SamuelRSmith said:
Ah, yeah, I understand what you're saying. That's how I'll personally see it. Also, this would mean that an optical drive would be useless, and with other wireless technologies (including transferring the rendered output to the television/sound device), consoles will shrink down in size. I personally think that within the next 10-20 years (so, 15) handhelds and home consoles may become the same thing. You just chose whether you use the system's onboard screen/controls or wirelessly connect to everything else. I also see the laptop getting replaced by a mobile phone which you can connect to a wireless docking station for full use. Desktop computers will merely become monitors with wireless keyboards/mice (though those would become pointless with voice recognition and touchscreen). A <£100 phone in a decade will have more power than your typical average computer/camera/music playing device combined. Sorry for straying off the point, but I can't wait for the future. It excites me. (Which reminds me... I was watching Futurama the other day, can't remember which episode, but Fry was playing a game console which used wired controllers. It made me laugh, and it wasn't even meant to be a joke). |
Its really hard to fathom what the next 10 years will bring technology wise. 10 years ago you couldnt have told me that Id be playing a console that was wireless AND had wireless internet AND had motion sensing capabilities.
As for the laptop, its possible, with better browsing capabilities, the laptop will be more productivity based, but the average email/internet/chat user will only need a $200-$300 cell phone.
@bdbdbd - It just seems to be going that direction more and more. 6 months ago people argued with me that digital distribution of movies would never catch on. Now more and more businesses like Netflix are promoting digital distribution.







