RhymesWell
All Star
I think it's like Mass Effect in a way. Intelligent life always ends up creating A.I and it always becomes sentient and wipes the creators out. Grey are probably A.I created by some ancient race.
I think it's like Mass Effect in a way. Intelligent life always ends up creating A.I and it always becomes sentient and wipes the creators out. Grey are probably A.I created by some ancient race.
You're telling me that maybe we could terraform an entire planet in 300 yearsHard to say. 300 years is a long time considering the exponential growth of technology. Even if we did though, living there would suck dikk.

That's actually pretty incredible given it's mainly due to some changes in diet, lifestyle, medicine etc. I'm talking about developments that will occur with the continued exponential growth of technology. There is no limit. Once they identify the genetic causes of ageing, and have the technology to change them and prevent cell failure, indefinite life will be a reality.There won't be any. We've only extended life on-average about 30 years since the Paleolithic Era.
then given our current trajectory barring no disasters that threaten humanity, indefinite life will eventually become the reality. The question is how soon it will be.This. Think about where humans were just 100 years ago.The change is hard to fathom. 300 years in an age with exponential technological growth is just,Hard to say. 300 years is a long time considering the exponential growth of technology. Even if we did though, living there would suck dikk.

You're telling me we that maybe we could terraform an entire planet in 300 years![]()
At that point we might as well terraform any damaged parts of Earth to make them habitable and liveableWell there's two possibilities.
Either:
Both answers are speculation. With the rate technology is advancing now, we may not even have to terraform a planet in order to live on it. Who knows, breh. Seeing that far ahead is impossible.
- Yes
- No

This is all I needed to hear. You have no clue what your talking about. Outside of a few extremophiles, no life could survive on Mars in it's current condition. The ONLY way to live on that planet would be to terraform it COMPLETELY. You have no actual idea how we could accomplish any of these monumental feats, your simply saying "Technology is moving fast, it's possible." over and over again, and that statement has no merit scientifically. What I said was speculative as well, but I have actual points.Well there's two possibilities.
Either:
Both answers are speculation. With the rate technology is advancing now, we may not even have to terraform a planet in order to live on it. Who knows, breh. Seeing that far ahead is impossible.
- Yes
- No
Honestly. If we had that much power it would be easier to fix a damaged house then start with just the frame of one far away. This thread is filled with a bunch of pseudoscientists. We don't even fully understand gravity yet, and we're supposed to either be able to adapt to such a drastic reduction, or stop it? Dudes in here are overestimating human potential to astonishing degrees. I think this would be possible at earliest in about 750 years or so. Computing power doubles at a crazy rate, about once every 18 months I think, but Moore himself said this would reach saturation soon and eventually slow down, and even so computing power ≠ energyAt that point we might as well terraform any damaged parts of Earth to make them habitable and liveable![]()
This is all I needed to hear. You have no clue what your talking about. Outside of a few extremophiles, no life could survive on Mars in it's current condition. The ONLY way to live on that planet would be to terraform it COMPLETELY. You have no actual idea how we could accomplish any of these monumental feats, your simply saying "Technology is moving fast, it's possible." over and over again, and that statement has no merit scientifically. What I said was speculative as well, but I have actual points.


The statement you made was ignorant, in order to live on Mars as sentient life forms we would have to terraform it. The uploading consciousness to a digital sphere argument is quite prevalent, if we could do that there would be no reason to go to Mars at all. It's certainly more feasible to save our consciousness then our bodies. But that is a completely different debate, and I doubt that's what you were referring to when you initially talked about colonizing Mars.I love the "you have no idea what you're talking about" argument when someone doesn't agree with you.
The fact is, there's a strong belief by people smarter than both you and I that we may not even have biological bodies that far into the future. There's a book by my favorite author named Ray Kurzweil that describes it pretty well. It's called "The Singularity is Near". Kind of long winded at points and he tends to go on and on about how "right" he is in some parts of it, but it's a good read on the exponential rate of our technological and biological evolution.
Terraforming a planet to conform to our no longer existing biology would be kind of a moot point, don't you think?
But what do I know.![]()
At that point we might as well terraform any damaged parts of Earth to make them habitable and liveable![]()