Technology not as advanced by 2010 as some had hoped
Despite iPods, genetic sequencing, the Internet and Twitter, nearly a third of Americans said they thought there would be more technological advances by the year 2010. Not everyone expected to be living like The Jetsons, the space age television cartoon series of the early 1960s, but the Zogby International survey of more than 3,000 adults in the United States showed many were less than enthusiastic about how far we have come by the dawn of a new decade. "The age group most likely to be disappointed with the current level of technological advancement are 35 to 54-year-olds (36 percent)," Zogby, which conducted the survey commissioned by the website ScoopDaily, said in a statement. About 21 percent of people believe we are more technologically advanced than they thought we would be by 2010, while 37 percent believed we are on target for their expectations.
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Technology not as advanced by 2010 as some had hoped