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Gizmodo: 15 current technologies your newborn son won't use

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I think the only one I can't see happening is the TV remote. Could they do away with it? Sure but I think it works pretty well as it is.

(Link is better formatted and has pictures)

http://gizmodo.com/5901576/15-current-technologies-my-newborn-son-wont-use


A surprising number of the gadgets and technologies we have today are on the verge of extinction. Laptop Mag's Avram Piltch walks us through more than a dozen, knowing that his newborn son will be about as familiar with them as today's teens are with Betamax. And some of this batch might surprise you.

From the moment that I found out my wife was pregnant with our first child, a son, I've thought of his development in terms of tech. When pregnancy sites described our six-week-old fetus as the size of a "lentil," I referred to him as the length of an RFID chip. When the doctor said he had reached 1.3 pounds, I told all my friends that my son was the size of an iPad. When he was born this week, he was about the size of an HP Envy 15, though unfortunately his cries did not use Beats Audio.

As my newborn son grows to match the size of a mid-tower desktop, a large-screen TV and eventually a server rack, I can't help but think about all the gadgets he won't even remember using that were so important to his dad. I'm not talking about long dead-and-buried technologies such as the VHS recorder or the 35mm camera. Rather, I'm thinking about devices and concepts most of us use today that will fall out of mainstream use so soon that he either won't remember them, or will only have very hazy memories of having lived with them.



Wired Home Internet

I was surprised when a 23-year-old co-worker told me she didn't remember a time before broadband Internet. At some point, her parents must have had dial-up, but she was so young that she doesn't even remember back that far. Wireless broadband won't dominate the home market until he's 8 to 10, but my son won't remember a world where consumers pay for wired Internet connections.

Even today, 4G LTE provides comparable download speeds and better upload speeds than cable Internet, but the cost of using mobile broadband all the time is prohibitive. At some point in the next few years, broadband providers are going to realize that giving everyone home antennas is more scalable than wiring and maintaining each street's network of fiber-optic cables. At that point, the paradigm will shift and it will be cheaper to purchase wireless than wired Internet. Clear already offers a 4G WiMax home Internet hub with unlimited service, though it's not fast enough to compete with cable Internet.

Dedicated Cameras and Camcorders

Smartphone cameras are already killing the consumer point-and-shoot and the family camcorder. Unlike cameras, which most of us carry only when we think we might need to take pictures, smartphones are always with us. They offer all kinds of apps and filters for adjusting pictures on the fly and they allow us to share our photos and videos online as soon as we take them. DSLRs and micro four-thirds cameras will remain with us, but within a few years, the average consumer won't own a dedicated camera at all.

Landline Phones

As of 2010, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that 26 percent of U.S. homes had wireless phones only. By the time my son turns 5 in 2017, only a handful of old people and Luddites will continue to own house phones while everyone will likely use cellphones exclusively. By the time my son is 10, most businesses will have done away with their desk phones and saved a lot of money and hassle in the process.

Slow-Booting Computers

Waiting for one's computer to boot is one of the great tech frustrations of the PC era, but my son will never know that pain. With the move toward always-on computing, future users will almost never turn their computers off, instead waking them from sleep in a second or less. New operating systems will be able to install updates and patches without requiring a reboot. However, if for some reason, you do need to restart the computer, boots will take only a couple of seconds because of SSDs and fast-starting operating systems like Windows 8. "When I was your age, we had to wait up to two minutes for a computer to power on, and we liked it," I'll tell him.

Windowed Operating Systems

When my son is ready for his own computer, the windows will be gone from Windows. Microsoft 's PC operating system will still exist, as will Mac OS X. But, in the next few years, we'll say good bye to the window metaphor where each application you run is displayed in a draggable box that has a title bar and widgets.

Microsoft has already signaled its intent to kill the window metaphor by making the tile-based Metro UI the default screen for Windows 8. How long before Mac OS and even Ubuntu also default to touch-friendly UIs that don't have tiny widgets?

Hard Drives

My first computer, a TI 99, used cassette tapes to store data. My second computer used 5.25-inch floppy disks, and the third system had a combination of a 3.5-inch floppy drive and a small IDE hard drive. The next PC had a zip drive and a tape backup unit. However, as different as these disks were, they all used the same magnetic platter technology that's been popular since reel-to-reel tapes ruled the earth.

Today, solid state drives finally allow us to end the ancient practice of storing our data on spinning magnetic platters. Because they have no moving parts, SSDs are infinitely faster than hard drives and more durable, too. Today, the cost of solid-state storage is significantly higher than magnetic media, but expect that delta to shrink significantly over the years while users come to expect SSD speeds from even low-end computers. By the time my son gets his first new laptop, you won't be able to buy one without an SSD. Hard drives and their cheap storage will only remain useful for servers, where space is more important than speed.

Movie Theaters

Pundits have been predicting the death of the movie theater since the first televisions hit the market, but this time, it's really going to happen for a number of reasons. First, with large HD televisions going mainstream and 3D sets becoming more affordable, the average home theater is almost as good as the average multiplex theater. Second, studios and their cable partners have begun releasing some movies for on-demand viewing on the same day they debut in theaters, a trend which is likely to continue.

Finally, the cost of going to a movie theater is so out of control - movie tickets in New York cost around $13 each - that nobody is going to keep paying it. In a world where an on-demand film that's still in theaters costs $7 to rent and one that just left the theater streams for $2.99 from Amazon, who will spend more than $50 for a family of four to go see the same movie surrounded by annoying patrons, dirty seats and overpriced popcorn? Art house theaters that offer specialized films and a sense of community may remain, but the average multiplex will be gone before my son notices it was ever there.

The Mouse

Within five years, the cost of adding capacitive touch capability to screens will be so small that every display, from large-screen TVs to laptops, will have it. More precise pointing devices such as the mouse and touchpad won't disappear overnight, but they'll likely fade away or become secondary input methods within the next several years. Already with Windows 8, the user interface will support touch even if you don't necessarily need to use it all the time.

3D Glasses

Ever since the first 3D films hit theaters in the 1950s, viewers have been forced to wear some kind of glasses in order to experience three-dimensional effects. However, in the past year or so, we've started seeing a number of glasses-free solutions hit the market.

In 2011, Toshiba released the Qosmio F755 notebook, which uses its webcam to track your eye movements and serve up really compelling 3D images, though these are only optimized for a single viewer. Last year, phone vendors HTC and LG both launched handsets with glasses-free, stereoscopic 3D screens that weren't home theater quality, but were good enough for some three-dimensional fun. By the time my son is 10, large-screened devices like TVs will be able to offer a compelling glasses-free 3D experience to many viewers at the same time.

Remote Controls

When I was a child, the family TV didn't even have a remote control. We had to actually get up and walk across the room to change the channel. By the time my son enters grade school, most of us will have moved on to either using our smartphones or a combination of gestures and voice commands to change channels.

Desktops

By the time my son is in elementary school, PC vendors will have stopped producing most desktop computers, though all-in-ones with large screens, high-end workstations for people who do industrial-strength computations, and servers (probably in blade form) will remain. As someone who loves to build desktops from parts, I hope the market for PC components remains intact so my son and I will still be able to custom build a computer together, but I fear that option may disappear too.

Phone Numbers

I still remember my parents' phone number, which hasn't changed in more than 30 years, but how many of us dial numbers rather than just tapping a name in our contacts menu? With the advent of VoIP chat services like Skype, Google Talk and even Facebook audio chat, you can just dial someone by username. When my son is in high school, he'll be asking the pretty girl on the bus for her user ID, not her phone number.

Primetime Television

In ancient times, people had to gather around their TVs at a set time each week to watch "Starsky and Hutch." Then VCRs arrived and you could find out whether the Duke boys outsmarted Boss Hogg any time you wanted. DVRs now let us tape shows without using tapes, but because most TV networks make their shows available for free either via Web streaming or cable on-demand, we don't even have to record shows.

Fax Machines

In the age of email, instant messaging and 4G connections, there's only one lame excuse for the continued existence of the fax machine, a gadget that had its heyday in the 1970s, and that excuse has to do with signatures. Some companies and their lawyers will only accept a scribbled signature as valid on contracts and forms, so if you want to file that loan application or send in your insurance claim form with your signature on it, fax may still be your best option.

However, three things will finally slay the fax. First, more companies will start accepting online forms with electronic signatures as valid, so someone's illegible signature on a hard copy isn't needed. Second, for those who just can't let go of the signature requirement, touch devices will allow people to scribble their John Hancocks into digital forms. Finally, the death of landlines will also mean death for fax machines.

Optical Discs

I still remember the first DVD I bought, because it was a copy of "Hard Boiled" that I ordered from a now-defunct website called Urban Fetch. It may take until my son turns 10 for the major entertainment companies to stop publishing in DVD and Blu-ray format, but make no mistake, discs aren't long for this world.

Optical discs will last another decade or so because consumers aren't eager to repurchase films they already own on disc and because there are still a number of old or rare titles you can't find on cloud services like iTunes or Amazon. Yet with the growth in downloadable and streaming video services, all physical media is on the fast track to extinction.
 

RubxQub

φίλω ἐξεχέγλουτον καί ψευδολόγον οὖκ εἰπόν
Hmm...all of that seems plausible, actually. Was expecting some crazy shit that I'd disagree with heavily...but that all actually seems entirely plausible.
 

The Technomancer

card-carrying scientician
The mouse is just too efficient. The only way it goes away is if sit-down computing goes away entirely, and while I think it will shrink there are certain tasks you don't want to do on a mobile device.
 
These fortune-telling articles are always fucking stupid and often end up being wrong. They used to say everyone would be using e-books by 2010 or something.
 

Ogni-XR21

Member
Disagree with the mouse and the TV remote. I also hope "windows" won't go away but I'll just have to adapt, I guess.
 
I think wired home internet is here to stay. I've used stuff like Clear and it's just sometimes unreliable. Granted, it should get better in the future, but it just makes me feel better knowing that my wired internet is there should my mobile internet crap out.
 

Davidion

Member
The mouse is just too efficient. The only way it goes away is if sit-down computing goes away entirely, and while I think it will shrink there are certain tasks you don't want to do on a mobile device.


The tablet form factor isn't going to be the lone catalyst in doing the mouse in, it'd have to be some other eventual evolution in the interface.

I always thought one of the ways that the mouse would be ushered out of existence is if there was technology that lets a touch screen discern which finger is being used to activate the screen.

As for the rest of the article...it's a lot of "yeah I guess I could see that" grade of predictions. As with any other kind of these lists, a good chunk of the predictions will likely be true while the rest is more like forecasts that weren't thought through very well.
 

poppabk

Cheeks Spread for Digital Only Future
I don't see the mouse being replaced by touchscreens any time soon, maybe trackpads will take over but it's unlikely.
The remote isn't going anywhere either, at most its functionality will be emulated by smart devices. I still think that voice recognition is a nonstarter for tvs.
 

Derrick01

Banned
The obsession everyone has with touch bothers me, especially as more and more people call for the death of more accurate things in place of it.
 

Tuck

Member
I hope Windows don't disappear.

On a 25" monitor, they're quite useful. Though maybe there is a better way.
 

slit

Member
No way, a lot of that is bull. The mouse going away anytime soon is ridiculous. While landines in the home are defintley going away I don't see all business doing away with them, especially places that store and use a lot of confidental information, like where I work.
 

Darklord

Banned
I was surprised when a 23-year-old co-worker told me she didn't remember a time before broadband Internet. At some point, her parents must have had dial-up, but she was so young that she doesn't even remember back that far.

That's one hell of a shitty memory then. I remember having dial up till like 15 and I'm 23.
 

GJS

Member
The only one I see disappearing is 3D glasses
and 3D as a whole with them as we move onto the next big thing
.
 

demon

I don't mean to alarm you but you have dogs on your face
Dedicated Cameras and Camcorders

Smartphone cameras are already killing the consumer point-and-shoot and the family camcorder. Unlike cameras, which most of us carry only when we think we might need to take pictures, smartphones are always with us. They offer all kinds of apps and filters for adjusting pictures on the fly and they allow us to share our photos and videos online as soon as we take them. DSLRs and micro four-thirds cameras will remain with us, but within a few years, the average consumer won't own a dedicated camera at all.
No. Too many people want decent cameras, if not for everyday use, then for trips/vacations and the like. You can't fit good camera technology into a thin phone no matter how hard you try.
 
b9NMF.jpg


From my cold, dead hands
 
Mouse
Movies
HDD drives will probably be replaced with ssd and flash and whatever is next

DSLR will still be kicking the shit out of smartphone cameras you dont change physics it changes you. A smaller sensor will always have a lesser quality than the larger sensor.
 

Trey

Member
The obsession everyone has with touch bothers me, especially as more and more people call for the death of more accurate things in place of it.

I couldn't imagine replacing a mouse as the main interfacing tool until computers can read my thoughts.
 
Dedicated Cameras and Camcorders

Most people will use their phone, but anyone who gives a damn about photography will still use a dedicated camera whenever possible.

Slow-Booting Computers

Booting will always be "slow". You'll just need to cold boot less often, because most things will be in sleep mode or a modified hibernation state.

Windowed Operating Systems

Despite what Microsoft wants you to think, this isn't going away anytime soon for anyone who wants to be productive. Sure, it may take a backseat to casual mobile-esque interfaces, but it will be there.

Movie Theaters

Wow, having a radio in your home sure killed concerts and dance clubs, didn't it?

There will always be the social need to go out.

Remote Controls

Using a smartphone is still using a remote.

Desktops

Not everyone needs a big truck, but they still make big trucks and we still see them every day.
 

midonnay

Member
wired internet will be here for at least the next 50 years....

even if some wireless technology magically appears to supercede it.... the optical fibre is already in the ground and it would be crazy to just leave it unused.
 

marrec

Banned
wired internet will be here for at least the next 50 years....

even if some wireless technology magically appears to supercede it.... the optical fibre is already in the ground and it would be crazy to just leave it unused.

So will hard-drives. So will movie theaters and mouse interface. So will many of the things on that list... it's as if he put a bunch of technology into a hat and randomly pulled out 15.

Hell, even fax machines will be around in 10 years.
 
Movie Theaters

Wow, having a radio in your home sure killed concerts and dance clubs, didn't it?

There will always be the social need to go out.

I think the pressure is coming from the audiences in this case and comparable alternatives are just secondary to the real motivating factor: cost. Rising costs are making movie going a lot more expensive. People aren't going to have a choice anymore and they'll stop going to the movies as much as they do now.
 
Landlines will still exist as long as there are places with terrible cell phone coverage.

His obsession with tablet technology is kinda weird. I haven't really tried Windows 8, so I don't really understand how the GUI is supposed to be better, but it still feels like its going to fall flat on its face. Touch screens are good for tablets, but I hate them on a regular PC. Well the Macbook touchpad is awesome, but that's patented.

SSD are hard drives, he should say rotational media.
 

Cheebo

Banned
Landlines will still exist as long as there are places with terrible cell phone coverage.

His obsession with tablet technology is kinda weird. I haven't really tried Windows 8, so I don't really understand how the GUI is supposed to be better, but it still feels like its going to fall flat on its face. Touch screens are good for tablets, but I hate them on a regular PC. Well the Macbook touchpad is awesome, but that's patented.

SSD are hard drives, he should say rotational media.

Well tablets will begin to outsell laptops (they already outsell desktops) pretty soon so while they won't replace it completely touch will be the far and away dominate form of computing for consumers pretty soon.

It's a stretch to say it will be dead as he does but not many consumers will be using traditional PC, most will be on tablets.
 

FLEABttn

Banned
Wired internet isn't going away within 10 years. Significantly higher bandwidth caps, significantly less packet loss, the first hop having a ping of much less than 250ms, much higher bandwidth. It won't be as important, if only because the number of wireless internet devices is going to significantly increase.
 

Dreaver

Member
I found it a quite enjoyable list and I can see most happening. Some sooner then other ones.
I don't think the mouse and remote control will disseapper anytime soon. I think they'll stay for a long time because it's way more practical but gestures, voice recognizion and touch screens will play a bigger role.

I also doubt Movie Theaters will be gone anytime soon.
 

Htown

STOP SHITTING ON MY MOTHER'S HEADSTONE
The mouse is not going anywhere. That's dumb.

Also, I'm unsure about optical discs. They're still an extremely cheap way of storing large amounts of data, while still being disposable.
 
Well tablets will begin to outsell laptops (they already outsell desktops) pretty soon so while they won't replace it completely touch will be the far and away dominate form of computing for consumers pretty soon.

It's a stretch to say it will be dead as he does but not many consumers will be using traditional PC, most will be on tablets.

I know, but I think that tablets sacrifice a lot for convenience sake. There are a lot of times when using a tablet, I think its adequate for the task on hand, but it would be so much easier on a laptop or something.
 

msv

Member
Almost all are completely wrong.

Wired internet will not go away. It has many inherent advantages over wireless. E.g. Protection from sniffers, speed, etc. No reason not to have wired internet when people will still have main PC's. Look in the future far enough, and the entire infrastructure of every country will have internet integrated into it. Insisting on wireless when you can just lay down some fiber optics won't happen.

Which brings me to this: PCs won't go away. Take away the limit of portability and you'll always have a much more powerful machine. A sizeable amount of people will continue to be interested in that.

The mouse won't go away. Not in the near future anyway. And it certainly won't be overtaken by touchscreens. Touching a screen is much more cumbersome than moving a mouse if you're using a keyboard. Perhaps the keyboard will go away, but I don't see a preference for a physical keyboard going away. Percentage of touchscreen only will rise of course, but to say physical keyboards will be gone doesn't make sense.

Remotes won't go away either, what's that about? Separate remotes maybe, but this rise of 'computer' tv's won't take over completely. Lots of people won't give a shit about features on a tv, and instead will prefer the tv with less features, that's bigger, clearer whatever.

Why would optical discs go away? Network (cloud) storage has been around since the dawn of the internet. People will always want to have at least backups and such. Perhaps they'll move to holographic or another type of better/denser data storage, point is, 'cloud' storage isn't going to eliminate the need for physical storage. Size of files (movies, games etc.) will grow a lot over the coming decade. 4K or more, 48+ FPS, etc. 100GB to over a TB sized games.

Seems like a random person that just learned some buzzwords and is trying to extrapolate with limited information and without vision.
 
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