(PD).- En el año 1901, Arthur Palm, un estudiante de 14 años de edad de Milwaukee, Wisconsin, publico un artículo en el periódico de su colegio –The Excelsior– describiendo como sería el mundo en el 2001. Y dice mezvam -que es quien localizó el artículo- que el muchacho no mencionó internet o la nanotecnología, y creía que la electricidad curaría casi todo… hasta la vejez.
El material forma parte d eun libro titulado «Yesterday’s Future: The Twentieth Century Begins (Voices of the Wisconsin Past)»:
«How it may appear a hundred years hence, when modern inventions have been carried to their highest point of development that even Edison would feel jealous of the great inventions in the year 2001. In the year 2001 you will see sky-scrapers sticking far above the clouds over 200 stories high. On the streets there will not be any room for street cars, so they will build lines way up in the air, and there will be landings fastened to the high skyscrapers, where the people will wait for the cars. The carlines will have different kinds of names and you will see the name «Manhattan Air Line» many hundreds of feet above the ground. You see air-ships and carriages fastened to balloons for the transportation of the people through the air, and you will often see collisions in the clouds. In one of the sky-scrapers on the 119 story you will see a sign, ‘Old People Restored to Youth by Electricity, While You Wait.'»