Actually hold on a second, we do have hoverboards, they only work on metallic surfaces but we have them.
That was possible in 1985, and far earlier than that as well. It is just electromagnetism.
We have flying cars but they're still in the prototype stages.
In 1985, flying cars had already been around for decades. They weren't mainstream then, and they are no more mainstream today. They will never be mainstream as long as they depend on human pilots. Being a pilot is a highly specialized job, and it always will be. Just because you call something a "flying car" doesn't mean it's not an airplane by FAA standards.
We have electric cars. Have you ever seen inside a Tesla? Your 1985 teenage self would be positively giddy.
We've had electric cars since the late 1800s. They were once even fairly common, enough so that there were public charging stations in cities such as New York City.
What about the internet? There's too many things you can do online for me to list here, it's pretty incredible to be honest. That teenage kid would spend weeks exploring the web.
The internet has been around since 1983, and the precursor to the internet (ARPANET) had its origins in the 1960s. Granted, the internet is a lot better today. It didn't start to become mainstream until the World Wide Web, cheap PCs, and a user-friendly operating system came along, i.e., in the mid 1990s.
Compact discs? Pfft, everything is stored in flash memory now! Smart phones would blow you away.
No, not everything. Music is still widely sold on CDs, and movies are still widely sold on optical discs which look like CDs, i.e., DVD and Blu-ray discs. And "smart phones", while being technologically impressive, are a bane of society. People can't keep their face out of them for 5 minutes, even when they're in public or guests in someone else's house.
There's tons of technology like exoskeletons, mind controlled artificial limbs, artificially intelligent robots like ASIMO, spaceships landing on comets, rovers sending HD images from Mars and people working in an international space station.
Experimental novelties and/or trivia, i.e., nothing that affects the day-to-day lives of the vast majority of people.
I think that kid would be equally disappointed and fascinated with how the future actually panned out.
Mostly disappointed is more like it. Even big TVs and a lot of channels are nothing new. TVs as big as 60" or more and over 100 channels were available in '85, i.e., rear-projection TVs and satellite TV. The only thing that's really improved in that area is the picture quality of the source material, i.e., the best we had for home use in '85 was LaserDisc and NTSC television broadcasts. It's not that much higher quality didn't exist in '85 (and far earlier); 35mm movie film is on par with today's digital HD formats, and 70mm movie film blows today's HD formats out of the water. However, those were (and are) pretty much only available for viewing in movie theaters.
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