future
Explore the next frontier of tech innovation, and imagine our society in the near and far future.
"Robot, Pass The Scalpel"
This story was previously published on Dr. James Goydos' Medium. Humankind is great at innovation. Throughout history, we can see several examples of this. From the discovery of fire transforming the ways in which we survive, to the invention of the wheel forever altering transportation, we are constantly seeking out new ways to improve our systems. While innovation has some of its earliest roots in things like rudimentary tool production to the creation of early forms of transportation, the legacy has continued to the present day.
By James Goydos, MD4 years ago in 01
Every Developer Should Learn These Programming Languages
Programmers use a range of basic programming languages to create their programmes. The majority of corporate software programmers stick to one programming language until they retire. On the other hand, some programmers have the opportunity to work with numerous programming languages daily. When working with a Flutter native module, a programmer can use Dart, Kotlin (or Java), Objective-C (or Swift), C/C++, and other languages.
By hashan tagari4 years ago in 01
Prosthetics design
How did you start into the field of prosthetics design? I began my academic career at the University of Oxford, where I majored in engineering. After some time in industry, I ended up inventing a robotic arm for persons with tetraplegia at the Bath Institute for Medical Engineering (paralysis causing a total or partial loss of function in all their limbs and their torso).
By chamil menaka4 years ago in 01
The Future is a Desert
We’ve all seen Hollywood’s take on a dystopian future, either apocalyptic or technological, often set in a desert landscape, like in Mad Max, The Maze Runner, The Bad Batch, Tank Girl, and many more. The desert is often the most popular setting for the future of human civilization in movies, yet the real world is oddly starting to mimic this imagery with new technological, architectural and societal investment projects popping up all throughout our desert landscapes.
By Ryan Barbin aka “Dirt”4 years ago in 01








