>>13378908when you think about it we're still very primitive (not accounting for kardashev scales)
we are still VERY much manual and not automated/digital
have you ever worked in a countryside town hall? even banks are enormously reliant on paper and manual operation
I think it's quite rare to work in a company that is completely digital and efficient
that and power increase(bandwith and storage mainly) will make current performances laughable
that is nothing though, just the "end" of the old world
we might invent in the next 80 years
>telepathy through brain/computer interface>blood check will be replaced by real time reporting of 100% of your body status and levels, in a dashboard in chromium or in your smartphone>personnal robot assistants that does all the chore, work, cooking, and everything>biological immortality (we die because our cells create waste and those can be cleaned with nano tech and advanced biochemistry)>matter and molecular programming>how does a nanofactory sound? watch this https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqyZ9bFl_qg [Embed] [Embed]but the biggest changes will be political
there will be a major economic crisis or major economical change, problems with debts and retirements
new generations will shape the world differently
my guess would be imagine magic
think about automation that we can't imagine as possible
like building extremely safe tall buildings quite fast, raw material gathering
maybe we would have home matter printer that would print our next screen or mouse with some kind of blueprint
you would be a subscription to your prefered company which will provide maintenance and make sure you never run out of material
recycling will be far more efficient
people will spend their time discovering and creating, and receive money following actions that would sound alien to us
for instance, helping people in an anonymous forum could grant you enough money to buy a week worth of food, without having anyone knowing your identity