Bruce Sterling, a science-fiction writer whose future caught up with  him, and who now writes books about contemporary design and technology,  believes phones will be “remote controls, house keys, Game Boys,  flashlights, maps, compasses, flash drives, health monitors,  microphones, recorders, laser pointers, passports, make-up kits, burglar  alarms, handguns, handcuffs and slave bracelets.” In short, he believes  that the phone will be “the remote-control for life”.
Oh no!
Tiny projectors inside handsets could allow walls, tabletops or screens  made of flexible materials to be used as displays while on the move,  suggests Jeff Wacker, a futurist at EDS, a technology-services firm.  Some firms are also developing displays built into glasses, in order to  do away with the screen altogether. This approach also makes it possible  to overlay information on the real world, which could be useful when  giving directions. Your phone might even label people at a party or  conference to remind you of their names.
Could be useful
Or perhaps it will discreetly whisper their names in your ear. Today's  earpieces may give way to smaller devices hidden in earrings or worn as  minuscule patches on the skin near the ear. It would then be possible to  listen to your phone or music-player while still hearing the ambient  sounds of the environment.
Maybe?
Stuart Wolf, a physics professor at the University of Virginia and a  researcher for the American military, suggests that within 20 years  people will use their thoughts to communicate not only with machines,  but also with each other—doing away with talking into phones entirely.  Telephony could give way to telepathy.
Ooh, even ...bad thoughts?
 
Everything from shoes to shirts to sunglasses could well contain tiny  wireless chips, people may use their phones to communicate with objects  as well as talking to people. You could then use a search engine not  just to find information on the internet, but to find objects in your  home. “I want to search my home via Google—I want to find my green  shirt,” says Mr Lindoff.
That would do nicely!
Concerns over privacy and security could derail plans to turn phones  into electronic wallets or universal keychains, for example. Phones that  know more about their owners could do all kinds of new things, but could  also raise new concerns.
Ulp!
There will certainly need to be powerful authentication techniques to  ensure that phones can only be used by their legitimate owners, says Mat  Hunter of IDEO, an international design firm. Already, some phones have  built-in finger scanners for just this purpose.
But if I lose it will I remember anything about my life?
Human memories will shrink, thoughts will be permanently clouded by  music of our choice, other peoples malign thoughts etc, we will always  be able to find our spectacles and keys, we will have photos of  everything we ever do....but will we be happier?
 
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