Tomorrow's World - Office of the Future 16 April 1969 - BBC

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 6. 01. 2010
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    James Burke experiences the automated office of the future. In this compilation of reports from a longer programme, James Burke (pictured above) becomes an executive in a futuristic office where the role of a secretary has been usurped by an automated robot. Derek Cooper also reports on a new process for manufacturing micro-electronic crystal lights and visits a South Dakota laboratory deep underground where scientists are collecting information about the sun.
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Komentáƙe • 336

  • @MilitantAntiTheist
    @MilitantAntiTheist Pƙed 9 lety +390

    And just like the real offices of the future, they're all using outdated electronic equipment.

    • @picobyte
      @picobyte Pƙed 7 lety +9

      My cellphone agrees..And makes way less noice.

    • @Keithbarber
      @Keithbarber Pƙed 3 lety +1

      Cutting edge on monday obsolete by Wednesday's

    • @johnwiiu7005
      @johnwiiu7005 Pƙed 2 lety +5

      Don't you dare criticising the trusty fax machine! /s

    • @Ibhorrorauthor
      @Ibhorrorauthor Pƙed 2 lety +1

      đŸ€ŁđŸ€ŁđŸ€ŁđŸ€Łso true!

  • @Luke_P
    @Luke_P Pƙed 4 lety +80

    "I needn't ever get out of this chair' And that's how it all started.

  • @YujiUedaFan
    @YujiUedaFan Pƙed 8 lety +163

    Man: And quietly
    Machine: BZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ

  • @Krawurxus
    @Krawurxus Pƙed 4 lety +34

    I've been sitting sitting here open-mouthed, watching people from 50 years ago wire the pixels on the first 7x5 digital LED displays by hand. This was as fascinating as I imagine watching the first humans make fire would be.

  • @Muonium1
    @Muonium1 Pƙed 7 lety +153

    For the physics interested individual in the 21st century *this clip is an absolute gem of history*. I will even go so far as to say that it may be one of the most important "popular technology" related videos of the last century. Not only does it open with what has to be one of the first tv appearances of the living legend James Burke himself (of Connections fame), but moves on to show in loving detail how Ray Davis Jr. collected his "little bottles of nothing" as his wife called them, which would earn him the 2003 Nobel in physics for the discovery of neutrino flavor oscillation (the sun's core temperature isn't a million degrees cooler than theory predicted after all, but rather a third of the neutrinos are 'disappearing' on their way to us from the sun). And on top of all of that, at the end we see what has to be the very first light emitting diode numeric display ever created using hand crafted red GaAsP diodes built at "wafer scale" directly on little slabs of hand cut GaAs. A technology that now, 50 years later in the form of gallium nitride, is the dominant lighting technology set to take over all other forms of lighting throughout the world. Absolutely incredible.

    • @scialomy
      @scialomy Pƙed 7 lety +4

      I didn't recognized him, I've only seen 2003 pictures of him. Thanks!

    • @dontaskme7004
      @dontaskme7004 Pƙed 5 lety +2

      There is a great clip of the 'tape navigation system' for cars on CZcams

    • @jayh9529
      @jayh9529 Pƙed 4 lety

      Checkout final days channel

    • @HalfdeadRider
      @HalfdeadRider Pƙed 4 lety +1

      I know very little about this stuff, watching the video I was confused as to how they knew this stuff and why they were doing what they were.
      At the end when I saw the LED display it blew my mind, more than them using neutrinos from the sun and how the heck they knew they were there a mile underground. And that they could tell the temperature of the centre of the sun from them lol, even though it turns out it was not accurate.

    • @smokeymcgee7585
      @smokeymcgee7585 Pƙed 4 lety

      I bet you are a real hoot at parties

  • @sologals361
    @sologals361 Pƙed 8 lety +60

    Thank the lord that was not the office of the future.

    • @Flipdrivel
      @Flipdrivel Pƙed 7 lety +4

      Except it absolutely was the office of the future (then). It's just not the office of the present (today). Nothing dates like the future.

  • @mundotaku_org
    @mundotaku_org Pƙed 9 lety +118

    So, they imagine Skype as a whole piece of furniture.

    • @magrathean0
      @magrathean0 Pƙed 5 lety +9

      it's easy to mock from fifty years in the future ;)

    • @Krawurxus
      @Krawurxus Pƙed 4 lety +2

      To be fair, this WAS before the inception of modern all-purpose computers relying on software so of course they imagined a dedicated machine for every task, and only that one task.

    • @WLHS
      @WLHS Pƙed 3 lety

      Robert Heinleins steno desk....star of several of his sci-fi books it even became his girl Friday.

    • @NeilCWCampbell
      @NeilCWCampbell Pƙed 3 lety

      No they concepted Skype as the smallest proof of concept they could?

  • @IAmSoMuchBetterThanYou
    @IAmSoMuchBetterThanYou Pƙed 8 lety +59

    That was quite a bizarre and surreal first five minutes

  • @ruadeil_zabelin
    @ruadeil_zabelin Pƙed 7 lety +39

    This is amazing. He wasn't wrong at all... LCD's and similar panels are so common these days it's hard to imagine a world without them.

  • @Nexfero
    @Nexfero Pƙed 7 lety +29

    Gallium Arsenide is what LEDs are made out of they are literally making LEDs 13:05

  • @weeneldo
    @weeneldo Pƙed 14 lety +72

    Its quite amazing to think that in 1967, they had only made 4 of those displays, but by 1974 they had the technology to rebuild a man's body with bionic implants for only 6 million dollars, including giving him an eye that could zoom in and legs that could run at 60mph. Amazing.

    • @ShahidKhan-ke8fe
      @ShahidKhan-ke8fe Pƙed rokem +3

      anyone can run at 60mph, you just have to run regularly and play it back very slowly.

    • @michael_mouse
      @michael_mouse Pƙed rokem +1

      ... that's not true I'm afraid to say

    • @donerskine7935
      @donerskine7935 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

      The leg could only hop at 60mph, to run you needed 2 of them.
      Back then, anyway, now everything is minituarised. Even legs.
      I miss 1967. I hope it comes back.

  • @kr0nic666
    @kr0nic666 Pƙed 7 lety +20

    It took until 30 seconds before the end before i knew what the fuck they were making

  • @minicoopertn
    @minicoopertn Pƙed 5 lety +26

    When I started watching I could not tell if I was watching Tomorrows World or an episode of The Twilight Zone.

    • @marionkennedy9651
      @marionkennedy9651 Pƙed 3 lety

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂👍

  • @irixperson
    @irixperson Pƙed 7 lety +77

    World's first ASMR video.

  • @oxcart4172
    @oxcart4172 Pƙed 7 lety +19

    Amazing how things are better than those people could have ever imagined

  • @roggerfrogger2
    @roggerfrogger2 Pƙed 12 lety +25

    I can't believe that's the origin of LCD displays! Amazing!
    Back when Britain used to invent stuff and everyone had a combover

    • @n1vg
      @n1vg Pƙed 3 lety

      I can't believe they're doing all of that stuff *by hand*! Also I'm pretty sure those are dynamic scattering mode displays, which really sucked compared to later TN LCDs. High drive voltage, low contrast, high power consumption, and short operating life. I doubt any working displays survive.
      Twisted nematic LCDs were invented about a year later and they're everything DSM was not - low voltage, low power, high contrast, high reliability. DSM got dropped pretty quick.

    • @squarecircle5522
      @squarecircle5522 Pƙed 2 lety

      @@n1vg yes but Ă©ventually the empire dried up and all the worlds resources the uk had exploited for 800 years to better themselves began to decline.

    • @funkyneil2000
      @funkyneil2000 Pƙed 2 lety +1

      @@squarecircle5522 How do you work out 800 years?

    • @ianlaker9161
      @ianlaker9161 Pƙed 2 lety

      Especially Bobby Charlton.

    • @krashd
      @krashd Pƙed 2 lety

      @@squarecircle5522 The UK is only 315 years old. 1707-202x

  • @StellaSteve80
    @StellaSteve80 Pƙed 5 lety +40

    those 60's office babes are much hotter then the modern ones.

    • @michaelmale138
      @michaelmale138 Pƙed 3 lety +9

      creep

    • @safirahmed
      @safirahmed Pƙed 3 lety +3

      Some workplaces with lots of technology tended to be hotter and less energy efficient in the 1960s and 1970s.

  • @fredhoupt4078
    @fredhoupt4078 Pƙed 8 lety +22

    really ancient technological history. Fascinating at how far we've come in such a short time. And the future? We can't even imagine.

    • @lmeza1983
      @lmeza1983 Pƙed 7 lety +1

      you are being really optimistic, I dont care about faster computers or smaller devices. For me the future is how will people will behave and what kind of world problems they will face.

    • @firestorm7977
      @firestorm7977 Pƙed 4 lety

      Well I’m from 2020. The future is great.

    • @ChatGPT1111
      @ChatGPT1111 Pƙed rokem

      @@firestorm7977 well I'm from 2022. The very near future sux more than you can possibly imagine.

  • @AlekMunroe01
    @AlekMunroe01 Pƙed 3 lety +4

    Imagine taking a telephone and a tiny camera like that where ever you go!

  • @SnowHarp
    @SnowHarp Pƙed 12 lety +6

    Amazing to see this and to realize that computers were not really envisaged as being on every desk in the future. The first thing he touches on his desk is a pen and paper. They also did not foresee LCD panels. Obviously not watching Star Trek which came out at about this time.

  • @mkay6089
    @mkay6089 Pƙed 3 lety +2

    OMG that music... My childhood. memories.

  • @ManInTheBigHat
    @ManInTheBigHat Pƙed 5 lety +5

    James Burke is a genius. Love it.

  • @jackkraken3888
    @jackkraken3888 Pƙed 5 lety +4

    James Burke, my man, I love how vision of the future is no only paperless but also lacks human contact which seems pretty accurate in some ways to our current reality.

  • @robleary3353
    @robleary3353 Pƙed rokem +1

    Loved this show as a young child!. Would watch in awe....🙂

  • @Envergure
    @Envergure Pƙed 13 lety +16

    AWESOME! I never imagined they could make semiconductor wafers by hand! 70 years before this show aired, the LED was discovered by accident, and nobody really cared because apparently they couldn't think of any use for a small yellow light.

    • @therealchayd
      @therealchayd Pƙed 6 lety +4

      Search youtube for Jeri Ellsworth, she has hand built some transistors and chips and shows the whole process (it's rather involved, but still within the reach of a dedicated hobbyist)

    • @cnegrea
      @cnegrea Pƙed 2 lety +1

      @@therealchayd yeah, but she uses semiconductor grade wafers

  • @dervxerox
    @dervxerox Pƙed 4 lety +7

    It's uncanny how accurate the prediction was. My office is just like that.

    • @dieseldragon6756
      @dieseldragon6756 Pƙed 2 lety +2

      But doesn’t the noise of the Alexa-controlled hostess trolley disturb your workflow? 🙃

  • @chrisgavin
    @chrisgavin Pƙed 4 lety +9

    Really eye-opening mixture of conjecture/science/engineering. How many people, (especially youngsters) would have watched this on prime time TV (there wasn't much else to watch), then been inspired to find out more. Some of these viewers would go on to study then work, developing more amazing things. The BBC is in a unique position to create and broadcast a lot more content like this today... where the hell is it? We need a whole lot more high quality science/engineering content like this. I like how this mixes broad themes and really specific detailed content too. It's proper broadcasting and most viewers would take away from this something they didn't know about before.

    • @1slandB0y77
      @1slandB0y77 Pƙed 2 lety

      Sadly , the BEEB is more interesting in identity politics and pushing what narrative supports "the message" these days than actually helping people in any way. Oh, how the mighty have fallen...

    • @MeaHeaR
      @MeaHeaR Pƙed 2 lety

      They watching Kardasshiers

    • @krashd
      @krashd Pƙed 2 lety

      You mean other than Click, Horizons, Leading Edge, Science Cafe, What's Next? and Rough Science? What is there other than those six shows?

  • @Juliem1976
    @Juliem1976 Pƙed 10 lety +10

    Try telling anyone these days that technology leaves them alone

  • @briancherry1
    @briancherry1 Pƙed 4 lety +3

    I can't bloody wait for the future!

  • @dontaskme7004
    @dontaskme7004 Pƙed 5 lety +17

    "They're worth around ÂŁ100 each, and at that price need to be handled with great care..."
    At that time a standard terraced house in London was around ÂŁ5000

    • @gram.
      @gram. Pƙed rokem +1

      At this time, a standard terraced house in London is around ÂŁ500,000

  • @Trance88
    @Trance88 Pƙed 7 lety +16

    I'm still not 100% what these new "crystal lights" are. I assume they're Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs)?? Pretty wild that this is just the beginning of what is now the most common source of electric light and display technology.

    • @Muonium1
      @Muonium1 Pƙed 7 lety +20

      that is in fact exactly what they are. they're making gallium arsenide phosphide diodes, so even though this is in black and white we know their color must have been red.

    • @michaelhills8516
      @michaelhills8516 Pƙed 3 lety

      light electrodes dont know the full name halogen lights led wristwatches.etc

  • @scumwizard5857
    @scumwizard5857 Pƙed 7 lety +44

    JUST ME AND MY EXECUTIVE PRISM

    • @freeman10000
      @freeman10000 Pƙed 4 lety +4

      What do I have to do in my life to get an "Executive Prism?" I do actually own a prism, it was made in China, comes in a red box and makes pretty rainbows but it is obviously manufactured for the prole prism afficianado. I need the more dynamic and resourceful prism of the executive.

  • @JakePurches-Base2music
    @JakePurches-Base2music Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

    The beginnings of the practical LED display. Amazing.

  • @typingcat
    @typingcat Pƙed 7 lety +25

    How come he is the only man in the building and all others are girls, like Japanese animations?

    • @bigblue6917
      @bigblue6917 Pƙed 5 lety +6

      That was a typing pool. Something which did not make it to the future. And the secretary got replaced by a virtual assistant who live miles away and probably works from home.

    • @MsPinkwolf
      @MsPinkwolf Pƙed 5 lety +5

      because it was the 60s

  • @nandanm3826
    @nandanm3826 Pƙed 4 lety

    Great and good information. Thank you for sharing.🙏

  • @chrisjudd743
    @chrisjudd743 Pƙed 4 lety +2

    All these years and I still haven’t had a BJ 39 arrive at my desk!

  • @cat333pokemon
    @cat333pokemon Pƙed 10 lety +6

    High-ho, high-ho, it's off to work we go! Hey, I can't be the only person who caught that at the beginning.

  • @medievalist
    @medievalist Pƙed 9 lety +18

    Up with the office that doesn't have a phone! I hate talking on the phone at work - I'd much rather be emailed.

    • @Ubique2927
      @Ubique2927 Pƙed 7 lety

      medievalist .. Email was so yesterday. Messenger is in. Isn't it?

    • @medievalist
      @medievalist Pƙed 7 lety +1

      I wish! Nick Turner

    • @PurplePinkRed
      @PurplePinkRed Pƙed 7 lety

      medievalist I agree. Emails are great. Don't want to hear the bullshit.

  • @kezadrone
    @kezadrone Pƙed 7 lety +3

    Machines do as they're told, I'd like to see them deal with my computer always acting up.

  • @theweathercat2002
    @theweathercat2002 Pƙed 4 lety +1

    This is unique BBC programme

  • @DoctorX17
    @DoctorX17 Pƙed 7 lety +3

    It's crazy to think that something like those displays were insanely expensive to produce in a professional environment, and now they can be made in a home lab...

  • @GreyHulk2156
    @GreyHulk2156 Pƙed 7 lety +11

    "The great thing about machines is that they do what they're told... They're obedient." HA HA HA!
    He has clearly never been to the _actual_ future (our present) where machines are far from obedient and forever breaking down.

  • @enoz.j3506
    @enoz.j3506 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    The L.E.D part was most interesting,great to watch.

  • @dudewhosaysarrh
    @dudewhosaysarrh Pƙed 14 lety +4

    @BGDPPL That was one of the first numeric LED displays, waay too big for a watch. The first digital watches with LED displays were intruduced in the seventies, they were expensive, heavy and the batteries didn't last long. Towards the end of the seventies, they came up with liquid chrystal displays, which were much more energy efficient.

  • @dizzydekil
    @dizzydekil Pƙed 7 lety +2

    my grampa said he was always went home from his office (he works at a bank) at 3 PM.... my brother now works at a bank, and sometimes he doesn't even go back home for 3 days......

  • @JohnSmith-rw2yn
    @JohnSmith-rw2yn Pƙed rokem +3

    love the 7:00 Mark. pouring liquids, removing his tin foil, gases in the air. no protection, no gloves, no mask, no goggles. Either he was reckless or we have gone health and safety mad lol

    • @Mecharnie_Dobbs
      @Mecharnie_Dobbs Pƙed rokem +2

      And 11:57 he turns on the acetylene torch BEFORE he puts on his goggles.

    • @Muonium1
      @Muonium1 Pƙed rokem

      It's just liquid nitrogen. So trust as someone who uses it often: IT'S THE LATTER.

  • @luckystar9205
    @luckystar9205 Pƙed 5 lety

    It was amazing inventory and thanks to those who were actually working and discovering

  • @zenekkamaz3197
    @zenekkamaz3197 Pƙed 2 lety +1

    For last 50 years we made more discoveries and new tecnologies than in last 2000 years. Look at 1969 and now what marvelous times we live in

  • @waynejohnstone3685
    @waynejohnstone3685 Pƙed 4 lety +2

    Pretty cool mining scene, I live in Sudbury Ontario and work indirectly in the mining business. That ppe wouldn’t get you underground these days! We also have the snolab (Sudbury neutrino observatory) - I believe it uses heavy water for detection though. Anyway, these old videos are fascinating - what an amazing time to be alive!

    • @Muonium1
      @Muonium1 Pƙed 3 lety

      D2O being replaced with linear alkylbenzene scintillator fluid for SNO+ operation

    • @krashd
      @krashd Pƙed 2 lety

      Ontario, eh? Are you a hick, a skid or a hockey player? Or a schmelly?

  • @mickyhovis
    @mickyhovis Pƙed 7 lety +2

    a colleague rushed into my office and asked to use my dictaphone I said use your finger like everybody else

  • @dieseldragon6756
    @dieseldragon6756 Pƙed 2 lety +1

    Woah, that clip about the Gallium Crystal Lights could do with more exposure and a vid in it’s own right! Nowadays we call them „LEDs”, and they’ve become a handy and essential part of everyday life! 😁
    (And the foresight of the presenter is commendable! Had Concorde survived the post-9/11 dip in air travel, it would almost certainly have an all-LED (Or „Glass”) cockpit! đŸ’ĄđŸ›«đŸ˜)
    Mind you: I would *never* ever have suspected that LEDs (Or at least single chip LED arrays) were a British invention! Bravo! 💡🇬🇧😇

  • @winstonsmith84
    @winstonsmith84 Pƙed 7 lety +2

    48 years later and I'm watching this on an LCD screen with 3,686,400 windows

    • @Hussdagreat
      @Hussdagreat Pƙed 5 lety

      You mean an OLED screen with 3,686,400 ppi

  • @michaeldemetriou1399
    @michaeldemetriou1399 Pƙed rokem +1

    Sir Isaac Newton "If I see further it is because I am standing on the shoulders of giants" So many ideas and discoveries have come before us.

  • @metafis2490
    @metafis2490 Pƙed 7 lety +2

    Very few people predicted the effect of the internet and WWW on our daily lives. I can only think of Arthur.C.Clarke making such a prediction.

  • @vividman100
    @vividman100 Pƙed 13 lety +1

    That motorised cabinet is nothing short of ingenious.

  • @garethoneill5676
    @garethoneill5676 Pƙed 5 lety +1

    Now it all fits on a phone

  • @ColinJonesPonder
    @ColinJonesPonder Pƙed 7 lety +2

    It's funny how the real future is often more futuristic than predicted.

  • @ckat609
    @ckat609 Pƙed 3 lety

    Amazing

  • @DelilahThePig
    @DelilahThePig Pƙed 7 lety +2

    13:10 They were thinking OLED displays before LCD! I wonder why it has taken so long and why fluorescent displays have been the preferred choice for the uses described?

  • @petertrei
    @petertrei Pƙed měsĂ­cem

    The first LED watch was around 1970. I first saw it in a James Bond film.

  • @ff_crafter
    @ff_crafter Pƙed 4 lety +2

    Wow it's that hard to make a LED 😼

  • @st.apollonius5758
    @st.apollonius5758 Pƙed 5 lety +1

    Just before my 1st birthday:)

  • @MotherSoren
    @MotherSoren Pƙed 7 lety +1

    This voice is just G O D - L I K E

  • @therealbluedragon
    @therealbluedragon Pƙed 12 lety +2

    In the future, everything will be viewed through mirrored tubes.

  • @bigblue6917
    @bigblue6917 Pƙed 5 lety +1

    Somethings they did get right. In the 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey while on the space station on of the characters is using a tablet.

  • @spritemon98
    @spritemon98 Pƙed 3 lety

    This is more complicated than it needs to be

  • @vladm7246
    @vladm7246 Pƙed 7 lety +9

    Plot twist - he's the serial killer.

    • @jaworskij
      @jaworskij Pƙed 5 lety +3

      Yup, this bloke does sound like he's got some mental health issues, doesn't he?

  • @TVperson1
    @TVperson1 Pƙed 12 lety +4

    Heh, these days that display is the speedometer on the dashboard of a car.

  • @GiuseppeGaetanoSabatelli
    @GiuseppeGaetanoSabatelli Pƙed 7 lety +2

    "They just... leave you alone."
    lol, wow they were shortsighted. Ever since the dawn of the internet, they have pestered us with advertisements.

  • @ArachmadiPutra
    @ArachmadiPutra Pƙed rokem

    I love this thing, because they're beyond today 😂😂

  • @jsl151850b
    @jsl151850b Pƙed 14 lety +5

    1) Meh.
    2) They were able to detect individual atoms of Argon??
    3) All those people HANDLING the semiconductor!
    No wonder it was so expensive!
    We in the 21st century assume automation perform those processes.

  • @typhoon-7
    @typhoon-7 Pƙed rokem +1

    Only thing they got wrong was the office of the future is sitting on your kitchen table and you'll spend much of the time saying "you're on mute".

  • @Ancient12Tree
    @Ancient12Tree Pƙed 11 lety +3

    tells about one of the most famous experiments in physics - the neutrino .
    15 atoms in 3 months . 1-2 atoms per week !

  • @NotMe35971
    @NotMe35971 Pƙed 5 lety +2

    I see. This is the office where Dalek used to work, before he went mad and decided to exterminate everyone. I wonder if reason was a declined pay raise or stupidity of his boss?

  • @dangerousdingo8846
    @dangerousdingo8846 Pƙed 7 lety +2

    Some where around the room the monitor fell off the robotic tray.

  • @JustPaden
    @JustPaden Pƙed 5 lety

    Anyone know how they filmed those shots in the intro? Such an interesting effect

  • @johnnyboy3949
    @johnnyboy3949 Pƙed 7 lety +7

    What the actual fuck have I just watched?

  • @willsshepherd2976
    @willsshepherd2976 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    The same robotic desk is still in development I saw it last week

  • @indigohammer5732
    @indigohammer5732 Pƙed 19 dny

    Intelligent broadcasting for a different age.

  • @xander7b
    @xander7b Pƙed 13 lety +2

    "No distractions !" guess they didn't imagine anything about Internet Distractions

  • @DustinDawind
    @DustinDawind Pƙed 5 lety +1

    With a laptop, cell phone, and a Verizon Wifi hotspot my office is wherever I am at the time.

    • @DustinDawind
      @DustinDawind Pƙed 2 lety

      3 years later this is still true. It's just that my office is now at home 99% of the time.

  • @petyrbaelish1718
    @petyrbaelish1718 Pƙed 4 lety

    This is a genuine depiction of a 1970's office, so I guess they got it right pretty much...

  • @antoniomaglione4101
    @antoniomaglione4101 Pƙed 3 lety

    Incredible how they made artisanal production of LED chips in 1969.
    Watching it on an OLED screen with one thousand time more LEDs on the panel. What irony.

  • @geoffgeoff143
    @geoffgeoff143 Pƙed 3 lety +2

    If they tried making tomorrow's world today by the time it got to air it would be yesterday's world.

    • @krashd
      @krashd Pƙed 2 lety

      Yep, the closest thing we have is Click which talks about what is just around the next corner where Tomorrow's World often spoke about things in 20 years time. Tomorrow's World wouldn't work now but Click is as strong today as it was in 2000.

  • @michaelhills8516
    @michaelhills8516 Pƙed 3 lety +1

    reminds me of Carol Burnett show the ding bat Secretary.with a robot burnadeen can you come in here.

  • @robertzeurunkl8401
    @robertzeurunkl8401 Pƙed 4 lety +1

    1:44 - LOL.. Today, we'd simply take a pic of it on our cell phone and text it anywhere in the world within ten seconds.

    • @robertzeurunkl8401
      @robertzeurunkl8401 Pƙed 4 lety

      Do you notice how everything is connected by cords? I guess they didn't quite foresee "wireless" in 1969. lol

    • @robertzeurunkl8401
      @robertzeurunkl8401 Pƙed 4 lety

      Amazing how ingenious all this technology is despite it's crudeness at the time. I mean, we're talking about a simple LED light display. They were throwing around numbers like "100 quid" for a single billet. Months of prep time. Chemical baths. High temp curing. All to create something that comes in devices we would now use once and throw away. Amazing.

  • @simonb2109
    @simonb2109 Pƙed 2 lety +1

    If i worked with some of them tasties that automated executive does i would refuse to work from home.

  • @nicks4934
    @nicks4934 Pƙed 2 lety +1

    Lovin’ those kinky boots 😂

  • @gymkhanadog
    @gymkhanadog Pƙed 7 lety

    Awesome. The first 8 segment LED. Heh!

  • @Bossphobia
    @Bossphobia Pƙed 2 lety

    Stanley sat at his desk drinking coffee.

  • @iidd13iii
    @iidd13iii Pƙed 7 lety +4

    love how health and safety didn't get in the way back then

  • @UKAbandonedMineExplores
    @UKAbandonedMineExplores Pƙed 2 lety +1

    He eventually died through loanleyness.

  • @Jurgh909
    @Jurgh909 Pƙed 2 lety

    I feel much of the old broadcasting was more in-depth and thorough than todays mainstream entertainment. I have a DIY magazine home that explains the basics of how to change the transmission in a car.

  • @nijuanrodriguez7600
    @nijuanrodriguez7600 Pƙed 7 lety

    2017 and still don't have a robot assistant in the office like predicted but we will get there one day

    • @sigmata0
      @sigmata0 Pƙed 6 lety

      Did you see the "typing pool" of women outside the office? They literally did the typing.
      What you have now (I suspect) is a computer which allows you to type letters/emails directly, formatting them in elaborate ways if you wish, proof reading it (checking for spelling and grammatical mistakes) then send them or print them without anyone else being involved.
      Further, you have calculators, spreadsheets and financial software that does all the accounting requiring you only to type in the various amounts and categories (something another whole team of people would be needed to achieve).
      It can organise your diary (with reminders), hold your contacts, track tasks and allows you to create presentations (which you can share with the whole world if you wish).
      You can even do enquiries without asking anyone in person; finding contact details of other companies and services, buy any kind of office furniture or supplies, get companies to repair things, order transport or couriers, have food delivered etc, etc.
      Of course, you have a robot assistant. It just hasn't replaced your job yet.

  • @simonthomas5367
    @simonthomas5367 Pƙed 5 lety +1

    BJ 39!! Anything I want? Brilliant.

  • @oldfartinthenight9201
    @oldfartinthenight9201 Pƙed 2 lety +1

    All that tech for 1969 and they have a scrunched up aluminium foil lid!

  • @importantjohn
    @importantjohn Pƙed 3 lety +1

    None of my furniture moves on its own. Progress my arse.

  • @AzraellllearzA
    @AzraellllearzA Pƙed 7 lety

    OSHA would love that bit at 6:55

  • @bordersw1239
    @bordersw1239 Pƙed rokem +1

    Well they got it wrong for 2020-2022, for many the office is their kitchen table, as spare bedroom or their lounge.

  • @locouk
    @locouk Pƙed 9 lety +3

    And they're still in there working out the iPhone 7.