By Futurist Thomas Frey
What sounds like science fiction today will be as unremarkable as checking email — a window into the ordinary morning of an ordinary man in an extraordinary decade
The Alarm That Isn’t an Alarm
Wilson doesn’t wake up to a sound. He wakes up because his sleep system — a thin mesh woven into his mattress and pillow — has been monitoring his sleep cycles since midnight and has been gently nudging his body temperature and ambient light toward wakefulness for the past twenty-two minutes, timing his emergence to coincide with the lightest phase of his sleep cycle. He surfaces feeling rested in a way that, in 2026, would have required a two-week vacation to achieve.
Before his feet hit the floor, his health agent — a persistent AI that has been running continuously for six years and knows his biomarkers better than any physician he’s ever visited — has already reviewed the night’s data. Resting heart rate slightly elevated. HRV down four points from his seven-day average. It cross-references his calendar, notes he has a presentation at 11 AM, and adjusts his morning protocol accordingly: slightly longer breathing exercise, modified coffee timing, a suggested twenty-minute walk instead of his usual morning run. It doesn’t ask his permission. He set these preferences years ago. He trusts it the way he once trusted a good doctor, except this one is available every second of every day and has never once confused him with another patient.
None of this strikes Wilson as remarkable. It’s Tuesday.
Continue reading… “A Tuesday in 2040”