I was studying in the LW Study Hall, and during our break someone posted this link to the official hyperloop announcement:
http://www.spacex.com/sites/spacex/files/hyperloop_alpha-20130812.pdf
One member was doubtful it would get past regulations, and another said "tentative p>0.05 that a hyperloop gets made by 2100", which was met with "p>0.05 that uploading people and moving them between bodies will be available by 2100".
It struck me that people might be interested in betting on things like this, or at least having a conversation about it.
A few predictions to start:
- Tesla Motors / SpaceX / Elon Musk will create a working hyperloop by 2100.
- Tesla Motors / SpaceX / Elon Musk will create a working hyperloop by 2050.
- Tesla Motors / SpaceX / Elon Musk will create a working hyperloop by 2030.
- The cost projections of the hyperloop are underestimates by at least an order of magnitude.
- When and if a hyperloop-like transit system is built (or not), the US will not be the first country to build it.
- One of the first really big (>5bn$) hyperloops will go across a body of water.
- If a hyperloop is created, it will be predominately (>50%) solar-powered.
None of those are 'major innovations in transportation', as is clearly demonstrated by the fact that most people do not ride ICBM's to work everyday, the fact that automobiles had almost entirely replaced horses before CVT and turbines, and the fact that planes had partially replaced ocean liners before jet engines. (In fact, some pre-WWII planes are still in everyday commercial use today.) You are likely confusing 'major innovations' in the sense of technical accomplishments with 'major innovations' in the sense of innovations that had a large impact on society. While new technologies are fun to think about, only the latter definition is relevant.
Incremental improvement != major innovations. If anything, the incremental development of automobiles is evidence against major new innovations, as argued above.
People didn't drive cars to work a hundred years ago, either. And today,there are people drive through the Chunnel to work every day. "Innovation" does not have an established meaning of "something people ride to work everyday[sic]". If you're going to dismiss disagreements with a claim by appealing to a personal, non-explicit definition of a term used in the claim, then I don't see the point of making the claim in the first place; a claim is useful only if the claim is phrased with sufficient clarity that people will know what would be... (read more)