I woke up this morning dreaming about "The Future"

By
Industry Observer

I woke up this morning dreaming about "The Future"

 

The weirdest thing happened to me this morning, I was living in "The Future" and it was very interesting! I am trying to type it down before I forget because you know how dreams go, if you don't write them down right away you forget most of them.

The dream took place in a huge futuristic city and it was dark most of the time. I was some time of scientist and was always going around working on very small integrate pieces of parts for peoples bodies & brains.

There were these long tracks that wiggled around the the city with high speed shuttles/ trains of some sort. I was driving on one of these tracks after being told not to with a fast scooter of some sort and this shuttle came along the track and I had to jump off the track or it would have crashed into me.

There were different people talking with me in the dream but I can not remember their faces, and I do remember this young lady with dark brown hair with deep red highlights that approached me wanting a ride somewhere.

The buildings and structure of the city was very interesting and really looked like the city was booming, but I did not see very many people.

Just before I woke up I was crawling alone someones roof and had to be careful so I didn't fall off because the drop to the ground was very very far. The roof was made from some very strange black sleek steel of some sort.

It was quite exciting being in the future and I hope to back soon some time!

 

Robert Swetz (Vegas Bob) 6-16-2010

 

Future City

 

This is what this city looked like!

 

Posted by

Robert "Vegas Bob" Swetz  

Direct: 408 410 4171

"Have a Wonderful Day"

VIDEOS BY VEGAS BOB

 

Comments (7)

Emily Medvec
eXp Realty LLC - Santa Fe, NM
Realtor | Serving Santa Fe & Northern NM

Sometimes the future is now! Dreaming is just the path to get there.

Jun 16, 2010 12:47 AM
Jay Schmitt
Keller Williams Keystone Realty - Gettysburg, PA
Gettysburg Real Estate Agent

Great looking city. Very interesting to me since I don't remember my dreams if I have them.

Jun 16, 2010 01:03 AM
Robert Vegas Bob Swetz
Las Vegas, NV

Hello Jay and if you write down your dreams right away with a note pad and pencil next to the bed this will help you to remember. I use to have a dream journal and dreams have played a huge part in my life, one of my dreams I had helped to decide to marry m y wife!

VB ;-)

Jun 16, 2010 01:14 AM
Patricia Feager, MBA, CRS, GRI,MRP
DFW FINE PROPERTIES - Flower Mound, TX
Selling Homes Changing Lives

VB,

I just joined this group and read your post from June. It prompted me to find an article I had read a long time ago. BINGO! I found it. I wanted you to have it, because it reminds me of you and your creativity. Never, give up on your dreams. If it wasn't for inventors and people like you, we wouldn't have the types of things we have today.

I can't wait for you to see some of my future posts about the future in technology that I took pictures of in Switzerland PLUS I found what I believe was a REAL ALIEN that lived upon this earth too! I hope to get that done this week.

Here's the long article that I hope you like that was written by Sarah Wright in 2001. It would be great to follow up on this panel to see if there were any new developments.

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Inventors whose dreams transformed computing, medicine and consumer products named Aristotle, Bob Dylan, Thomas Edison, Galileo, Marvin Minsky, Isaac Newton and Judah Folkman as their personal heroes during a Nov. 27 panel discussion at MIT.

Their freewheeling session formed part of a celebration co-sponsored by the Lemelson-MIT Program and the MIT Press Bookstore on the publication of "Inventing Modern America: From the Microwave to the Mouse" (MIT Press).

"Inventing Modern America" by David E. Brown profiles 35 inventors, detailing the events, people and opportunities that shaped their growth. Lester C. Thurow, the Jerome and Dorothy Lemelson Professor of Management and Economics, wrote the foreword. Historic photographs accompany the 200-page text.

"The book celebrates human imagination. Thanks to that, it's impossible to imagine a world where soldiers go out without Kevlar vests or walkie-talkies, or where people have neither MRI nor cardiac pacemaker technologies," said Rob Lemelson, trustee of the Lemelson Foundation.

Lemelson and Merton C. Flemings, director of the Lemelson Program and Toyota Professor Emeritus of Materials Science and Engineering, opened the discussion, which was moderated by radio personality Christopher Lydon.

Panel members were Douglas Englebart, inventor of the computer mouse; Brian Hubert, winner of the 2001 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize; Raymond Kurzweil, inventor of an optical reading machine for the blind; Robert Langer, the Germeshausen Professor of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering and inventor of the "pharmacy on a chip" drug delivery system, and Steve Wozniak, co-founder of Apple Computer.

After Lydon challenged the panelists to name their personal "Joe DiMaggios"--people who inspired them to persevere--he asked, "Is there an 'X factor' that separates a first-class professional engineer or biologist from an inventor?"

"Creativity, brilliance and learning how to deal with failure. Most of the time things won't work," Langer said.

"The scientist values knowledge; the inventor takes pleasure in seeing the leap from a dry formula to an impact on people's lives, to making a difference in the real world. Invention in technology is a form of magic: revealing the methods does not ruin its effect. There is magic to any creation," said Kurzweil.

He urged the next generation of inventors to abandon the "myth of the inventor who disappears into his basement and emerges with a breakthrough. Actually, it's a group. Part of inventing is having leadership qualities, a vision, a passion and the ability to get a group to work effectively together."

Englebart recommended that the next generation of inventors nurture collectively their "dreams about how much people can improve. The mouse was just a windshield wiper. There are urgent big problems that have to be dealt with collectively."

 

A version of this article appeared in MIT Tech Talk on December 5, 2001.

 

May 08, 2011 06:47 PM
Robert Vegas Bob Swetz
Las Vegas, NV

Hello Patricia and a very interesting comment and I will have to check from time to time and read your posts to the "Dream Group". It use to be a hopping group but then kind of died after a while.

VB ;o)

May 09, 2011 03:13 AM
Patricia Feager, MBA, CRS, GRI,MRP
DFW FINE PROPERTIES - Flower Mound, TX
Selling Homes Changing Lives

VB,

Let's see if we can get it revived!

Patricia

May 09, 2011 04:42 PM
Robert Vegas Bob Swetz
Las Vegas, NV

Hello Patricia and I always loved this group and Gary Woltal use to be one of the main bloggers along with myself! I think "Dreams" fit into many parts of our life's when were awake and when were sleeping. Thanks for becoming a member at the Dreams group!

VB ;o)

May 09, 2011 05:19 PM

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