Human Race on the Verge of a Massive Upgrade

The exponential growth of technology will greatly expand our lifespans and eventually let humans settle in other galaxies, famous inventor and author Raymond Kurzweil said in a speech Monday.

By Jon Brodkin
Tue, October 13, 2009

Network World — The exponential growth of technology will greatly expand our lifespans and eventually let humans settle in other galaxies, famous inventor and author Raymond Kurzweil said in a speech Monday.

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Kurzweil has written extensively about laws of accelerating returns related to IT, and predicts that humans will eventually be able to overcome age and disease by combining artificial systems with our mortal bodies.

Life expectancy has risen greatly over the past century, and within a decade and a half medical science will be advancing so rapidly that another year will be added to the average person's life expectancy every year, he said.

"Your life expectancy will run away from you, so you can hang in there," Kurzweil said, drawing laughs from the audience.Kurzweil was speaking to a group of IT professional at Computerworld's Storage Networking World in Phoenix. Kurzweil, author of The Singularity is Near and other books about the future of technology and the human race, talked little about current storage technology. Instead he focused on his theories related to laws of accelerating returns, and how they could lead to technological advances that seem unimaginable today.

While Moore's Law is well known, Kurzweil says there are countless examples showing that IT progresses exponentially, rather than linearly. Examples include increasing performance of dynamic RAM memory and magnetic data storage. Kurzweil, 61, said there has been a billion-fold increase in the price-performance of computing since he was an undergraduate.

"These technologies will be a million times more powerful in 20 years," he says.

Because medicine is in many ways becoming an information technology, Kurzweil believes we will ultimately be able to reprogram our bodies to be more resistant to disease, and greatly enhance our physical abilities and brainpower. For example, he said replacing a portion of our red blood cells with lab-manufactured blood cells could let us sprint for 15 minutes without running out of breath, or sit at the bottom of a pool for hours on end.

"The software that's running in our bodies is really out of date," he said. "How long do you go without updating the software in your cell phone? The software in our bodies evolved thousands or millions of years ago."

By 2029, Kurzweil said that $1,000 worth of computation power will be equal to 1,000 times the power of the human brain. Reverse engineering of the brain will be completed, virtual reality technology will be a part of everyday life, and nanoscale devices will exist in our bodies keeping us healthy. Skeptics may scoff, he said, but even today some Parkinson's disease patients essentially have therapeutic computers inside their brains.

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