It’s the end of the decade, and you’re seeing plenty of retrospectives rounding up the last ten years of smartphones, and tech in general – but what about the future, and the tech advances it might bring? How could smartphones change in the next ten years?
It’s worth pointing out that this speculation could end up being totally, totally off, as guessing tends to be, so come the smartphone industry could be totally different to how we suggest here.Foldable phones in the future (*******************************
(Image credit: TechRadar)
This is because of how pricey they are, and also because software hasn’t been developed that really makes the most of the form factor.
************************************
More rear cameras?
******************
The Nokia 9 PureView with five rear cameras (******************** Image credit: Future)
************While you may think the future will bring you phones with plenty of smartphone cameras, far more so than now, that might not end up being the case: there are only so many different kinds of lens, so we’ll soon reach a point where adding more lenses adds nothing new.
No, in fact, the real change will likely be megapixel count – at the end of 2019 the highest resolution in a smartphone is (MP in the Xiaomi Mi Note) *******************************************************************************, but it looks like a number of phones in 2020 are gearing up to match that. In ten years, though, that number could be through the roof.
Well, at least five times nearer the roof. Scientists have estimated that (********************************** the human eye sees roughly (MP) *******************************************
No, in fact, the real change will likely be megapixel count – at the end of 2019 the highest resolution in a smartphone is (MP in the Xiaomi Mi Note) *******************************************************************************, but it looks like a number of phones in 2020 are gearing up to match that. In ten years, though, that number could be through the roof.
Well, at least five times nearer the roof. Scientists have estimated that (********************************** the human eye sees roughly (MP) *******************************************
, but that’s assuming perfect vision with an image right by your face, so if you’re Looking at a phone at arm’s length and don’t have flawless vision, that number is higher than you’ll ever need.
So people don’t need cameras with incredibly high megapixel counts, and it would be a surprise if phone companies decided to even reach 576 MP. Saying that, advances in megapixel count will almost certainly be more pronounced in of the number of rear cameras.
- These are the best smartphones in 2029, not
************************************
(********************************************************************************** (Read More)
GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings