The innovation and growth on the mobile phones front is
astonishing. The top-end phones available now have the processing power and
storage available in desktop computers just 4-5 years ago. Little wonder, then,
that 2004 saw 674 million phones being bought, and estimates for 2005 stand at
730 million.
The mobile phone is rapidly becoming the uber device -- the
one device that seems to have it all and becomes even more indispensable than
it is now. Mobile phones have already started functioning as more than just
communications devices. Mobiles serve as watches and alarm clocks. Even with
the limited free games that come with basic phones, they are already good for
"time-pass". They can also function as calculators.
In unfamiliar neighbourhoods, they tell us where we are. The
address book and contacts list on phones is our social interface. Without the
phone, many of us would be quite lost in connecting with other people. The
calendar function on the mobile phones can help us track our lives. Phones can
also function as radios. For some, the mobile phone also becomes a notepad --
send an SMS to oneself and make it a reminder service. Owners also have tended
to customise phones, with their own ringtones, themes and wallpapers.
This is just for starters. Consider what some of the more
advanced mobile phones are also doing:
Digital camera:
Point-and-click! Phones capture pictures and
let us save them for posterity or transfer them to others and to computers.
Audio recorder:
Mobile phones can be used to record
conversations or even brief notes to oneself.
Video recorder:
Phones are becoming video cameras also --
some of the newest cellphones can record an hour or more of video.
Multimedia messaging:
Everything recorded can be shared with
others by using MMS.
Email client:
The phone can be used to connect to any POP or
IMAP server and allow receiving and sending email. While most phones may not
have the ease of use that a Blackberry has with email, contacts and calendar,
the fact that it is on the phone itself and that there is no need for a
separate device can be a big help (along with the lower total cost of
ownership).
Web client:
Phones can also browse websites, via a WAP
and/or HTML browser. Most web sites may not look great on the small screen, but
it is still possible to connect to any web site.
Gaming platform:
Mobile games have become big business in
the past couple years as people seek entertainment in the free time that they
have on the device that they always carry with them.
Documents viewer:
It is increasingly possible to view
documents on the cellphone, in the popular MS-Office file formats.
Computer adjunct:
For many, the cellphone has replaced the
PDA as the complement to the computer. With a remote desktop application, it
also becomes possible to make the mobile phone a window to one's computer.
Music player:
The next big thing in 2005 is reckoned to be
the combining of music capabilities on the mobile phone. While phones can play
MP3s, it will soon also be possible to have music streamed from the Internet.
Motorola is expected to introduce a phone this year that marries the mobile
with Apple's iPod.
TV:
In India, some operators have been promoting many TV
channels on the cellphone over next-generation networks like EDGE.
Wallet:
The phone can also be used to pay for purchases like
a credit or debit card. There is already a billing relationship that exists
between the subscriber and the operator, and that can be used to make payments
to merchants.
Bar-code readers:
Phones will also be able to read bar codes
and that can have very interesting applications in commerce.
So the phones of tomorrow will be the remote controls of our
life. They will come with bigger, better keyboards and displays -- even though
there are practical limitations on how big a device we will carry.
Networks are becoming faster too. And the device that was
once a replacement for the fixed-line phone will occupy an even greater role in
our lives. Countries like Japan and South Korea already lead the way in having
multi-purpose mobile phones.
A Slashdot wrote: "Samsung [is] showing off a new cell
phone which runs on Microsoft's Windows Mobile operating system which features
a built-in hard drive. The SGH-I300 will offer 3GB of storage, which allows you
to store up to 1,000 songs on it for playback through the music player. The 3GB
hard drive is similar to the type of hard drive that is found in Apple's Mini
iPod. These 1-inch drives with very low power requirements are ideal for cell
phones and other mobile devices."
News.com wrote about two of the announcements at Cebit:
"Motorola is demonstrating its 3G Motorola V1150 phone in Hannover. The
sleek phone will come with an integrated 2-megapixel camera, two-way video
calling and a new Motorola ticker technology called Screen3 that streams news
and entertainment from Motorola... Sony Ericsson is showing off the W800 phone,
the first Walkman- branded cell phone. The handset comes with a digital-audio
player, FM radio tuner and 2-megapixel camera. The W800 will have 38MB of free
memory for music and images."
Mobile phones are morphing -- to the point where voice is
just incidental. They are becoming, what George Gilder has called, teleputers.
No comments:
Post a Comment