We're back with the final installation of this week's cell phone roundtable. We choose the topic, put forth a few questions to our panel, and bring the most provocative answers back to you. This week, with more details about the Palm Pre and Monday's iPhone G3 S announcement it seemed a good time to ponder some issues about our love affair with mobile. Today's question: What will cell phones look like 10 years from now?
Mark Dziersk, VP Design, Brandimage: Curved. Expect flexible screens to alter form factors dramatically. Cell phones will become life management devices and vehicles to control absolutely everything that has a chip in it. And everything one day will pretty much have a chip in it at some point. Cell phone functionality will include certain aspects that are enabled by implants. It's already possible with pets and such. Also the constant "convergence" factor. Cell phones have already become cameras and music players and web browsers. They will evolve to fully featured entertainment and computing devices and be able to facilitate all financial and legal transactions. People will design their own phones, picking the size, weight, battery life, materials, screen: Built to order. Bluetooth devices will be made by Oakley, others and be invisible to the naked eye, as all voice is transmitted through other accessories, like glasses, earrings, baseball caps.
Ken Carbone, CarboneSmolan: In the comedy film Zoolander, Ben Stiller's cell phone was about the size of a USB drive. Smaller more compact devices will definitely be part of cellphone evolution. Picture this; two cellular "rings" with rotating parts for function selection. The earpiece ring is worn on the thumb, the mic on the pinky. So when friends use that wiggled hand gesture signaling "call me," it will have added meaning!
Robert Fabricant, VP Creative, frog design: In 10 years, the phone won't matter at all. We will have moved from a phone-based network to an account based network in which I can access all of my communications data from the cloud--from any phone or device that is convenient. The tight coupling of my information to specific piece of hardware will be eliminated, just like email has nothing to do with my PC anymore. This is not just the future for those of us in developed markets with access to corporate IT support and MobileMe. This is the future for the masses. There is a desperate need for broad-based access in developing markets that doesn't require the ownership of a dedicated personal device. Services will allow someone to access their contacts, messaging and credit from any device, whether the phone belongs to their uncle or is a community phone. People will have multiple accounts. Employers will enable accounts as will local health workers so that people can access sensitive information related to HIV or TB without having to compromise the confidentiality of this information on a shared device. This revolution is starting right now with companies like MoVirtu.
Related:
Design Roundtable: Why Do Cell Phones Go Out of Fashion so Quickly?
Design Roundtable: How Can Cell Phones Improve the World?
Design Roundtable: How Have Cell Phones Changed Our Behavior?
Any features you'd like to see in the cell phone of the future? Give us a ring in comments.
Related Stories: | Topics:Innovation, Technology, Design, deep dive, mobile, Mark Dziersk, Ken Carbone, Robert Fabricant, movirtu, Oakley, Bluetooth SIG Inc., Ben Stiller, Robert Fabricant, Apple MobileMe, Apple iPhone |
Recent Comments | 13 Total
June 24, 2009 at 1:40pm by TJ Barone
It's so easy to forecast 10 years into the future because no one will remember to come back and tell you how wrong you were.
So let me start. Implants and finger phones? No. 100% wrong. 10 years from now, every cell phone will be a newer version of the iPhone, or some ripoff there of. A touchscreen that can become anything, always connected. The apps will be more useful and integrated into everyday life.
Oh, and it's called the iPhone 3GS. Not the iPhone G3 S. Really.
July 7, 2009 at 1:55am by Peter Warner
There is a desperate need for broad-based access in developing markets that doesn't require the ownership of a dedicated personal device.
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July 7, 2009 at 1:56am by Peter Warner
Also the constant "convergence" factor. Cell phones have already become cameras and music players and web browsers.
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July 8, 2009 at 6:19pm by ALX C
THE FUTURE CLPN/SCN/DB/LCTIP/ RCNDGPRNT/ANLC/DNA/ALL AT ONCE
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September 8, 2009 at 4:48am by Mike Young
There is a desperate need for broad-based access in developing markets.
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September 8, 2009 at 4:53am by Mike Young
Also the constant "convergence" factor.
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October 8, 2009 at 4:41am by Mohit Jain
We all use cellphone handsets extensively and with handset manufacturers coming up with snazzy models that allow email, wap, internet surfing and almost everything that a computer can do we all are dumping our old phones. But that's creating a huge problem of addition electronic waste. Mobile handset manufacturers are now willing to take back old models and recycle them.
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November 18, 2009 at 1:58pm by Steph Robbins
Well I am happy to find the new design of mobile in 2020, I think any new technology will replace the current technology and you will never found this kind of stuff. Anyways thanks for sharing the design of mobile features. MCITP
Regards,
November 19, 2009 at 6:03am by hilmi adindra
Nice post guys. lately , Cell phone technoloy growth very fast.And there are many kind of choise for people to choose .
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November 27, 2009 at 2:15pm by Benetta Anthony
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December 2, 2009 at 11:05pm by Julia Dalton
All interesting ideas! It is so difficult to truly predict the advancements that will be coming out because you never know what is in people's imagination. It really depends on the direction that phones go in. Currently, we have a trend in smartphones like the newest iPhone 3GS that are more like computers than they are phones. If their continues to be interaction with the device itself, I can't imagine them getting smaller.
December 2, 2009 at 11:07pm by Julia Dalton
All interesting ideas! It is so difficult to truly predict the advancements that will be coming out because you never know what is in people's imagination. It really depends on the direction that phones go in. Currently, we have a trend in smartphones like the newest iPhone 3GS that are more like computers than they are phones. If their continues to be interaction with the device itself, I can't imagine them getting smaller.