dolorosa_12: (space)
a million times a trillion more ([personal profile] dolorosa_12) wrote2025-04-18 01:52 pm

Friday open thread: 'futuristic' tech of the past

It's a public holiday, and the better part of a four-day weekend stretches blissfully ahead of me. I'm not in Cambridge at work, and therefore I'm able to pick up these Friday open threads again. Today's prompt is inspired by all the post-apocalyptic science fiction I've been reading recently (about which more in a later post). And the question is:

What is your favourite example of technology of the future that you've encountered in a science fiction novel/film/TV series/etc, and which seemed ridiculously dated by the time you'd encountered it.

Mine is an example which warms my librarian heart, from Victor Kelleher's The Beast of Heaven. This is a novel set in the distant future after a nuclear apocalypse has wiped out almost all life on Earth. The remaining people keep (an imperfect) knowledge of past human civilisation alive due to the fact that one person takes on a semi-sacerdotal role (part priest, part keeper of history and lore, part bardic reciter of this history and lore) due to being trained in the ability to read. And where are these surviving historical records to be found? In the advanced, ubiquitous, certain-to-survive-nuclear-apocalypse format of ... microfilm!

I find this delightful. It was already charmingly retro when I first read the book for my secondary school English class in 1999, and it's even more so with every year.

What about you?
corvidology: Ophelia and goldfish (Default)

[personal profile] corvidology 2025-04-18 05:17 pm (UTC)(link)
It basically turns into unusable vinegar smelling semi-goo after a number of years though no matter how well you store it.


lirazel: Evelyn from The Mummy reads as she walks ([film] no harm ever came from reading)

[personal profile] lirazel 2025-04-18 06:27 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh yes, I'm familiar! But if you could figure out a way to do it that preserved it, it would be accessible in a way that digital stuff just isn't!