00:51
We will
soon open cars with our smartphones, store data on Cloud and command
computers with our voices. You know what's the most magical thing about technology?
It is its fixation to replace old with new, obsolete with promising
and smart with genius. This is the reason why, every decade, a set of
tech things that eased our lives in a million ways make way for
something newer, better and brighter.For example, the fixed line gave
way to the pager and mobile, cassettes to compact discs and digital
content, wires to infrared and Bluetooth, yellow bulbs to CFL and
LEDs. Here are a few other products that will soon age and fade.
Traditional Car keys
Steel car keys are already dead. They have been replaced
by smart keys that you don't even need to take out of your pocket to
start or turn off the engine. These come loaded with chips and can't
be duplicated by local key makers, which means the car thieves have
bigger challenges to deal with than half a decade ago.However, this
is not where the evolution of car keys has stopped; by the time you
retire, or maybe a lot sooner than that, car keys will be completely
out of business. They will be replaced by smartphone apps that will
grant you complete control over your car ignition, temperature
control and stuff like that. Tesla, BMW, General Motors and Volvo
already offer such apps, and this fad will roll down to cars for the
masses soon. You will still have to make sure that you don't lose
your smartphone.
Compact Cameras
Thanks to the war of megapixels amongst the mobile phone
manufacturers, and our never-ending craze for selfies, the sale of
compact cameras has drastically dropped. You hardly find anyone using
a point-and-shoot camera these days. However, DSLR will be with us
for a very long time because of the growing interest in amateur
photography and professional use. Says Manish Sharma, president,
CEAMA and managing director Panasonic India and South Asia, "Due
to the growing popularity of smartphones, the sales of compact
cameras declined by 30 per cent till October 2014. Also, heavy
discounts have led to consumers preferring high-end smartphones and
tablets over cameras. However, the Digital SLR segment is witnessing
exciting times." Just in case you lost track, Kodak, whose
little yellow film boxes defined your growing up years, quit the
camera-making business a few years ago after ruling the world of
photography for more than a century! In fact, a Singapore-based label
which is doing exceedingly well in DSLR is struggling to sell its
compact cam eras, and its sales in this segment is dropping every
quarter.
Hard drives
With every thing moving to Cloud based storage and the
in crease in the sale SSD (solid state drives), the sale of hard
drives has already taken a hit. Cloud-based storage allows all data
to be stored online, and can be accessed from anywhere, anytime. On
the other hand, SSDs, smaller versions of hard drives, are very
expensive and incredibly fast and robust."Technological progress
is making things smaller, faster, smarter and web based. With
everything going digital, Cloud computing will become big soon, and
we will manage our data using a Cloud-based app," exlpains Chris
Chang, managing director, ADATA Technology India.
Media Players
Who plays DVDs and CDs on dedicated media players these
days? Stoneage men? Aren't we already using Chrome Cast and streaming
movies online on our tabs and phones? With Apple TV and iTunes, the
fate of DVDs and Bluerays has more or less been sealed.
Keyboard
This story has been typed using a keyboard, but in times
to come, as intelligent voice functions like Siri and Ok Google
evolve, and the computer starts reacting to gestures and motions, the
keyboard will eventually die the death of a typewriter, and instead
of typing this story, we will voice them onto the designer's
computer. Designers, obviously, will not be allowed to sleep.
0 comments:
Post a Comment