Abstract
The field of neutrino oscillations continues to advance at a fast pace.
The recent results presented at Neutrino 2016 show us that goals that used
to be vague hopes are now almost a reality: CP violation and the Mass Hierarchy
seem to be within reach of present experiments. I will present a summary of the
state of the field and a vision of what is to come next from existing and new
experiments. I will also talk about CHIPS, a novel, and very recently funded
experiment which
aims to demonstrate a disruptive reduction in the cost of building a water
Cherenkov
detector. If successful it could lead the way to Megaton neutrino detectors in
the near
future, to enable precision measurements of neutrino oscillation parameters
within
a much shorter timescale than presently planned.