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Popular culture, at least, has advanced to the point that we can actually visualize these technologies being used long before they're ever developed or even officially proposed. That is a big leap forward for the development of real-world technologies that simply didn't exist as we know it in the 50s and 60s.
Take the SyFy series Caprica, for example. There are two technologies used on that show that are probably no more than a decade away for us in real life: e-sheets and electroreactive glass. E-sheets are a kind of paper lookalike that also has all the properties of a simple touchscreen display; however, they can be bent and folded like regular paper (and are just as thin).
The electroreactive glass looks like an ordinary window of arbitrary size in someone's house until it's placed into display mode, at which time the entire sheet of glass (or only a portion of the panel) becomes a true-color computing and media display. The disadvantage to this is, of course, that anyone outside the home sees a reversed image of what's being displayed, because the glass is still glass and has no backing. Today's emerging OLED technology seems to be a cross between the two, and if that technology is refined in the right directions (and that's pretty likely), we may well end up with both devices as portrayed on the show.
You have to imagine a piece of technology before it can be developed, and today's CG effects in television and film allow us to do that in ways we've never had in previous decades. Huge budgets are no longer necessary for utterly convincing digital fakery (you can even do it yourself, at home, if you have the right open-source tools), and that fakery almost certainly will inspire someone, somewhere, to "make it real".
(The PADD devices used on Star Trek: TNG are almost identical to the iPad. There could well have been some inspiration there along the lines of what I'm describing.)
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