We've made some changes
to The Sunday Times
In the 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey a spaceship crewman uses a videophone to call home for a chat with his daughter, while another character taps into a foolscap-sized electronic notepad to access automatically updated news reports.
Thirty-six years ago Arthur C. Clarke, who wrote the novel on which the film was based, had foreseen camera phones, texting and Teletext. But the great futurologist predicted more, and sooner.
In 1945, in a letter to the editor of Wireless World entitled Peacetime Uses for V2, Clarke proposed geostationary satellites. The idea that a satellite in equatorial orbit 22,000 miles above the earth would remain over the same spot on the ground remained fantasy until Early Bird was launched in 1965. Geostationary satellites are now at the heart of global telecommunications, which would not function without them.
In the 1960s, Clarke foresaw a day when people would be contactable through wristwatch phones wherever they were on the planet. Mobile phones are not quite that small yet, but they are going that way.
The internet was fiction long before it was fact. In his first novel Neuromancer, published in 1984, the American writer William Gibson invented the terms “cyberspace” and “matrix” to describe a world beyond the computer screen in which every computer and every information store is linked in what he calls “a consensual hallucination experienced daily by billions of legitimate operators, in every nation, by children being taught mathematical concepts . . . a graphic representation of data abstracted from banks of every computer in the human system”.
In the Terminator films, the computers owned by the US military are linked into one web called SkyNET. One character explains: “New. Powerful. Hooked into everything. Trusted to run it all. They say it got smart . . . a new order of intelligence. Then it saw all people as a threat, not just the ones on the other side. Decided our fate in a microsecond: extermination.”
It’s easy enough to extrapolate when you see the direction technology is taking. But what we now have has long been wished for.
Samuel Morse, an American portrait painter, was moved to develop the electric telegraph in 1835 after it took a week for him to receive news of his wife’s death. He dreamt of “a worldwide communications system, erasing barriers of time and space, so that no one would be unable to reach a loved one in time of need”. His dot-and-dash code is really the same binary principle on which all computers now work.
Having invented the basic telephone, Alexander Graham Bell produced a prototype Photophone in 1880 using electricity, glass and mirrors. It may have disappeared up a technological cul-de-sac, but it was the first recorded instance of the human voice being carried by radiated electromagnetic waves, the Cro-Magnon ancestor of today’s mobile phone technology.
But you will search William Gibson’s books in vain for any mention of a cheap, easy and portable mobile phone that can reach anyone in the world. He admitted that, in 1984, he had thought the idea far too implausible. He should have read Arthur C. Clarke.
How the new breed of location based mobile services can find your nearest cashpoint, restaurant or wi-fi hotspot
Enjoy screenings of all the classic films you love, plus take advantage of two-for-one tickets
We explore leisure activities that are safe and suitable for all of the family
Times Online's new TV show helps you make the right decisions for your pet
Are you California dreaming? Explore the wonders of the Golden State. Also enter our fantastic competition
See the best entries in this year's competition
Your brain is capable of more than you might think...
An interactive preview of the brand new For Your Eyes Only exhibition
The latest travel news plus the best hotels and gadgets for business travellers

Love Sudoku? Play our brand new interactive game: with added functionality and daily prizes

Are you irritable when you return from work? Drained of emotion? You could be suffering from boreout
Prepare for some shock and awe, petrol lovers. Despite the greens trying to wipe it out, the car is about to offer us the most exciting year ever
We've trawled the brochures and websites to find this summer’s best holidays for every taste and budget

Overseas contacts and local business information

Find a course, arrange a game and save money
2006
£189,500
NW England
2008/08
£169,950
NW England
2007/57
£35,000
South East England
Great car insurance deals online
Circa £82,000 per annum
Birmingham Women's Hospital
Birmingham
To £28k
Barclaycard
Northampton/Liverpool/Teeside
£
Up to £66,000 per annum
Hertfordshire County Council
South East
To £38k
Barclaycard
Northampton/Liverpool
2 Bathrooms, Balcony and Garden
Beautiful Gardens w/ stunning Thames Views
Dining, Shopping & Riverside Pk
Mortgages, bank acc & money transfers to help you buy abroad
Explore mystical Jordan
From £1030 for 7nts 4*
to USA's Most Cosmopolitan City; San Francisco!
£POA
Book Now for Winter 08/09 and Get 10% off!
Great travel insurance deals online
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times. Search globrix.com to buy or rent UK property.
© Copyright 2008 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.