The writer Bill Douglass is well-versed in making compelling forecasts – in 2000 he won a $20,000 (£14,800) global futurist writing contest entitled “The World in 2050”.
While he still agrees one of his original predictions – pilotless planes – will come true by 2050, he believes we will first see more advances in driverless cars, making traffic congestion “largely a thing of the past”.
“Cars will drive so much closer to each other than they can now,” he told the BBC. “And if one has to break, they all break.
“On private toll roads for autonomous vehicles, there’s no reason traffic can’t go up to 100 miles an hour or so – you’ll see mortality from traffic accidents plummet.”
Away from Earth, the space race will equally continue at speed, journalist and co-host of the Space Boffins podcast Sue Nelson told the BBC.
She says in 25 years, it is likely there will be a liveable base on the Moon; and some industries could be almost entirely based in space.
For example, she believes we may see pharmaceutical companies making the next generation of medicines in microgravity, i.e. on board an orbiting spacecraft.
This is because, she says, crystals grown this way rather than on Earth, are “often larger and better quality”.