{"id":192,"date":"2007-11-07T19:55:12","date_gmt":"2007-11-08T02:55:12","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.bspcn.com\/2007\/11\/07\/5-awesome-sci-fi-inventions-that-would-actually-suck\/"},"modified":"2007-11-07T19:55:12","modified_gmt":"2007-11-08T02:55:12","slug":"5-awesome-sci-fi-inventions-that-would-actually-suck","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/localhost\/wordpress\/2007\/11\/07\/5-awesome-sci-fi-inventions-that-would-actually-suck\/","title":{"rendered":"5 Awesome Sci-Fi Inventions (That Would Actually Suck)"},"content":{"rendered":"
Written by CRACKED Staff, Keith Mclean<\/a><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Remember all those Star Trek<\/em> gadgets you wished you had because they looked so cool? Well, it turns out looking cool is about all they’d be good for.<\/p>\n Here’s five inventions that will be available some day … though you may not want them when they get here.<\/p>\n #5.<\/p>\n Flying Cars<\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n As seen in: Why we thought we wanted it: Of course, once you learned to drive you wanted one even more. Every time you’re stuck in traffic, you can picture yourself flipping a switch and swooping into the sky, leaving those honking bastards behind. You’d fly straight to work, free as a bird.<\/p>\n Why we were wrong: No, you’d have to fly according to a wussified autopilot, along pre-set pathways. Air-roads, in other words. And, once everybody has a flying car … well, have you ever been driving to work in a city at around, oh, eight or nine in the morning? Now, imagine if there was not just one layer of cars, but there was layer after layer of flying metal death traps creeping above and below you.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n That’s not even the worst part. The many people who have tried to invent flying cars<\/a> are finding out that every single thing that’s bad with cars (cost, safety, etc) is made worse when you try to make the things fly.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n For instance, no matter what kind of engine they invent, a flying car will always burn more fuel than a regular car, especially on short trips (you’d burn a bunch of gas trying to overcome that whole gravity thing on takeoff).<\/p>\n Even worse, what would be a minor fender bender in regular cars would likely send two flying cars plummeting to the ground while the passengers scream in terror. Now imagine the poor guy on the ground, sitting there at a red light, as a flaming five-car pile-up hurdles down toward him from the sky like the wrath of God.<\/p>\n If you’re not scared yet, try to imagine what the insurance premiums are gonna look like.<\/p>\n #4.<\/p>\n Jet Packs<\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n As seen in: Why we thought we wanted it: Why we were wrong: <\/p>\n Modern jet packs don’t use “jets” at all, for that very reason. They just use tanks of compressed gas that basically fart you into the air. If that sounds lame, it’s because it is lame. The prototypes they have now let you fly a whole 30 seconds<\/a>.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n But, let’s assume they overcome all that and make one that actually works. All those safety issues we have with the flying cars? You’ve got all that, only without a car around you to protect your fragile body. The only possible method of saving your ass when you crash\/fall asleep\/run out of fuel is probably a parachute, which means you’d need extensive training on how to land without impaling yourself on a tree branch.<\/p>\n The only alternative would have to be some kind of enormous air bag that instantly inflates around you in an emergency, letting you bounce gently to safety while you involuntarily shout, “WHEEEE!!!” The problem with that, of course, is that we’d be intentionally crashing all the time just to make that happen.<\/p>\n #3.<\/p>\n Holodecks<\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n As seen in: Why we thought we wanted it: <\/p>\n Why we were wrong: Now, assuming the creators of the real holodeck are not completely retarded and they install something that makes it so the simulation cowboys do not shoot real bullets and that the veldt lions don’t really eat you (both of these would seem to be first-day considerations in the design phase), there is another problem.<\/p>\n Imagine how you’ll react if you’re in your holodeck and somebody interrupts you. Say, you’re halfway through your chess game with Darth Vader, when suddenly he disappears, Scarlett Johansson is no longer sitting in your lap, and pizza costs money again. You’d find the guy who turned off the machine and snap his damned neck. Dilbert<\/em> creator Scott Adams jokingly points out<\/a> in his book The Dilbert Future<\/em> that the holodeck “will be society’s last invention.” It’s no joke; once we had it, there’d be no reason to have anything else.<\/p>\n It’s not just that it would be addictive; it’s that it would literally fill every possible human emotional need and utterly eliminate all motivation to ever do anything. Everyone’s only goal would be to do just enough work to keep food and electricity coming into the holodeck, to keep the amount of time you have to spend in the real world to a minimum.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n People would stop reproducing, your virtual Scarlett Johansson could have perfect virtual kids who’d never wind up in jail or steal money from you to buy crack. If you get tired of them, tell the holodeck to blink them out of existence. If you’re saying that you’re a high-minded person who pursues spiritual goals and would never be sucked in by anything as crude as a simulation, hey, they’ve got a holodeck for you, too. You can sit down to dinner with Plato and Abe Lincoln and Gandhi and Jesus. Now imagine getting yanked out of that to go work at the post office all day. You’d barricade yourself in with a shotgun.<\/p>\n We’re thinking if aliens showed up to Earth 1,000 years after the invention of the holodeck, they’d find a silent planet with 10 billion mummified corpses laying on the floor of 10 billion dusty holodecks, with huge smiles on their faces.<\/p>\n #2.<\/p>\n Teleporters<\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n As seen in: Why we thought we wanted it: Why we were wrong: <\/p>\n A teleporter wouldn’t actually break down your atoms and then shoot those same atoms thousands of miles through the air; even if it were possible, there’d be no reason to do it. It would instead just grab hydrogen and oxygen atoms from out of the air nearby and assemble you out of those. One hydrogen atom is the same as another, after all.<\/p>\n
Blade Runner, The Fifth Element, Back to the Future II, Futurama, The Jetsons<\/em> … it’s actually kind of difficult to list sci-fi that doesn’t<\/em> feature some variation of the flying car.<\/p>\n
First, we don’t mean some kind of sissy half-plane, half-car hybrid that some people will try to tell you is a flying car. No, we mean real, float off the ground, how the crap is that happening, Jetsons<\/em> sort of flying cars. Admit it, when you were 7 years old, there were only two things you were sure of: Transformers fucking ruled, and the future would be full of flying goddamn cars.<\/p>\n
Well, guess what: They’re not gonna let you do that. People just flying wherever the fuck they want would be a death warrant for every radio tower and power line in the country.<\/p>\n
The Jetsons<\/em> (again), The Rocketeer<\/em>, James Bond used one in Thunderball<\/em>, Boba Fett … too many to count. If you’ve never heard about and\/or purchased a toy featuring a jet pack, you are from the 1800s.<\/p>\n
Because every single human wants the ability to fly, pretty much from birth. We’re talking about the ability to fly<\/em> here, not ride in a thing that flies.<\/p>\n
We’re going to skip past the obvious point that the rocketeer here would be left with charred stumps below the thigh, since that exhaust would have to be coming out of his jet pack at around 2,000 degrees.<\/p>\n
Most people know the holodeck as an invention out of the Star Trek<\/em> series, but their writers probably took the idea from a Ray Bradbury short story called The Veldt<\/em> where a family has a holodeck that simulates an African veldt, and then are (predictably) eaten by virtual lions.<\/p>\n
The holodeck is just a big room that can simulate any number of environments and\/or experiences for the user, and can trick all five senses into believing that it’s real. You don’t have to hook anything up to your brain, you can walk in and out of it like any room. A room that happens to be full of ninjas and naked women and everything else you don’t have in your real life.<\/p>\n
Of course, we here at Cracked were too busy practicing jujitsu and working on our dragsters to watch something as geeky as Star Trek<\/em>. But, we’ve heard that the dangers of a holodeck were demonstrated in Episode 234 (“A Fistful of Datas,” aired Nov 9, 1992, Stardate 46271.5). This episode proved that if you get shot by a cowboy in the holodeck world, you really die.<\/p>\n
Star Trek, The Fly<\/em>, countless video games.<\/p>\n
Here’s a technology that’d make the flying car and the jet pack both look like that retarded Flintstones<\/em> car you drive with your feet. We’re talking instant transport to anywhere, any time. You can live on the beach in Hawaii and work in New York. Just sit there in the morning and sip coffee by the ocean until about five seconds before your morning meeting is set to start, then step into your transport and instantly you’re in the conference room in the city.<\/p>\n
Many later science fiction writers have declared that a device that can disassemble and reassemble a human molecule-by-molecule would be patently unsafe (the most famous and grotesque portrayal of a teleporter accident came, of course, in the film Spaceballs<\/em>). But, even if they get the bugs worked out (What method of transportation is perfectly safe, after all?) there is a much larger and much weirder issue.<\/p>\n