Not yet, but science fiction DOES have a habit of becoming science fact. Some might say it's a nasty habit, because they can't stand it when somebody who remembers when something WAS science fiction points out that those things are now science fact and that they use some of those science fiction things every day.
Examples, mostly from Star Trek TOS: 3.5 inch floppy discs. blood sugar meters (I got my fourth meter since 1983 today, and I didn't have to buy it. I feel like a kid with a fabulous dream come true Christmas present.); PCs, cell phones, smart phones, MRI scans, RNA cloned human insulin, CDs and CD players, DVDs, electronic books and hardware, holograms/graphs......
ALL of the Star Trek and Stargate series producers hire consultants from NASA and on university faculties to get their science FACTS straight. That's WHY those science fiction things become science fact.
Examples, mostly from Star Trek TOS: 3.5 inch floppy discs. blood sugar meters (I got my fourth meter since 1983 today, and I didn't have to buy it. I feel like a kid with a fabulous dream come true Christmas present.); PCs, cell phones, smart phones, MRI scans, RNA cloned human insulin, CDs and CD players, DVDs, electronic books and hardware, holograms/graphs......
ALL of the Star Trek and Stargate series producers hire consultants from NASA and on university faculties to get their science FACTS straight. That's WHY those science fiction things become science fact.
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you're watching to much star gate my dear.