This question probably needs a bit of explanation. When we look back on a previous civilisation, it can often be quite difficult to empathise with the people who lived during that time period. Sometimes this is because there is a huge difference in our cultures, but it is often due to the massive technological boom that started to happen a couple of hundred years ago.
The horse is no longer our main form of transport, after thousands of years of it being the only transport available to us. The percentage of our population that has to be growing/gathering food for the rest of us to survive has dropped significantly. These are two very minor examples of changes that have happened (relatively) recently.
Even more recently, we have sent people into space. We also have the internet, which allows instant communication across the globe, access to a collective pool of information and dank memes.
Considering that the rate of technological advancement is increasing at an exponential rate, are we going to be able to look back 100 years and be able to relate to anything?
But it's sort of funny now, though, because even though we are rapidly advancing in technology- we're still generally communicating the same way we did 15 years ago. Telephone calls, emails, chat rooms, and texting was just starting to begin phasing in around then. Sure, the way we're doing them is much different and we now have different mediums to do them in (social media, snapchat, ect...) but even though technology is much more advanced now we're mostly just building off of things that have already existed.
Now, I do think we'll be much more advanced in 150 years - but we also have to remember that in 1960, they thought we would have flying cars and be in a Jetsons-esque society by 1999. I think we'll continue to evolve technology-wise, but I do think it'll mostly be in the sense of making pre-existing things easier to use rather than mastering new technologies all-together.