If we consider the moment the first computer was created (A quick google search tells me it was built in 1822) as the moment we started working on a better version of ourselves, that's almost 200 years of development, and we aren't even close yet.
Do people really not really grok how freakishly
fast these developments have occurred, compared to general human history? We speak of two centuries like it's this some strange long time, when in fact it's been a period of development more rapid than any before it by several orders of magnitude.
We've seen ridiculous transformations in the breadth and depth of technology in single lifetimes, and we don't actually have much indication that's going to slow down. Prediction
is fairly silly, though, if only 'cause we don't really have a bloody clue what's going to change next. What has been happening over the last handful or two of decades is entirely unprecedented in human history. We don't really have a goddamn idea what's going to happen next.
On the other hand, to think that it's
not going to perception shattering for like the sixth bloody time in the last century or so
is kinda' foolish. We have had a string of successive events telling us that predicting things
aren't going to radically change is
somewhat unlikely, with every indication that's either not going to slow down significantly or begin to outright accelerate.
Maybe it'll be AI. Maybe it'll be something else -- we're seeing gains towards biological freaking immortality right now, nevermind the various non-medical advances. The only bet you can really make at this point is that it's going to be
something, because
that keeps happening.