The House That Isn’t There

When the building is made of energy rather than matter, everything we assume about shelter, ownership, and place dissolves along with the walls.

By Futurist Thomas Frey

Part 3 of 3: The Projected House

The oldest human technology is the wall.

Before the wheel, before writing, before agriculture, human beings were building barriers against the world — piling stones, stretching skins, weaving branches, mixing mud and straw into something that would hold back the wind and the rain and the things that moved in the dark. Every architectural tradition in human history, on every continent, in every climate, starts from the same premise: shelter is a physical object. It is made of matter. It sits in a place. It stays where you put it.

That premise is about to become optional.

In the first column of this series, I traced a twenty-year-old thought experiment about creating floating points of light from intersecting invisible beams of energy — no bulb, no wire, no surface — and showed that the physics not only works but has been demonstrated in laboratories around the world. In the second column, I followed that physics into the future of display technology, where a million floating points of light become a three-dimensional video environment that fills a room and makes the rectangle of the screen obsolete.

In this column I want to follow the same physics to its most radical conclusion. Because the same principles that allow intersecting energy fields to create light at a point in space can, in principle, create other physical effects at a point in space. Thermal resistance. Acoustic damping. Electromagnetic shielding. Mechanical pressure sufficient to deflect physical objects.

Fields that behave like walls without being walls. Boundaries that exist in space without matter to define them. A house made entirely of energy that can be summoned, configured, and dismissed — and moved to a different location the next morning.

Continue reading… “The House That Isn’t There”

When the Screen Disappears

The display that fills the room will not arrive as a better television. It will arrive as the end of television.

By Futurist Thomas Frey

Part 2 of 3: The 3D Video Room

Every generation inherits a rectangle and mistakes it for reality.

For most of the twentieth century, the rectangle was the cinema screen — a wall-sized surface in a darkened room where the world of moving images lived. Then the rectangle shrank to the television in the living room. Then it migrated to the laptop, then the phone, compressing the entire universe of visual storytelling into a glass slab small enough to hold in one hand. Each transition felt, at the time, like the final form. Each time, we adapted so completely that the previous rectangle started to seem primitive almost immediately.

The rectangle is about to disappear.

Not shrink. Not become more portable. Disappear — replaced by something that has no screen at all, no surface to project onto, no frame to contain it. A display that exists in the volume of a room the way furniture exists in a room, except that it occupies no physical space and can be summoned or dismissed in an instant. A display made of millions of floating points of light, each one positioned precisely in three-dimensional space by intersecting fields of energy, collectively forming images and scenes and presences that exist in the room with you rather than behind a pane of glass.

In Part 1 of this series, I traced the physics of this idea from a twenty-year-old thought experiment to the laboratory demonstrations that have proven it real. The floating point of light is not theoretical. It exists in research settings today, produced by femtosecond lasers ionizing air molecules at precise locations, by two-photon excitation in fluorescent media, by acoustic levitation of illuminated particles. The physics works. The engineering is the remaining challenge.

In this column I want to think about what happens to entertainment when the engineering catches up. Because the implications aren’t incremental. When the display escapes the screen and fills the room, the entire architecture of how we experience stories, watch sports, attend performances, and share visual information with other people changes simultaneously.

Continue reading… “When the Screen Disappears”

The Light That Floats in Nothing

What if light had no source? Intersecting invisible beams could place illumination anywhere—no fixtures, no wires—turning rooms into programmable fields of floating light.

What began as a thought experiment is becoming the foundation of a new physical reality

By Futurist Thomas Frey

Part 1 of 3: The Point of Light

More than twenty years ago, I found myself staring at the ceiling of a room and thinking a thought that seemed, at the time, almost too simple to be interesting.

What if the light didn’t need to be there?

Not the light itself — the fixture. The bulb. The wire running through the wall to the panel in the basement. The entire physical infrastructure of illumination that we’ve inherited from Thomas Edison and that we’ve never seriously questioned because it works and because we built our entire civilization around it before anyone thought to ask whether there was another way.

The thought went like this. If two invisible beams of energy crossed at a point in space, and if something happened at that crossing point that produced visible light — no bulb, no filament, no surface, no wiring — then you could place a point of light anywhere in a room simply by directing two beams to intersect at that location. You could fill a room with floating points of light the way a night sky is filled with stars. You could light a space without touching it. Without installing anything in it. Without running a single wire.

I turned the thought over for years. It seemed physically plausible in outline, intuitively satisfying in a way that good ideas tend to feel, and practically very far from anything buildable. I filed it in the category of ideas worth watching and moved on.

What I didn’t anticipate was how quickly the underlying physics would go from theoretical to demonstrated — and how the demonstration would open a set of doors that lead somewhere considerably larger than a lighting fixture.

This is the first column in a three-part series about what happens when you follow that thought experiment all the way to its conclusions. The destination is more radical than the starting point suggests.

Continue reading… “The Light That Floats in Nothing”

The Farming Silo That Could Feed the World From Places Nothing Grows

Farming is running out of land. The solution may not be better fields—but abandoning fields entirely and growing vertically, inside the earth.

By Futurist Thomas Frey

Agriculture has a geography problem.

The places where food grows best — flat, fertile, temperate, well-watered — are also the places where people want to live, build cities, and expand infrastructure. As the global population pushes toward ten billion, the competition between agriculture and development for the same arable land is intensifying in ways that traditional farming, no matter how optimized, cannot resolve. We are running out of the right kind of ground.

The idea I want to explore today reframes the question entirely. Instead of asking how to farm better on the land we have, it asks: what if we stopped thinking about land as the primary surface for agriculture altogether?

What if the growing surface was the wall of a cylinder, descending into the earth?

Continue reading… “The Farming Silo That Could Feed the World From Places Nothing Grows”

The Day the Music Changed — And Nobody Noticed

AI music isn’t marginal—it’s infinite. Labels help, but don’t solve the
economics. The industry will adapt, but its structure will never be the same.

By Futurist Thomas Frey

Last week, an AI-generated track hit number one on iTunes in the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Canada, and New Zealand simultaneously.

Not a song with AI-assisted production. Not a human artist who used AI tools in the mixing process. A fully AI-generated track — no songwriter, no singer, no musician, no studio session, no story behind it — sitting at the top of the charts in five countries at once.

This happened quietly. Without much ceremony. Without the cultural reckoning you might expect from a moment that would have seemed unthinkable five years ago. It was noted, discussed briefly, and the conversation moved on. Which is, in its own way, the most revealing part of the story.

When a milestone arrives and the world mostly shrugs, it usually means one of two things: either the milestone wasn’t as significant as it seemed, or it was so significant that people don’t yet have a framework for processing what it means.

This is the second kind.

Continue reading… “The Day the Music Changed — And Nobody Noticed”

The One-Person Empire: What Comes After the Unicorn

AI raises the ceiling. When one person can build what once took 200,
the goal isn’t efficiency—it’s building something 200 times bigger.

By Futurist Thomas Frey

The debate is over. The one-person unicorn is here.

Matthew Gallagher launched Medvi, a GLP-1 telehealth company, out of his Los Angeles home in September 2024 with $20,000, no employees, and a stack of AI tools. In its first full year, Medvi posted $401 million in revenue, 250,000 customers, and a 16.2% net profit margin — nearly triple the margin of Hims and Hers, which runs the same playbook with 2,442 people. Gallagher runs it with one other person: his brother. The company is tracking toward $1.8 billion in 2026 revenue.

Sam Altman predicted this. Most people didn’t believe him. Now it’s a case study.

But here’s the more interesting question — the one nobody is quite asking yet. If AI can compress the work of hundreds of people into the output of one, and if that compression continues accelerating, what happens when the people wielding these tools stop thinking in terms of unicorns and start thinking bigger?

Because that’s what’s coming next.

Continue reading… “The One-Person Empire: What Comes After the Unicorn”

The Nasal Spray That Could Rewrite What Aging Means

Aging was “inevitable.” New research suggests otherwise—targeting inflammation and restoring brain function, pointing toward reversal, not just slowing cognitive decline.

By Futurist Thomas Frey

For decades, doctors and scientists used a quiet but devastating phrase when patients asked about brain fog, memory slippage, and the slow cognitive dimming that arrives somewhere in middle age: “It’s just part of getting older.”

Not a diagnosis. Not a disease. Just time, doing what time does. Irreversible, inevitable, the price of living long enough to pay it.

A research team at Texas A&M University just challenged that assumption in a way that deserves significantly more attention than it received this week.

Dr. Ashok Shetty, university distinguished professor and associate director of the Institute for Regenerative Medicine, along with colleagues Dr. Madhu Leelavathi Narayana and Dr. Maheedhar Kodali, published findings in the Journal of Extracellular Vesicles this month describing something that, even a few years ago, would have sounded implausible: a nasal spray that, in just two doses, dramatically reduced brain inflammation, restored the brain’s cellular energy systems, and significantly improved memory — with effects that appeared within weeks and lasted for months.

The study was conducted in preclinical models. Human trials are years away. The researchers are careful to say that more work is needed. All of that is true, and all of it is important context.

And yet: what they demonstrated is a genuine conceptual shift in how we think about brain aging. Not slowing it. Not managing its symptoms. Reversing it.

Continue reading… “The Nasal Spray That Could Rewrite What Aging Means”

The Wall That Holds Everything Without a Single Hole

Eight billion fasteners a year—every one a hole. Magnetic cement replaces them, turning walls into attachment surfaces without damage or hardware.

By Futurist Thomas Frey

Eight billion pounds. That’s the estimated weight of nails, screws, anchors, and wall fasteners consumed by the global construction industry every single year. Each one punches a hole. Each one leaves a mark. Each one represents a method of attaching things to walls that hasn’t fundamentally changed since the Roman Empire was mixing volcanic ash with lime.

A 29-year-old industrial engineering student from Argentina named Marco Agustín Secchi thinks that’s about to change. And the material he’s developed is so elegantly simple that the hardest part is convincing people it’s real.

He calls it Ironplac. It’s magnetic cement. And the idea is exactly what it sounds like.

Continue reading… “The Wall That Holds Everything Without a Single Hole”

The Drones That Will Pick Up Your House and Move It

From rolling houses to flying them—heavy-lift drones could transform relocation,
turning days of logistics into coordinated lift, transport, and precise placement.

By Futurist Thomas Frey

House moving is one of the oldest and most peculiar industries in America.

Since the mid-1800s, entire buildings have been lifted off their foundations, placed on wheels, and rolled down the street to a new location. It’s slow, expensive, logistically nightmarish, and requires the temporary removal of every utility line and tree branch in the path. And yet it happens thousands of times a year — because sometimes a building is worth more than the cost of moving it.

Now imagine the same outcome without the wheels, the blocking, the utility crews, or the road permits.

Just a formation of heavy-lift drones, coordinated by a single control system, that lifts a structure off its foundation, carries it through the air at low altitude, and sets it down precisely where you want it.

That’s not science fiction. It’s the logical endpoint of a technology trajectory that is already well underway — and the implications extend far beyond moving houses.

Continue reading… “The Drones That Will Pick Up Your House and Move It”

The Driverless Party Bus Is Coming — and This is When Our Kids will Leave Us Behind

When vehicles drive themselves, they become venues—unlocking unexpected
experiences no engineer planned, and entire industries built on motion, not destination.

By Futurist Thomas Frey

Every transformative technology creates a second-order invention that nobody saw coming.

The automobile gave us the drive-in movie. The internet gave us the flash mob. The smartphone gave us the pop-up bar. These weren’t the inventions the engineers were working on — they were what happened when creative humans got their hands on a new capability and started asking questions the original designers never thought to ask.

Self-driving vehicles are about to produce one of the most gloriously unexpected second-order inventions in recent memory.

The driverless party bus.

Think about what autonomous vehicles actually change, beyond the obvious. They don’t just move you from place to place without a human at the wheel. They transform the interior of a vehicle from a place where someone has to remain alert and sober into a fully social space where every occupant is free to do whatever they want for the duration of the journey. Nobody is responsible for getting everyone home safely. The vehicle is.

For the first time in the history of motorized transportation, a moving vehicle becomes a true venue.

Continue reading… “The Driverless Party Bus Is Coming — and This is When Our Kids will Leave Us Behind”

What People Mean When They Say AI Is Killing Capitalism

By Futurist Thomas Frey

The phrase gets thrown around a lot right now. “AI is killing capitalism.” You hear it in tech circles, in economic policy debates, in late-night conversations between people who sense something fundamental is shifting but can’t quite name it.

They’re not wrong that something is shifting. But “killing capitalism” isn’t quite the right frame. What’s actually happening is more interesting and more complicated than that — and understanding it matters, because the transition we’re entering will be one of the most disorienting periods in economic history regardless of what we call it at the end.

Let me try to be precise about what’s actually breaking.

Continue reading… “What People Mean When They Say AI Is Killing Capitalism”

The Knowledge Bottleneck Is Breaking Open

Futurist Thomas Frey (left) with Cogniate Founder Morne Maritz (right)

By Futurist Thomas Frey

Every revolution has a moment when the barrier drops so fast that the people standing on the other side don’t realize yet what just happened.

We’re at one of those moments in education. And most people — including most educators — haven’t looked up from their screens long enough to notice.

I will introduce you to the company at the center of this revolution if you read a bit further.

Continue reading… “The Knowledge Bottleneck Is Breaking Open”
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