My crazy wish list

Photo by danorbit
Photo by danorbit

Here’s my wish list:

  1. A food printer. That’s right, a printer that will create any food you want from a few basic ingredients. I don’t think it’s quite done yet. And I certainly don’t need it. Pasta on demand might just do me in. But I’d feel like I was living in a science fiction book, which would just be cool. Seriously, I can see how this would help out on long distance space travel or remote science stations.
  2. A smart thermometer. I have to be one of the pickiest people about the temperature of my surroundings. In my car, I play with the thermostat all the time and I keep a space heater in my office so I can turn it up and down at will. If the Nest thermometer could read my mind, I’d get it in a heartbeat. Maybe it just needs a sensor that I could wear …
  3. Smart clothes. Actually, what I really want is a suit of clothes that just keeps me the perfect temperature all the time. And protects me from skin cancer and frost bite and all that. Oh, and it should stay clean and be comfy – no space suit. And stylish. I’m happy to wear the same outfit every day if it can do all that.
  4. A wearable implanted computer. I want the computer totally out of the way. (They keep suggesting brain implants, but that makes me a bit queazy.) And the display should be either in my brain or in my contacts. No glasses or big eye contraption. This one comes close but still requires glasses.
  5. Better input methods. Speaking of wearable computers, typing is too slow. I’d like to be able to think my emails and communications. No more slow typing. No mistaken speech recognition.
  6. Something better than email. Speaking of email, there’s got to be a better way to communicate.
  7. A teleporter. I spend way too much time in airports, cars and planes. If I could teleport, working remotely and visting friends and colleagues would be much more enjoyable. My 6 year old thinks we should make a teleporter that could take the whole house. I told him parking might be a problem.
  8. If I can’t have a teleporter, maybe a Tesla. I’m not too into cars, and I don’t know really why I want one, but I think the Tesla is awesome. I got a chance to check out the sedan a few months ago in California and I’ve been wanting one ever since. Not quite badly enough to pay the price though. But a high performing electric car with lots of space that still gets 300 miles to the charge … wow.
  9. Or maybe a catamaran. Maybe I could find a nice warm location with awesome snorkeling, lots of sun and still decent wifi. Not this one though. The guy went down below (whether to use the head or to see is wife is still up for debate) and left it on autopilot. No more catamaran.
  10. A declutterer. Someone who makes all the stuff you accumulate disappear. Like my mom used to do. I never realized that she got rid of old clothes until a few years after I left home and I realized my closet was overflowing. Someone or something that could distinguish between my kids’ treasurers and all the random junk they accumulate and keep the first and lose the latter. Without asking them. Because everything is a potential treasure if you ask them.

What’s on your wish list?

One Reply to “My crazy wish list”

  1. kinetic & solar powered, water-proofed & floatable tablets with backlit, full motion colour eink displays plus resistive/capitative input at approx 17″ size featuring all the modern sensors including a barometer, access to full range telco specturm & brutally efficient accelerometers linked to their kinetic charging
    These would be the type of thing you can leave in the sun or in the surf to charge up.
    You should be able to operate one from empty with complete passive charge via whatever means (thermal too?). i’d throw one inside a surfboard and never work from home again. governments could run them as emergency resources in rural remote areas all the while clustering their solar powered cpu cycles to fold proteins and other clustering tasks. they’d be weather stations, wide distribution nodes for ocean seismologists & workstations for managing themselves. Ideally, they’d be made quickly and efficiently using bio materials, assembled in first world countries and cared for by society despite not being a symbol of affluence.

    also I want a hoverboard – it’s about time

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