There's going to a subtle paradigm shift in electronics. Physical media is 
slowly dying off, and new form factors are going to become norms. Tablets are 
beginning to become what laptops originally were- less-powerful desktops that 
could be used portably. Laptops have become what desktops used to be- the 
powerful mainstay for big tasks that can also be the center of your computing 
needs (how many gaming laptops have you see advertised?). Cloud computing is on 
the verge of being what it's been billed as being as more services and apps 
that used to be local are successfully shifted to remote servers. Microsoft is 
in the process of making Office a cloud service, Google's Chrome OS is a viable 
system (albeit a not so popular one). Instead of Microsoft ruling most of the 
world there will be an oligarchy- Apple couldn't care less about dominant 
market share because they've become unimaginably wealthy focusing on margin 
instead. Google is on the verge of creating a mobile ecosystem (devices, media, 
storage, productivity, apps, you name it), and Amazon isn't too far behind 
them. It wouldn't be a big jump from having a mobile ecosystem to a full one; 
and Google's products have always been aimed at every user. Microsoft has shown 
some promise and still rules enterprise, but they still aren't innovating (the 
only true innovation they've offered has been the XBox). 
Moore's law has been lessened but is still in effect; I agree with the 
assertion that devices will become more powerful and less expensive. My 
freaking iPhone has a much more powerful processor than my first Win98 desktop 
(45p MHz single core vs a 1 GHz dual core), has more RAM, better graphics, and 
almost as much hard drive storage. I think Google's Nexus will be a decent 
seller, and the iPad Mini will be even moreso (when even Bloomberg and the Wall 
Street Journal talk about it it's safe to say Apple's making it). The field 
will be even more crowded when Microsoft enters the game later this year, but 
I'm still not convinced that they will be very successful- the market is going 
to be closer to saturation point by the time they are out, and they are three 
years behind. 
I'm hopeful and excited as to where media could be going in the next ten years. 
I think that more content creators will see the light and begin embracing 
digital distribution, be it sales through portals like iTunes or Amazon, or the 
eventual deployment of IPTV. It's already close- many new TVs are 
internet-capable (mostly for simple streaming of content) and a lot of channels 
like HBO and ESPN have digital versions; once they can generate enough revenue 
you'll see it explode. 
Lastly, publishing is changing rapidly too. Hard copy will never disappear, but 
I think the age of digital publishing is on us now. It's too easy to go about 
self-publishing and distribution for it NOT to be a coming tidal wave. 

On Jul 13, 2012, at 12:16 PM, Edward Crosby wrote:

> The pulse of technology seem to think tablets are it, are the future and will 
> replace laptops and desktops for the average consumer. The tablet has already 
> killed the netbook and most "technology seers" think this will also happen 
> with desktops and laptops too. I, actually, have already seen this for myself 
> not in the consumer space but in the corporate space. The company I work for, 
> within the past year, has already started allowing some of our top management 
> personnel to use the iPad in our network and most of them do in place of 
> their laptop. I have personal experience from this because I was designated 
> in my department to head this project and assist management, with the help 
> from our field engineer team, to get integrated into our network. I've also 
> heard of other companies going the same route. The tablet seems to be a 
> better tool than a laptop, especially for those that attend and present 
> meetings frequently.
> Also, it seems that even a lot of the software companies are fine tuning 
> their applications to work on tablets. A prime example is OnLive. They have 
> developed a means of getting Windows with the Office Suite in their product 
> specifically for the iPad and Android tablets so that you can install the 
> OnLive app in iOS and Android, fire up Windows and, poof, you have Word, 
> Excel or PowerPoint running on the tablet.
> I haven't fully grasped the tablet fad yet myself because I am still waiting 
> for them to go down in price some more, specifically the 10", which I think 
> is starting to happen. I actually may purchase an Android tablet within the 
> next 6 months or so. I've seen some of the better Android tablets (Samsung 
> Galaxy Tab, Asus Transformer) drop as low as $300 and even refurbs as low as 
> $250. That's a fantastic price. And, these examples mentioned have the option 
> to attach a portable keyboard too.
> However, it's not just tablets that are the big thing right now. It's mobile 
> in general. The mobile space of the smartphone is super hot also and will be 
> hot for sometime thanks to the competition of Apple and Android.
> 
> ----------------------------------------
> Have a Better One, 
> Edward Crosby
> http://about.me/edwardcrosby
> 
> 
> On Fri, Jul 13, 2012 at 11:52 AM, Shag <[email protected]> wrote:
> My good friend Ed has always seemed to have his finger (albeit a large, 
> sausage-like finger) on the pulse of technology trends.  He's one of the 
> first people I knew our age that bought a cell phone.  He championed Google, 
> Google apps, and other cloud computing apps much earlier than the rest 
> (although I still question his faith in Google Plus).  He ditched his 
> physical media ages ago (we all thought he was just being a curmudgeon) in 
> favor of digital versions.  He is literally the original Unique Geek.
> 
> So I put the question to Ed (and everyone else), what is the next big change 
> in technology?  Tablets, smart phones, the cloud, digital media, social 
> media... all these have changed the world (well, at least the First World). 
> What is on the horizon right now (even if it seems far-fetched) that will 
> eventually become commonplace?  
> 
> 
> The Irredeemable Shag
> 
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