Carlos Guestrin wants to stop the spread of waterborne disease, design chairs that adjust to your posture, and cure Internet-induced information overload. This might seem a bit overambitious, but Guestrin has developed a single algorithm that can tackle them all.
This guy should work for Google! He could make their already awesome search engine rock even more.
Today marked the public debut of the Martin Jetpack, a ducted-fan-equipped personal flying vehicle that could keep pilots aloft for 30 minutes or more. Inventor Glenn Martin has been working on the jetpack—which isn't technically a "jet" pack, given the fans—for 27 years, but he has kept it secret until now. Even his son, Harrison, the 16-year-old test pilot, wasn't allowed to tell his friends that he'd been cruising around the yard back home in Christchurch, New Zealand in a revolutionary flying vehicle.
I knew this technology would be invented. Anything imagined on film eventually comes to be. Some things take longer to be invented, but before you know it some engineers will get together and say, "I wonder how we can build something like that." I'd say another 20 years (only because of lack of funding and big money interest) and this technology will be well on its way to becoming available in the consumer market. Of course, then there's the more complicated issue of licensing people to fly them, HAHA... Imagine that! I suppose that would suggest that the technology is possible but totally impractical.
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