And this, coming from someone who has taken the name from a character in "Transformers" - and a Decepticon, no less (so that flags up some concerns, re. his attitude) - an animation/film series that is, by definition, Science Fiction.
PROTIP: "2001: A Space Odyssey" was released in 1968. A year before Armstrong's 'One Small Step For Man'. The original story said film was based on, by Arthur C. Clarke appeared years before then. As far back as 1945, Clarke even postulated the idea of electronic devices placed in geosynchronous orbit, to relay radio transmissions. When the first telecommunicatons satellite 'Telstar' was created, guess who they recruited as the project's chief technical advisor? (remember: much of the internet today relies on telecommunications satellites). I guess you have a logical explanation for that, eh?
The 1977 novel by Craig Thomas - and the 1982 Clint Eastwood film based on such - "Firefox". Years before the concept of Stealth aircraft had even entered the public consciousness; certainly before the F117-A seeing action in the 1st Gulf War, and the B2 in Kosovo. What next? Project Aurora, the hypersonic plane in Afghanistan? (fact: one is based here in the UK, at RAF Macrihanish)
Oh, and remember the film "Stealth"*, several years ago? The UCAV E.D.I., with it's 10 Tb/sec Quantum Processor-based AI? Quantum Computers already exist.
The Science Fiction of the past, is the Science Fact of today.
*- I'm absolutely positive, that film was based on "The Capricorn Quadrant" by Charles Ryan. In which a new Russian stealth plane goes rogue, and a race is on by the West to claim it's secrets, and Russia to stop it from falling into their hands. Meanwhile, said plane - which has an AI, coupled with a Fusion Beam Emitter (a weapon infinitely more powerful than even a Particle Beam Laser) could potentially start WWIII.