Resolves YES for any number of technologies that are widespread enough in 2049 but not in 2024.
Resolution criteria:
Significant Adoption: The technology must be adopted to a degree that indicates it has moved beyond the experimental or niche phase.
Operational Efficiency: The technology should demonstrate reliable and efficient operation in real-world conditions.
Regulatory Approval: If applicable, the technology must receive approval from relevant regulatory bodies.
Economic Viability: The technology should be commercially viable, with clear economic benefits.
Independent Verification: The breakthrough should be independently verified by reputable sources.
If it is unclear whether any given technology meets these requirements before 2050, resolves to some subjective percentage value.
@JuJumper Aren't we travelling to the future all the time? If you want to speed it up, would cryonics qualify? What about relativistic time dilation?
The base should supports continuous human presence for at least one year by the end date. The habitats and other infrastructure are (at least somewhat) permanent instead of temporary. It should also include some commercial elements. Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station is not "viable" according to this definition: for that to be the case, it would need to be partially funded by regular tourist visits.
Is it not the case for both of them?
For BCI there’s a multitude of devices from those used from locked-in syndrome to cochlear implants, not to mention consumer products.
For gene editing, don’t GMO count?