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by sixQuarks 3846 days ago
I believe smartphones will be looked back from the future and seen as what they really are: a clunky way to interact with information.

AR is definitely the future of all interfaces, not an audacious bet at all, pragmatic in fact.

2 comments

Agreed. A functional heads-up display in normal-looking glasses would render almost every smartphone obsolete. Add a good way to do text input (air typing on an AR-projected keyboard?) and most laptops and desktops can go away too.

If we're still poking at tiny screens in 2025, something has gone very wrong.

Meh, I'm not so convinced. AR is certainly a great way to interact with real time information, but there's a time and a place for that. I don't want to be out at dinner and be interrupted with notifications while I'm having a conversation. Laptops and Mobile phones have one huge advantage that AR and even desktops don't have: they're easy to put away. Close the laptop, put the phone in your pocket or in a drawer and it's gone. I suppose you could do the same with glasses, but they're still more intrusive.
No offense, but you're going to be one of the "old" people by then. AR will be embraced fully by newer generations.
All evidence points to the contrary. There's been a pendulum swing in the younger generations away from omnipresent technology such as mobile phones and facebook. It's a mistake to think all subsequent generations will march toward your definition of progress. For all we know, those generations' definition of progress will be a focus on the physical world over the digital one.
are you joking? In which world does the younger generation swing away from technology such as mobile phones? Facebook is simply replaced by Snapchat and other social apps among the youth.