The miniaturisation of computers has helped humanity achieve technological prowess beyond what early generations could ever have imagined. From systems that were once the size of rooms we now carry in our pockets machines millions of times more powerful. While we might not expect further leaps on the same level, there’s no question that future tech will continue to shrink, and become more capable.
The question is, where is this tech going? In a world where mobile computing is increasingly important for work, communication, and entertainment, the need for transportable systems will only grow. What forms will they take, and what might users in Wales and the world expect from their improvements?
Everything Available Everywhere
To track what the future could bring with mobile computers, we should start with software and features that already achieved consistency across many devices. A standout example is demonstrated by the Paddy Power Games December £1 Million Prize Giveaway. While giveaways like this would once have been confined to just computers, now it’s equally available on mobiles and smartphones. This is because hardware power on smartphones today is more than enough to browse this website, enter the weekly draws, and play the slot games available. Available anywhere in the UK and Ireland with an internet connection, this illustrates exactly where mobile computing is aiming. Take an experience that used to be confined to desktop, and open it to all modern computing platforms.
In the future, the idea is that location and the size of what you carry shouldn’t affect what kind of systems you can access. The hardware we carry needs to keep improving, but so too does the software we can access. For reference, Adobe notes that even a now-outdated iPhone 12 is more than 5,000 faster than the old CRAY-2 supercomputer. Some software, like online casino games, are optimised so well that this power advantage is obvious, but a good deal of other software is not well optimised or is simply much more demanding.
Systems Making the Coming Generations Possible
Achieving complete parity of mobile computing across all devices starts with smaller processing nodes. As reported by the team over at MCCFTech, Taiwan is currently leading the charge as semiconductor production finally enters the single nanometre range. This means more processing power in a smaller package, and thus more powerful mobile computers.
The other side of the equation comes from cloud computing services. Instead of running natively on a computer or a phone, the programs in cloud services are hosted on large computer networks far away. Through high-speed internet, users can then effectively stream near real-time access to far less powerful systems. This technology is already here, and with improved 5G support pushing through Wales, it’s only going to improve.
With the technology backing the processing requirements of mobile computing already here or on its way, the final component we have yet to solve relates to input. We can make computers or computer access devices increasingly small, but how can we transfer more effective methods of control? It’s a challenge many developers have to ponder carefully, trying to somehow miniaturise the efficient keyboard/mouse setup into the best format possible. We may not yet know how we’ll get there, but we’ve come too far to turn back now.
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