- Nov 20, 2005
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For a couple of years there, from say 2009-2013, mobile devices were pretty exciting. Each new generation was a major leap from the past ones, and phones were improving in ways that were easily understandable to users (dual core vs one, 720p screen vs 1080p, LTE vs not, etc.). Plus we got new exciting form factors (10 inch tablets, 5 inch phones, phablets, etc.) that kept the market going at a brisk pace.
Then in the last two years it seems mobile has stopped being so exciting. Phone form factors (and IMHO usable performance) kinda plateaued around the LG G2. Instead of cool new features flagships have stayed similar but are built with (fragile) "premium" materials. The price of a quality smartphone dropped which is a good thing, but with that went away a lot of the differentiation of the Android market (things like a Galaxy Camera) as everyone tries to fight for the same piece of the pie. Meanwhile iPhones grew and began to look more and more like Android phones (replaceable keyboards, widgets, etc.). The early days when there were many flagship phone PLATFORMS, let alone OEMs, with different concepts on how mobile should work are all gone. Two remain, and they look more like each other every day.
We have had innovation OUTSIDE of the core phone experience since 2013- VR, wearables, etc.- but most of this is hype towards a future when a killer app is made for each platform instead of the current practical day-to-day use. Actual innovation on mobile has slowed and when it does come the benefit to the ordinary user is questionable (like Force Touch, dual cameras, etc.). Real "must-have-it" innovation probably stopped with the fingerprint reader in the 5s or the waterproofing of the Galaxy S4 Active, and since then there isn't much to really force an upgrade.
Anyone else just not as excited about mobile technology anymore or is it just me?
I am in the market for a phone this year and I am not that excited about the process- it will be which comprise I can live with the easiest (unless we get a Nexus 5P which I doubt). Made me reminisce about how excited I was to get the 3GS, the Galaxy S4 or even my Nexus 7.
Then in the last two years it seems mobile has stopped being so exciting. Phone form factors (and IMHO usable performance) kinda plateaued around the LG G2. Instead of cool new features flagships have stayed similar but are built with (fragile) "premium" materials. The price of a quality smartphone dropped which is a good thing, but with that went away a lot of the differentiation of the Android market (things like a Galaxy Camera) as everyone tries to fight for the same piece of the pie. Meanwhile iPhones grew and began to look more and more like Android phones (replaceable keyboards, widgets, etc.). The early days when there were many flagship phone PLATFORMS, let alone OEMs, with different concepts on how mobile should work are all gone. Two remain, and they look more like each other every day.
We have had innovation OUTSIDE of the core phone experience since 2013- VR, wearables, etc.- but most of this is hype towards a future when a killer app is made for each platform instead of the current practical day-to-day use. Actual innovation on mobile has slowed and when it does come the benefit to the ordinary user is questionable (like Force Touch, dual cameras, etc.). Real "must-have-it" innovation probably stopped with the fingerprint reader in the 5s or the waterproofing of the Galaxy S4 Active, and since then there isn't much to really force an upgrade.
Anyone else just not as excited about mobile technology anymore or is it just me?
I am in the market for a phone this year and I am not that excited about the process- it will be which comprise I can live with the easiest (unless we get a Nexus 5P which I doubt). Made me reminisce about how excited I was to get the 3GS, the Galaxy S4 or even my Nexus 7.