muzani 4 years ago

Only one mention of climate change. Which was the biggest problem of the world before covid. Here's a tweet (in Malay) back in 2019, warning that parts of the country would be underwater in 2050: https://twitter.com/CentGPS/status/1191913321391247360

Floods hit hard a few weeks ago, really hard. Cars were underwater, homes completely wrecked. A lot of the damage were in line with the chart above. They're working on drainage but I don't really think that'll help for rising sea levels.

  • JaggerJo 4 years ago

    I’m from Germany and we were hit really hard by the flood.

    People died, lost their homes - but after a few months most of it is already forgotten.

    There is little to no action taken to prevent this from happening again - at least in the village my parents live.

    A friend of mine lost everything. It makes me freaking angry. We all have to adjust our behavior or we are really fucked sooner than most people think.

    Climate change is already here.

    • przeor 4 years ago

      when last flood was in your area ? I heard about it, cos Im from Poland and we have plenty of areas that are probe to flooding but people still try to build homes in floading prone areas coz of X ( dunno why )

ak_111 4 years ago

Striking that the major stories that occurred this year weren't mentioned anywhere in any of the top voted comments, or where mentioned in exactly the wrong way:

ordered by my subjective level of importance:

- Increased spread of covid variants right until the end of 2021 (along with prolonging of lockdown measures).

- Official recognition by the Fed that inflation is no longer transitory

- State Capitol attack.

- Increased confrontation with Russia.

- Taliban taking over Afghanistan in a blink of an eye.

- Stock market smashing all time high after all time high.

- Evergrande collapse.

- Lira collapse

- The Great Resignation

- web3, nft and metaverse dominating tech discussion.

  • arturkane7 4 years ago

    tbf some of these are quite contradictory no way anyone could have predicted them and not look like a fool, which is a sign of the crazy time we live in.

    Evergrand and Lira collapsing with the markets barely reacting for example.

    • emteycz 4 years ago

      Actually I think that's a property of most significant predictions that came true - and it's nothing new.

      Reality is and always was much crazier than our imagination and sense of what is normal/possible.

  • mellosouls 4 years ago

    This is an excellent list though I think the last two have little impact outside of tech-heavy fora like this (tbf you specifically mention "tech discussion").

    Most of the others actually mean something in the real world.

  • mam4 4 years ago

    No one cares about the capitol attack

    • cdaringe 4 years ago

      My community cares deeply about it, but action is taken pretty much only via donations and the ballot box

abletonlive 4 years ago

Inflation was pretty well predicted. Good job hackernews

contravariant 4 years ago

> Software Bill of Material (SBOM) will become more of a thing

Not sure if it's become more of a thing but it is pretty dang relevant these last few weeks.

  • xyzwave 4 years ago

    Somewhat of an outsider here.

    What’re you referring to?

  • Zababa 4 years ago

    There was log4j the last few weeks, the malicious packages in PyPI and the ua-parser-js that was taken over. At least that's what I remember from this year.

ggm 4 years ago

my pick for 2022 remains crypto crash.

my second pick is that quantum supremacy will not happen in 2022

my third pick is that 2022 will be the year of linux desktop

  • spot5010 4 years ago

    I am willing to bet that quantum supremacy for some actually useful computation is not going to happen in this decade.

    • ggm 4 years ago

      I have doubts it will ever be "Supreme" but I can genuinely believe it will help locate solutions, subsequently confirmed by traditional methods, which are then optimised to be as quick or quicker.

      Run enough times, find the statistically satisfying minima or maxima or point of interest. Mainly it's about coherence and noise. Stable qbits are like Noah's cubits: hard to find.

      ubiquitous RSA factoring in nanoseconds? Don't personally think so. Specific key finding for post-hoc analysis? Dunno, but not in 2022 or by 2030 (to agree with you)

  • Shared404 4 years ago

    > my third pick is that 2022 will be the year of linux desktop

    Don't do that, don't give me hope. /j

    In all seriousness though, I don't know if we'll ever see it. That being said, if the Steam Deck materializes, is popular, and people don't go straight to booting Windows... It could actually happen!

    • ggm 4 years ago

      Linux will have a functional desktop environment before OSX has a tiling window manager which doesn't need you to "root" your installation :-(

      • Shared404 4 years ago

        Honestly, my personal Year of the Linux Desktop was 2018ish, I prefer Linux's current state to Win/Mac.

        Is there really no way to do that on Mac?

  • stackbutterflow 4 years ago

    At this point I don't think that the year of linux desktop is even a thing to root for. What could there be to gain?

    • rytcio 4 years ago

      Put pressure on Microsoft and Apple to stop being so awful.

  • danuker 4 years ago

    > my pick for 2022 remains crypto crash.

    Everything is crashing, but it seems crypto less so than national currencies.

    • ac29 4 years ago

      Define "everything". SP500 closed at an all time high in the most recent trading session (Dec 23).

  • rvz 4 years ago

    > my pick for 2022 remains crypto crash.

    You know what?

    Maybe this time, you could be right.

    Let's come back to this in a years time and tell everyone about it.

betwixthewires 4 years ago

Well, number 55 was not factored using Shor's algorithm on a quantum computer, so I'm a happy camper.

jimhi 4 years ago

The next incoming trend of startups is Buy Now, Pay later. A series of companies will offer you to keep your standard of living and assume you can pay it off at a later date.

Many will abuse these services assuming they can have their pre-Covid lifestyles and just “wait out” whatever recession.

lkrubner 4 years ago

The process of drug approval is so slow that I can’t predict a one year revolution, but given a few years, I do expect to see mRNA vaccines/treatments to emerge as a broad category treating dozens of medical conditions.