Future Living 2025 (found Science Channel documentary special; 2002): Difference between revisions

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<blockquote>"Future Living - Discover what life will be like in the year 2025. Advanced technology will enable the creation of iris-scanning security systems and refrigerators that reorder cartons of milk when the old ones expire. Meet the Robosapien who is more human than machine."</blockquote>
<blockquote>"Future Living - Discover what life will be like in the year 2025. Advanced technology will enable the creation of iris-scanning security systems and refrigerators that reorder cartons of milk when the old ones expire. Meet the Robosapien who is more human than machine."</blockquote>


On January 6, 2024, YouTube user ''mikusingularity'' (@piplupsingularity) uploaded a recording of the documentary provided by Reddit user ''omeglidan'', after having made requests on the r/lostmedia subreddit<ref>[https://www.reddit.com/r/lostmedia/comments/efcxno/does_anyone_remember_a_documentary_called_future/ Does anyone remember a documentary called "Future Living 2025" on the Discovery Channel or Science Channel? : lostmedia] Retrieved 7 Jan '24</ref> in December 2019 and the Lost Media Wiki forum<ref>[https://forums.lostmediawiki.com/thread/10844/future-living-science-channel-documentary "Future Living 2025" (2002 Science Channel documentary) | Forums - The Lost Media Wiki] Retrieved 7 Jan '24</ref> in March 2023, rendering the full documentary as found.
On January 6, 2024, YouTube user ''mikusingularity'' (@piplupsingularity) uploaded a recording of the documentary provided by Reddit user ''omeglidan'', in response to a request made on the r/lostmedia subreddit<ref>[https://www.reddit.com/r/lostmedia/comments/efcxno/does_anyone_remember_a_documentary_called_future/ Does anyone remember a documentary called "Future Living 2025" on the Discovery Channel or Science Channel? : lostmedia] Retrieved 7 Jan '24</ref> in December 2019, rendering the full documentary as found.


==Gallery==
==Gallery==

Revision as of 19:25, 7 January 2024

Future Living 2025 title card.jpeg

The title card of the documentary.

Status: Found

Date found: 06 Jan 2024

Found by: omeglidan and mikusingularity

"Come with us on a journey into the future, to see how we'll be living in 2025. It's closer than you think."

Future Living 2025[1][2], 2025: Future Living[3][4], or simply 2025 (according to the title card) was a documentary that aired on the (Discovery) Science Channel in 2002 (and re-ran multiple times during the 2000s), predicting technological advances in the year 2025. Framed around the futuristic life of the fictitious DiMarco family, the documentary discussed technologies such as:

  • Self-driving vehicles
  • Tele-immersion (3D teleconferencing) and remote work
  • Virtual and augmented reality
  • Wearable computers (e.g. smart glasses)
  • Low-cost satellites and space transportation
  • Affective computing (empathic machines)
  • Ambient intelligence (electronics that respond to human presence)
  • Green buildings
  • Home security systems
  • Hydrogen fuel cell vehicles
  • Personalized media (music/TV)
  • Ultra-thin LED displays
  • Intellectual and creative games and toys

One of the reruns was once reuploaded to YouTube in five parts, with links being posted on sites like the TechEBlog[5] and SgForums[6] in 2007, but the YouTube account that had uploaded them had been terminated for several years.

Before its rediscovery in 2024, a description on an archived page on science.discovery.com[7] provided one of the only direct proofs of its existence, as no physical media (such as a DVD) was released and the show was not listed on any version of the website after the early-to-mid 2000s. The documentary was listed as part of the "Digital Domain" anthology series.

"Future Living - Discover what life will be like in the year 2025. Advanced technology will enable the creation of iris-scanning security systems and refrigerators that reorder cartons of milk when the old ones expire. Meet the Robosapien who is more human than machine."

On January 6, 2024, YouTube user mikusingularity (@piplupsingularity) uploaded a recording of the documentary provided by Reddit user omeglidan, in response to a request made on the r/lostmedia subreddit[8] in December 2019, rendering the full documentary as found.

Gallery

Videos

The full documentary.

The documentary used these exact clips of the Japanese reusable rocket concept "Kankoh-maru" (at timestamp 8:52), albeit with an electronic soundtrack and no text.

Images

See Also

Discovery Channel

Discovery Kids

Hub Network

References