Hi all
Your smart phone may be out of date by the middle 2020s.
📱
Read this piece by a tech writer on the advances in technology
that will eventually make the Sm.Phone irrelevant.
And below the ABC's article yesterday on Google's new
product.
Where is high technology taking us.....🙄
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TECH INSIDER
The Smartphone is Eventually going to Die, and
then Things are going to get Really Crazy
MATT WEINBERGER, SEP 4, 2017
*This article was originally published in April,
2017.
One day, not too soon - but still sooner than you think -
the smartphone will all but vanish, like beepers and fax machines
before it.
Make no mistake, we're still probably at least a decade away
from any kind of meaningful shift away from the smartphone. (And if
we're all cyborgs by 2027, I'll happily eat my words. Assuming
we're still eating at all, I guess.) Yet, piece by piece, the
groundwork for the eventual demise of the smartphone is being laid by
Elon Musk, by Microsoft, by Facebook, by Amazon, and a countless
number of startups that still have a part to play.
And, let me tell you: If and when the smartphone does die,
that's when things are going to get really weird for everybody.
Not just in terms of individual products, but in terms of how we
actually live our everyday lives and maybe our humanity itself.
Here's a brief look at the slow, ceaseless march towards the
death of the smartphone - and what the post-smartphone world is
shaping up to look like.
The short term
People think of the iPhone and the smartphones it inspired as
revolutionary devices - small enough to carry everywhere, hefty
enough to handle an increasingly large number of our daily tasks, and
packed full of the right mix cameras and GPS sensors to make apps like
Snapchat and Uber uniquely possible. But consider
the smartphone from another perspective. The desktop PC and the laptop
are made up of some combination of a mouse, keyboard, and monitor. The
smartphone just took that model, shrunk it down, and made the input
virtual and touch-based.
So take, for example, the Samsung Galaxy S8, unveiled this
week. It's gorgeous with an amazing bezel-less screen and some real
power under the hood. It's impressive, but it's more refinement
than revolution. Tellingly, though, the Galaxy S8
ships with Bixby, a new virtual assistant that Samsung promises will
one day let you control every single feature and app with just your
voice. It will also ship with a new version of the Gear VR virtual
reality headset, developed in conjunction with Facebook's
Oculus.
The next iPhone, too, is said to be shipping with upgrades to the
Siri assistant, along with features aimed at bringing augmented
reality into the mainstream. And as devices
like the Amazon Echo, Sony PlayStation VR, and the Apple Watch
continue to enjoy limited but substantial success, expect to see a lot
more tech companies large and small taking more gambles and making
more experiments on the next big wave in computing interfaces.
The medium term
In the medium-term, all of these various experimental and
first-stage technologies are going to start to congeal into something
familiar, but bizarre. Microsoft, Facebook, Google and the
Google-backed Magic Leap are all working to build standalone augmented
reality headsets, which project detailed 3D images straight into your
eyes. Even Apple is rumoured to be working on this, too.
Microsoft's Alex Kipman recently told Business Insider that
augmented reality could flat-out replace the smartphone, the TV, and
anything else with a screen. There's not much use for a separate
device sitting in your pocket or on your entertainment center, if all
your calls, chats, movies, and games are beamed into your eyes and
overlaid on the world around you.
Meanwhile, gadgetry like the Amazon Echo or Apple's own AirPods
become more and more important in this world. As artificial
intelligence systems like Apple's Siri, Amazon's Alexa,
Samsung's Bixby, and Microsoft's Cortana get smarter, there's
going to be a rise not just in talking to computers, but having them
talk back.
In other words, computers are going to hijack your senses, more
so than they already do, with your sight and your hearing
intermediated by technology. It's a little scary. Think of what
Facebook glitches could mean in a world where it doesn't just
control what you read on your phone, but what you see in the world
around you.
The promise, though, is a world where real life and technology
blend more seamlessly. The major tech companies promise that this
future means a world of fewer technological distractions and more
balance, as the physical and digital world become the same thing. You
decide how you feel about that.
The really crazy future
Still, all those decade-plus investments in the future still rely
on gadgetry that you have to wear on you, even if it's only a pair
of glasses. Some of the craziest, most forward-looking, most
unpredictable advancements go even further - provided you're
willing to wait a few extra decades, that is.
This week, we got our first look at Neuralink, a new company
cofounded by Elon Musk with a goal of building computers into our
brains by way of "neural lace," a very early-stage technology that
lays on your brain and bridges it to a computer. It's the next step
beyond even that blending of the digital and physical worlds, as man
and machine become one. Assuming the science works - and
lots of smart people believe that it will - this is the logical
endpoint of the road that smartphones started us on. If smartphones
gave us access to information and augmented reality puts that
information in front of us when we need it, then putting neural lace
in our brains just closes the gap.
Musk has said that this is because the rise of artificial
intelligence - which underpins a lot of the other technologies,
including voice assistants and virtual reality - means that humans
are going to have to augment themselves just to keep up with the
machines. If you're really curious about this idea, futurist Ray
Kurzweil is the leading voice on the topic.
The idea of man/ machine fusion is a terrifying one, with
science fiction writers, technologists, and philosophers alike having
very good cause to ask what even makes us human in the first place. At
the same time, the idea is so new that nobody really knows what this
world would look like in practice. So if and
when the smartphone dies, it will actually be the end of an era in
more ways than one. It will be the end of machines that we carry with
us passively and the beginning of something that bridges our bodies
straight into the ebb and flow of digital information.
It's going to get weird.
And yet, lots of technologists already say that smartphones give
us superpowers with access to knowledge, wisdom, and abilities beyond
anything nature gave us. In some ways, augmenting the human mind would
be the ultimate superpower. Then again, maybe I'm just an
optimist.
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Pixel 2: The Smart Phone Age is Over and
Google thinks AI is Next
ANALYSIS, By RN Breakfast technology editor Peter Marks in San
Francisco
Updated 5 Oct 2017.
At the launch of Google's Pixel 2 phone in
San Francisco today, CEO Sundar Pichai acknowledged smartphone
features were "levelling off" and said it was hard to
develop exciting new products based on hardware alone. Google
said it is in a transition from a "mobile-first" company to
an "AI-first" business. The machine-learning part of
artificial intelligence is one of Google's strengths.
(CLIP.....)