I don't think the wikipedia article captures the flavour of the book.
Yes, most of the concrete predictions listed in wikipedia have happened. That's not, I think, the point. Everyone from Clarke to Pournelle was predicting those things.
The difference with Toffler, and why I thought he was wrong then and still think he is wrong, is that he regarded these predictable changes as A BAD THING. He regarded it all as being a disaster for human mental health, with people overwhelmed and without hope with no firm foundations. No permanent place. No permanent relationships. etc.
And, on top of that, he was one of those predicting the imminent exhaustion of metals (by 1980 if I recall), oil and gas and coal, constantly increasing pollution, and so forth.
It's all just so wrong, and for very fundamental reasons.
The peak of pollution was just after WW2 and in the 1950s. Since then everything from the rivers and oceans to the air in cities (and globally) has become far *less* polluted. Except in places where the government is in charge of everything, such as the Soviet Union and today's China.
Toffler totally missed that while people might change their physical address and phone number often, other means were developed that enable maintaining permanent relationships -- phone number portability (at least within a country), permanent email addresses (I've been bruce@hoult.org for more than 20 years and always will be in future), and semi-permanent accounts on facebook, twitter, skype, and dozens of others including eevblog -- any one might disappear due to accident or some organisation ceasing to exist, but there is redundancy. In any event they tend to last a lot longer than jobs, phone numbers, and physical addresses.
It must be incredibly difficult for a young person now to imagine how isolating it was to be a teenager (or a wife) on a farm in a rural area in the 1960s. A rural area anywhere even in the UK or USA, but all the more so in somewhere like New Zealand or Australia. There was maybe radio and a newspaper and gradually TV to keep track of what was happening in the outside world, but that was very filtered and superficial. You could get more specialised magazines such as Scientific American or Wireless World, but those were literally three or four months out of date when you got them.
The worst part was that you didn't have a voice. You couldn't *participate*.
Now I can choose to live at a remote beach in the most isolated region of one of the most isolated countries in the world (New Zealand) but I can participate fully (especially in these times without physical conferences) in any world-wide interest I might have. For example I can participate in RISC-V task groups designing new instruction set extensions, and have an actual influence over the results. I can contribute to LLVM or the Linux kernel or anything else that attracts my interest. I can be EMPLOYED by a company anywhere in the world. I can communicate instantly -- by written word, photos, voice, or video -- with anyone who I choose to stay in contact with.
The world -- fifty years after Toffler (and the Club of Rome, and others) made dire predictions of societal and physical collapse 10 or 20 years out -- is not a disaster, it it INFINITELY better in every way than the world of 1970.