to invade other non-nuclear states is just fine, it's the people with no weapons and little realistic hope of getting them.
The technology that's being talked about is carbon mineralifcation - the technology to turn CO2 into graphite, or diamond, or soot. That's would be a huge help in fighting global warming.
Hah. ok, the obvious problem with this is that turning CO2 into coal is the opposite of what we have been doing for the past 200 years. How do you accomplish that? Put the energy back into the coal! But if we could do that, the first thing we'd do is use all of that energy to replace the energy we still obtain by burning coal (and other hydrocarbons) in the first place.
So, it seems like the only way to do that is to solve the "energy problem" that is putting so much CO2 into our atmosphere already. Once we fix that, then the surplus energy can be used to remove all the CO2 we have already put into the atmosphere...
I understand that's a total oversimplification, but the point is: cure the disease, not the symptoms!
actually yes...
Known nuclear states are not much of a threat as they leave a trail back to them that ensures their own destruction.
It is the fringe groups that only need a single weapon that you have to worry about... because they WILL use them!