Here’s our vision of what a typical fridge might look like a few days before Thanksgiving in 2020. We imagined what new capabilities a fridge might have by then, and made some subtle changes to many pieces of bric-a-brac that you might find on a present-day icebox. We’ll continue to create a new Artifacts from the Future in upcoming issues of Wired magazine. But we’d like to see your prognostications too. What do you think our world will look like in 10, 20 or 100 years? Each month, we’ll propose a scenario. Then it’s up you: Sketch out your vision, then return here to upload your ideas, see other submissions and vote for your favorites. Check out this month’s http://archive.wired.com/culture/culturereviews/magazine/found/found_1611 Office Cubicle of the Future challenge. The concept and most of the text for this Found came from writer Steven Leckart. Contributing Wired magazine designer Walter Baumann, photo assistants Sarah Filippi and Daniel Salo, deputy photo editor Anna Goldman Alexander, Senior Editor Chris Baker and production director Jeff Lysgaard helped create the image.
Child’s drawing of extinct animals: dinosaur, bee, polar bear.
Calendar tracks family events, including defrosting grandpa
Kid’s b-day invite for a zero-gravity cruise on Virgin Galactic
We support our troops in Venezuela magnet
According to the Whirlpool Intellifridge: Auto Defrost scheduled for Butterball Tri-Breasted Six-Legger Turkey, Spoiler Alert: Ho Chi Minh House Shrimp Lo Mein, The Jetsons want to borrow 1 cup of protein paste
Two £500 DNA-Coded tickets to watch the Microsoft Seahawks face off against the Dubai Roughnecks at Ballmer Memorial Stadium.
Ziggy cartoon clipping: According to his DNA workup, he’s already dead.
Historic Route 101 magnet
Beautiful Antarctica magnet
2018 Coppola Blue Label Water magnet
Safari on Mars magnet
Moose in Los Angeles magnet
I Loved NY magnet
A €100 casino chip magnet from Reno, Nevada.