Explore Topics:
AIBiotechnologyRoboticsComputingFutureScienceSpaceEnergyTech
Space

Our Star Trek-like Future Awaits on This Week’s Episode of Ask an Expert [VIDEO]

David J. Hill
Oct 01, 2015

Share

If you consider how much of our world's systems revolve around scarcity — from basic needs like food and shelter to quality-of-life improving desirables — it's no wonder that the resource-abundant world of the Star Trek universe would seem like utopian fantasy. But every day, advances in science and technology take a step closer to a future that in a word can be described as abundant.

In the season finale of Ask an ExpertPeter Diamandis discusses a future of abundance along with asteroid mining robots and how technology affects his daily life. Diamandis is the Chairman and CEO of the X PRIZE Foundation, which launches incentive prizes to drive technological breakthroughs for humanity's benefit. He is also the co-Founder and Executive Chairman of Singularity University.

Be Part of the Future

Sign up to receive top stories about groundbreaking technologies and visionary thinkers from SingularityHub.

100% Free. No Spam. Unsubscribe any time.

Have a question about virtual reality, synthetic biology, or the future of emerging technologies? Tweet us at @singularityu with the hashtag #AskSU. Experts within the Singularity University community will answer queries in future seasons, so be sure to subscribe to Ask an Expert to get the latest.

Subscribe to SU's YouTube channel to stay up-to-date on the latest insights and perspectives shared at SU's Graduate Studies Program and Executive Programs.

David started writing for Singularity Hub in 2011 and served as editor-in-chief of the site from 2014 to 2017 and SU vice president of faculty, content, and curriculum from 2017 to 2019. His interests cover digital education, publishing, and media, but he'll always be a chemist at heart.

Related Articles

Solar panels on the ISS with Earth's horizon from space in the background

Data Centers in Space: Will 2027 Really Be the Year AI Goes to Orbit?

Domenico Vicinanza
NASA image of the planet Earth from space

Scientists Say We Need a Circular Space Economy to Avoid Trashing Orbit

Edd Gent
A radio image of the Milky Way taken with the Murchison Widefield Array.

New Images Reveal the Milky Way’s Stunning Galactic Plane in More Detail Than Ever Before

Natasha Hurley-Walker
and
Silvia Mantovanini
Solar panels on the ISS with Earth's horizon from space in the background
Space

Data Centers in Space: Will 2027 Really Be the Year AI Goes to Orbit?

Domenico Vicinanza
NASA image of the planet Earth from space
Space

Scientists Say We Need a Circular Space Economy to Avoid Trashing Orbit

Edd Gent
A radio image of the Milky Way taken with the Murchison Widefield Array.
Space

New Images Reveal the Milky Way’s Stunning Galactic Plane in More Detail Than Ever Before

Natasha Hurley-Walker
and
Silvia Mantovanini

What we’re reading

Be Part of the Future

Sign up to receive top stories about groundbreaking technologies and visionary thinkers from SingularityHub.

100% Free. No Spam. Unsubscribe any time.

SingularityHub chronicles the technological frontier with coverage of the breakthroughs, players, and issues shaping the future.

Follow Us On Social

About

  • About Hub
  • About Singularity

Get in Touch

  • Contact Us
  • Pitch Us
  • Brand Partnerships

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
© 2025 Singularity