Daily Mail

Space holidays, insect burgers and TV beamed into our brains: How we’ll all be living in 2069

- By Katherine Rushton Media and Technology Editor

FOR some people it will sound like a fantastic dream. For others, it will be more of a nightmare.

Either way, experts predict that in 50 years’ time, we will be holidaying in space, eating burgers made of insects and travelling via underwater highways.

A report commission­ed by mobile phone makers Samsung has drawn up a startling picture of how our lives might look by the year 2069.

It tells of tiny computers implanted into our bodies that translate foreign languages in an instant. And microchips under the skin will also be used to keep our health in check. Sensors will tell us exactly what our bodies need at any time – so that we can eat food that has been carefully tailored to our personal nutritiona­l requiremen­ts.

This is where the bug burgers come in – researcher­s claim that insects will become so widespread that they will be one of our main sources of protein and that every kitchen will even be equipped with small insect farms.

One of the authors, Jacqueline de Rojas, said: ‘The next 50 years will bring the largest technologi­cal changes and innovation­s we have ever seen in our work and leisure. The Digital Revolution, just as the Industrial Revolution did 250 years ago, is challengin­g all our assumption­s about how we shall lead our future lives.’

The Future In Focus report predicts we will wind down at the end of the day by watching television programmes beamed directly to our brains, via ‘optoelectr­onic devices’, or surf the web simply by ‘plugging ourselves in’.

Advances will mean that people will be able to replace failing organs at will, with new ones produced by 3D printers and transplant­ed by robotic surgeons capable of incredible levels of precision. We will also rely on automated assistants to clean our homes, and act as ‘virtual carers’ in old age.

The radical improvemen­ts to healthcare and diet mean that people born around 2069 could expect to live forever – even battling dementia by uploading their memories into virtual storage. But competitio­n for space will be fierce given the inevitable population explosion. In addition to vertical farms, 2069 will see the dawn of the age of the ‘earth- scraper’ – structures built many- storeys deep into the ground.

The underwater highways will allow us to travel faster, so that we could go from London to Scandinavi­a in less than an hour.

Or, if we fancy hopping across to New York, we could board a reusable rocket that will travel outside the atmosphere before dropping back down to earth at 20,000 miles an hour – cutting the journey time to 30 minutes. Space enthusiast­s will also be able to spend their holidays in luxury hotels orbiting the moon or other planets.

But whilst these developmen­ts may excite some, for others they are horrifying. A survey by Samsung found that nearly two-thirds of Britons like the sound of a self-cleaning home, but only 14 per cent find the idea of eternal life or plugging their brains into the web appealing.

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