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@bookerx3
I have no doubt the future will resemble something like this video, but will it be companies like Microsoft that deliver it to us? History tells us "no!"
Enough rambling...Good find thanks for sharing :-)
Though in the past many people and companies may have ignored the need for a shift or wasted time with legacy, many others will embrace the need for such shifts and drag the rest of them along. As things increasingly develop and speed up, everyone will need to change or get left behind.
At any rate, the changes look intriguing. Whether M$ brings them market or not someone will and I can't wait to experience them.
Imagine how quickly MSFT could gain back their market-leadership position from google if they created a portable paper-like version of the Surface that incorporated standardized dynamic ad units into the display of content.
I remember in 1990 (back to the future movies) they said we'd be driving hover cars by the year 2000... its almost 10 years since that day and no hover-cars. However, some cool things have come out and changed the way we communicate - lets use community networking as an example or just even the power of the recent Xbox.....
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It reminded me of that scene in Big where they were designing all the toys and making up the rules as they went along. This gave me a similar vibe.
Here's to the future :)
My take on all this future stuff, however, is to look at future films of the past -- even as recent as the 1980s. Nobody got the 16:9 television. Even when screens were larger, wall-sized, the 4:3 format still reigned.
Lets concentrate on really good mobile connections (I still can't get a phone to work for more than three minutes at a time on the Manchester to London rail line never mind the internet) before worrying about super cool hardware.
10meg mobile broadband with 99% coverage first please!
It's pure awesomeness in interface design :-)