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Mobile Internet and me: your life in the next ten years

Have you ever wondered what you’d be doing right now if the internet as we know it hadn’t been ‘stumbled on’ in 1990? Would we be interacting with technology in the same way that we do today?

It’s hard to believe that anything can advance as far as technology has in the last 20 years. Heck, in the United States, 20 years doesn’t give you the right to drink. No celebratory champagne for you, Mr. WW Web. You will have to wait another year.

One thing is certain: the Internet has grown. And it’s becoming something we can’t live without.

I’d be willing to bet that at least a quarter of the audience who intently watch this work can reach into their pockets (or on their desk) and access a piece of technology that goes with them everywhere. This pile of junk went from a “cell phone” to a “cell phone” to a “smartphone” to a “superphone” (the latter, of course, according to Google).

As technology advanced, the Internet grew in speed, accessibility, and content. Very soon, with Apple’s announcement of its ‘new device’, the mobile tablet industry will take off and another era of Internet technology will be upon us (desktops, laptops, cell phones and tablets).

With these super expectations ahead and the undeniable truth that the mobile internet is not just a fad but an inevitable utility, I have five ways your average life now may become obsolete ten years from now. Although consumers are currently constrained for financial reasons, the mobile Internet will be embedded in a technology that has yet to be invented. With that said, let’s dig into the list:

1. Your vehicle will be like your home, or better

With the addition of Wi-Fi-enabled Internet access in production cars, accompanied by the move toward electric vehicles (albeit still a long way off), your suede carpet and sheet-covered capes may take a close second to your leather seat and steering wheel. Ignoring the obvious safety issues here, cars will soon have the same accessibility as your mobile phone now, but it ALSO keeps you warm! Luxury what?

2. Going to class will continue to be a nuisance, but less

Remember those good old days when you had to buy textbooks to read, notebooks to take vigilant notes, and plenty of paper and ink for that self-proclaimed “green” college class? With the explosion of mobile technology and Internet access, everything will soon be accessible through a simple Internet connection, through a single device. And to think that with each passing year, new technology slowly trickles down to younger markets.

3.Personal entertainment

This is the most difficult area to imagine because of its unlimited and relatively untapped potential. With the rise of 3D TV, how long will it be before we start watching 3D content over the web? Also, with technology getting smaller, how will game developers adapt to higher resolutions and smaller screens? This, in my humble opinion, is the most fascinating and open area of ​​the mobile Internet explosion. Companies like Apple, Nintendo, Microsoft and Sony are fully aware of the capabilities that come with their devices, but what will their strategy look like when it comes to integrating past entertainment experience with new means of interaction?

4. Social media will explode, yes I mean more than it has.

One of the best examples of the social media explosion is Facebook, and soon after its arrival in 2004, the online networking community began to diversify. What will be the next social platform and why do we need it to exist? Do you remember life without Facebook or Twitter? Could you go back to those days? Some view these things as “absolutely necessary.” Will the mobile Internet change the perception of the world, or will the advent of the mobile Internet reveal the far reaches of the world of information that we have not yet discovered?

5. There is always the possibility of more than one ‘internet’

More than one internet? This can not be! Well, it may not be anytime soon, but the current foundations we’re standing on weren’t meant to last forever. In fact, the Internet was never intended for any of this, it was simply envisioned as an advanced computer network for the military in the 1960s. Today’s Internet protocol suite is running out of IP addresses; Some experts have predicted that it will be sold out in 2010! Don’t worry, I’m sure there is no Mayan theory of what happens when you run out of IP addresses.

Where will you be in ten years? Technology is evolving at an alarming rate, and there are certainly areas for improvement that have yet to be discovered. I guess the important question is: what will you do when you move?

With what we know, the data, and the experience with the growth of the mobile Internet, we can expect the next ten years of mobile Internet technology to act like the last twenty years of the Internet: grow.

Get ready to see Mobile Internet integrated into everything you can imagine. Then sit back and watch it evolve before your eyes.

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