I'm looking forward to seeing the 2015 movie Eye in the Sky, starring Helen Mirren, Alan Rickman and Iain Glen, which has received excellent reviews but only limited release.
Take a look at the following trailer, and pause for a moment at 20 seconds and at 40 seconds to see a couple of science-fictional technologies that were first introduced about thirty-five and eighty years ago, respectively.
(Eye in the Sky movie trailer video)
The first is a UAV flapping-wing bird that was described by Roger Zelazny in his 1980 novel Changeling; he called it the tracer-bird:
The prototype blue-bellied, gray-backed tracer-bird with the wide-angle eye and the parabola ear followed the dragon-riders north. A series of the larger fliers followed it at well-spaced intervals, to serve as relay points for the spy broadcasts...
(Read more about Zelazny's tracer-bird)
The second instance is an 80 year-old idea, from a 1936 issue of Astounding Stories magazine. Raymond Z. Gallun was one of the three most famous authors of the Golden Age of science fiction (or scientifiction); he's fun to read even today.
The Scarab rubbed its hind legs together, as flies will do when at rest. Then, apparently satisfied that it was in condition, it unfolded the coleoptera-like plates over its wings. With a buzz that any uninformed person would have mistaken for that of a beetle, it started out on its journey.
(Read more about the scarab flying insect robot)
I should also point out Philip K Dick's amazing housefly monitor from his 1964 novel Lies, Inc..
Check out some of these links for stories about real-life insect-sized flying robots:
I'm still waiting for this movie to come to my town's art theaters, hopefully I'll be able to see Eye in the Sky by early April. This movie also features one of the last performances by Alan Rickman, who died last year.
Scroll down for more stories in the same category. (Story submitted 3/19/2016)
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'You had to live -- did live, from habit that became instinct -- in the assumption that every sound you made was overheard...' - George Orwell, 1948.
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A System To Defeat AI Face Recognition
'...points and patches of light... sliding all over their faces in a programmed manner that had been designed to foil facial recognition systems.'