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Arts & Entertainmentback to the future

10 ‘Back to the Future’ predictions that came true

By Susie Poppick and
Money
Money
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By Susie Poppick and
Money
Money
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October 21, 2015, 11:50 AM ET

Great Scott! Back to the Future Day is upon us.

That would be October 21, 2015, the date to which Marty McFly and Doc Brown time-travel in 1989’s Back to the Future Part II. While all three movies in the iconic trilogy are beloved by fans, particular attention is going to the second film, which envisioned that by this year we’d have a host of crazy new technologies and products, including hands-free video games and flying cars.

While we haven’t made much progress toward levitating autos, controller-less gaming and several of the film’s other predictions have indeed come to fruition—and many others are, at least, very close. (Robot chefs will go on sale in 2017, and Chicago Cubs fans may still have a shot, however slim, at World Series tickets.)

Here are 10 Back to the Future II inventions that are available for purchase today.

Personal Drones

Flying drones are ubiquitous in Back to the Future’s 2015, and they’re shown doing everything from walking a dog to capturing images for news organizations.

The latter prediction has come true, and while people still walk their dogs the old-fashioned way, drones—widely available to consumers for about $1,000 a pop—have given us new and creative ways to catch fish, deliver dry cleaning, and make people feel awkward at holiday parties.

Tablets and Mobile Payment Technology

Square, a credit card reader made for smartphones, is plugged into an iPhone

Viewers catch a glimpse of a flat, wireless electronic device in the film, during a scene in which an elderly Terry asks Marty to electronically donate $100—equal to only a couple of inflation-adjusted 1985 dollars—to save the town’s historic clock tower.

Thankfully, inflation hasn’t hit the dollar nearly as hard as Back to the Futurepredicted. But mobile technology has met and even surpassed that of the devices in the movie—in a way that one of the film’s screenwriters recently said he never could have imagined.

The film’s prediction that wireless devices could be used for payment (in cabs, for example) was spot on, and in the last decade we’ve seen the advent of smartphone apps like Venmo, Apple Pay, and Square, which make it easy to exchange cash electronically. Some even use fingerprint recognition, just like in the movie.

Biometric Devices

Fingerprint recognition is used throughout the film, but one key scene occurs when Marty’s girlfriend (and future wife) Jennifer uses her thumbprint to open the door to her house in 2015.

Indeed, today fingerprints and other biometric measures are used to unlock devices like the iPhone, view bank account information, and—yes—even open the door to your home.

Unfortunately fingerprint theft is also a problem today, as the movie predicted, though thieves don’t need to cut off victims’ thumbs to steal their prints.

Hands-Free Gaming Consoles

A classroom edition of the fitness video game Dance Dance Revolution is demonstrated at the Consumer Electronics Show

In one memorable scene, which takes place at the nostalgic Cafe ’80s, two young boys are taken aback when they see Marty play an arcade game. “You mean you have to use your hands?” one says. “That’s like a baby’s toy!” the other scoffs.

While plenty of video games still require the use of your hands, it’s been five years since Microsoft launched the Xbox Kinect, which lets gamers control onscreen actions using voice and gestures. Similar technology used for computing and managing a smart home is also becoming a reality thanks to innovations by Apple and Amazon.

Smart Clothing and Wearable Technology

A model poses backstage during the Chromat runway show, wearing a dress featuring Intel Curie modules.

Marty wears power-lacing sneakers and a size-adjusting, auto-drying jacket in the film—two inventions that haven’t appeared yet, though rumors are swirling that Nike has plans to launch real auto-lacing shoes this year. (Alas, while movie fans can buy limited-edition 2011 light-up Nike Mags—pictured—on eBay, those are more superficial replicas: They don’t have working power laces.)

What is available today are a host of wearable technology products, including wristband fitness trackers like the Fitbit, “smart shirts” that measure breathing, heart rate, and sleep patterns, and infant-size onesies that double as baby monitors. And while they may be too early-stage for purchase, other inventions like stain-proof clothes and high-heels that change color with the click of an app are under development.

Video Phones

1. Skype for iPad

Phone and video calling over the Web.

Marty’s future self gets fired during a video phone call in Back to the Future II. That call is not only prophetic of video chat applications like Skype and Apple’s FaceTime but also of Facebook, in that personal details like date of birth, occupation, political leanings, and hobbies are shared electronically.

Of course, the movie gets a few big details wrong—like the widespread use of fax machines.

Waste-Fueled Cars

A Toyota Motor Corp. worker checks a Mirai fuel cell vehicle on the production line of the company's Motomachi plant in Toyota.

Although you can’t yet buy a vehicle with a fusion engine, like that in Doc Brown’s DeLorean, the scene in which Doc uses garbage to power his car (well, technically the flux capacitor) is prescient.

In fact, Toyota is promoting its new hydrogen fuel cell car—the Mirai—with an ad campaign featuring Back to the Future actors Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd.

Hydrogen-powered cars are lauded as environmentally friendly since they convert hydrogen and oxygen to electricity, with water vapor as a byproduct. That eco-friendliness is partly offset by the fact that fossil fuel or natural gas is typically consumed to create the hydrogen in the first place, but scientists are experimenting with solar and wind-powered generation—and, in Orange County, Calif., hydrogen will be harvested from human waste.

Hoverboards

Skateboarder Ross McGouran testing out the Lexus hoverboard in Barcelona.

While you can now buy hands-free scooters that are widely described as “hoverboards,” they technically don’t count, as they have wheels and don’t actually hover off the ground.

That said, startup Arx Pax has successfully created a working, real-life $10,000 hoverboard called the Hendo, which pro skateboarder Tony Hawk has personally tested. Lexus has also created a hoverboard using a different technology involving superconductors. Unfortunately, both versions can glide only over conductive surfaces, so you probably won’t be using one to escape bullies in your town squareany time soon.

Note: If you care more about form than function, you can buy a (non-hovering) replica of the pink Mattel board Marty “borrows” from a little girl.

Video Glasses

A young woman wears Google Glass.

One correct prediction from the film’s vision of 2015 is how personal technology would disrupt the American dinner table. In one scene, Marty and Jennifer’s future kids ignore their families, instead watching TV and talking on the phone using futuristic glasses.

Sound familiar? Though smartphones are the real source of distraction today, high-tech video goggles keep getting more advanced—and popular. Google has stopped selling Google Glass (at least for the time being), but pairs are available for purchase on eBay and can be used to watch streaming video, record images, and search the internet.

Pepsi Perfect

Pepsi is releasing a limited edition bottle called Pepsi Perfect, inspired by how the soda appeared in the 1989 film "Back to the Future Part II."

This one is a marketing stunt, though hardcore fans might not mind: In honor of the trilogy’s 30th anniversary, Pepsi is selling a limited number of bottles of “Pepsi Perfect,” the soda of choice in Back to the Future‘s 2015. The bottles, sold in the movie for $50, will cost $20.15 (get it?) if you order them online—though cosplayers got bottles for free at New York ComicCon earlier this month.

Despite the futuristic packaging, the flavor of Pepsi Perfect is traditional; the company is using natural cane sugar rather than the typical corn syrup. Unfortunately, that doesn’t make it any healthier.

This piece was originally published on Money.com.

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