All this was predicted a couple of decades ago. There is a natural progression here. Sometime in this decade, you'll slide a keyboard and mouse next to your phone and it will be your desktop computer. Hopefully, the video to the monitor is wireless too.
The real trick is to figure out how to get it all sooner.
This is as predictive as Darren Brown showing people how to win the lottery. A billion anonymous Internet denizens typing on a billion keyboards, and so on.
Any real legitimacy in this realm is only derived fron being a consistent predictor over a long period of time.
No, you predicted natural language personal assistants that were integrated into your phone. Demos of those already existed in 2007, and natural language assistants have been in the works since the late 80s. Here's a paper from 1993 that describes a lot of the Siri functionality that exists today: http://www.media.mit.edu/speech/people/lisa/interchi93.html
Siri and the iPhone 4s is nothing new, Apple simply tied a lot of things together that already existed and added a bit of shine and sparkle.
1) The iPhone would become the new dominant computing platform.
2) There would be a dev kit for more tightly integrated applications.
3) A Siri equivalent would be on the iPhone, possibly delivered by a startup or Apple itself.
4) That this would be happening soon, in a subsequent version of the same device, or I would build it myself.
While this isn't magic, it is a pretty good prediction, and a lot more specific than what you just stated.
Finally, if this was all so obvious, why didn't anyone else predict it?
>Siri and the iPhone 4s is nothing new, Apple simply tied a lot of things together
The original iPhone was nothing new component-wise but something wonderful is summation. This has been Apple's gift. Lots of folks can dream up and write a paper about super-phone, it's a top-notch engineering company, living in the real world of engineering trade-offs, that can actually build and sell millions.
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[ 5.2 ms ] story [ 63.6 ms ] threadThe real trick is to figure out how to get it all sooner.
Any real legitimacy in this realm is only derived fron being a consistent predictor over a long period of time.
Is that a prediction of the forthcoming Google Glasses there, too? ;)
Siri and the iPhone 4s is nothing new, Apple simply tied a lot of things together that already existed and added a bit of shine and sparkle.
1) The iPhone would become the new dominant computing platform. 2) There would be a dev kit for more tightly integrated applications. 3) A Siri equivalent would be on the iPhone, possibly delivered by a startup or Apple itself. 4) That this would be happening soon, in a subsequent version of the same device, or I would build it myself.
While this isn't magic, it is a pretty good prediction, and a lot more specific than what you just stated.
Finally, if this was all so obvious, why didn't anyone else predict it?
>"1) The iPhone would become the new dominant computing platform."
By what measure?
>"why didn't anyone else predict it?"
Absence of evidence =/= evidence of absence.
The original iPhone was nothing new component-wise but something wonderful is summation. This has been Apple's gift. Lots of folks can dream up and write a paper about super-phone, it's a top-notch engineering company, living in the real world of engineering trade-offs, that can actually build and sell millions.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/tensafefrogs/49199489/
>yeah, exactly, why the hell would you want an itunes phone!? silly apple, jacks are for pods.
[1]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HGYFEI6uLy0