A History of XR Cross Reality Part 2 of 6

 

As a reminder, we are using science fiction as our time machine vehicle to examine how good we are at predicting the future and our intention is to predict the future of cross realities (XR).

1881 - 1909

1881 - The invention of the theater phone (theatrophone) allowed users to listen to the live opera from a location up to 1 mile away from the theater. So you do not have to be there to be there.

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1882 Paleo futuristic image showing opera attendees in the future year 2000. In case you are checking your watch, that's 2 decades ago as of this writing. Did I miss fish cars? Lizard cars? Actually, never mind. I don't think you'd find me going to the opera regardless of the kind of car.

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1895 H.G. Wells published The Time Machine as a dystopian future view. Wells was living in rural England and was seeing the industrial revolution expand. He saw large factory cities swallow up young workers for long hours in dark conditions and producing to satisfy an seemingly insatiable consumer. He looked forward and saw a future where humanity would become split into two groups that would almost would never interact.

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On the surface was a Greek god-like existence of Eloi. They all looked alike. (Shivers.) This group would be the consumers. They would benefit from this world order but simultaneously be oblivious to the price for their existence. They would be a small group, the 1%.

The underground dwellers, the Morlocks, would run all of the machinery. They would be the producers, and the generations of being underground would allow for adaptations of evolution including large eyes, intolerance of sunlight, and flesh-eating.

E.M. Forster read The Time Machine and rejected this future that H.G. Well foresaw.  

However, before we get to Forster’s publication, we visit one other futurist. In 1901, Frank Baum (of The Wizard of Oz) published The Master Key which contains the first known reference in writing to what we would recognize today as augmented reality:

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 "On the other hand," continued the Demon, "some people with fierce countenances are kindly by nature, and many who appear to be evil are in reality honorable and trustworthy. Therefore, that you may judge all your fellow-creatures truly, and know upon whom to depend, I give you the Character Marker. It consists of this pair of spectacles. While you wear them every one you meet will be marked upon the forehead with a letter indicating his or her character. The good will bear the letter 'G,' the evil the letter 'E.' The wise will be marked with a 'W' and the foolish with an 'F.' The kind will show a 'K' upon their foreheads and the cruel a letter 'C.' Thus you may determine by a single look the true natures of all those you encounter."

"And are these, also, electrical in their construction?" asked the boy, as he took the spectacles… All character sends out certain electrical vibrations, which these spectacles concentrate in their lenses and exhibit to the gaze of their wearer, as I have explained."

"It's a fine idea," said the boy; "who discovered it?"

"It is a fact that has always existed, but is now utilized for the first time."

In December 1909, E.M. Forster publishes The Machine Stops. If you have a chance to read it, I encourage that. It is a remarkable story. If you substitute “the Internet” for “the Machine,” the story is eerily accurate in some predictions of humanity. There is also very interesting economy where humanity values the exchange of ideas above all other concepts (cough Instagram).

Short summary:

In the future, everyone lives underground in these large columns of cells because the surface is inhabitable. Each person lives in a cell that is of a small defined space, one person per cell. The collections of people are like bee hives. Everything a person needs to live is brought to them in their cell by the Machine. Food, air, water, and once a day the cell (and the person) are washed clean. The humans never meet or touch in any way. They listen to concerts, speeches, and read books.  

The plot of the story unfolds with a son that yearns to escape to the surface world; he believes it might be inhabitable and as such, holds new promise for humanity. At first, he tells his mother about his desire to leave via the Machine (a progenitor to Skype?) but the Machine, intercepting the message, always fuzzes out when people express unhappiness with the current order of things (cough, Facebook experiment). Thus, the mother does not understand her son’s intent. She tries to dismiss her worries. The son becomes insistent and travels to visit his mother in person. When they meet, the mother is bothered by human touch. He insists that he’s been on an exploratory climb and that he knows other youth that are going to leave too. She will not leave the hive, she cannot understand why anyone would leave the Machine. He leaves and finds a livable world on the surface. The Machine, without humans to service it, eventually breaks down and everyone remaining underground dies; not because they are unable to leave, but because they lack the fortitude to do so

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Forster’s future vision does not have cannibalism but it highlights an amazing weakness; that the more humans depend on machines, the less human we will essentially become. Forster seems to argue that the human connection to the natural world is our salvation; a lesson not lost in 2019.

You've finished a great deal of time travel but this was the slowest feeling part of our journey. We'll start speeding up in Part 3 which will publish on November 29, 2019.

Miss Part 1? Here it is: A History of XR Cross Reality Part 1

Next:

Part 3 1910 to 1965

Part 4 1966 - 1998

Part 5 1999 - 2013

Part 6  2014 - Future

#Reality #CrossReality #MixedReality #VirtualReality #AugmentedReality #VirtualWorlds #Design #Transmedia #XR #VR #AR #ARVRinEdu #EdTech #Innovation #Change #HGWells #EMForster #TheMachineStops #TheTimeMachine #TheMasterKey #FrankBaum #TheaterPhone