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The Ten Businesses The Smartphone Has Destroyed
Global smartphone sales rose by nearly 100% in the third quarter of 2010 compared with the same period last year.
The power of the smartphone as the primary device used for news, entertainment, and communication will only increase. New 4G networks will allow subscribers to connect to the internet with handsets which will download data at speeds similar to those supplied by a home cable modem. Smartphone processors become more powerful each year and the devices get more storage capacity
This is 24/7 Wall St.’s list of the devices that the smartphone has begun to replace, and in some cases, that process is so far along that the older products have almost disappeared.
1. PDAs
Personal digital assistants, the device that transformed personal organization in the 1990’s, are almost obsolete.
2. Flip Video Cameras
Cisco Systems’s line of Flip video cameras has been modestly popular over the past few years, bringing in about $75 million between February and May 2010, according to Cisco
3. MP3 Players
Companies that make MP3 players have sold fewer and fewer units ever since smartphones began to provide the service
4. Digital Cameras
As handset phone cameras improve in quality, the demand for separate, low-end digital cameras may begin to decrease. Many phones already have 5-megapixel camera capabilities.
5. Handheld Video Games
For 2010, factory unit shipments of game-capable mobile phones are expected to reach 1.27 billion, according to iSuppli. This will be an increase of 11.4% from the year before
6. GPS
The increase in smartphones with GPS capabilities poses a huge threat to standalone GPS devices.
7. PCs
There are plenty of studies which insist that smartphones will begin to replace the PC as the common vehicle for accessing the Internet.
8. Regular Cell Phones
Just as smartphones are making other single-function devices more and more obsolete, they are pushing regular, “featureless” cell phones out of the competitive marketplace.
9. Watches
As more people have become equipped with mobile phones, fewer people have found a need to wear wrist watches.
10. Remote Controls
Although it is hard to imagine there being a successful replacement for the television remote, smartphones are beginning to do just that.
Global smartphone sales rose by nearly 100% in the third quarter of 2010 compared with the same period last year.
The power of the smartphone as the primary device used for news, entertainment, and communication will only increase. New 4G networks will allow subscribers to connect to the internet with handsets which will download data at speeds similar to those supplied by a home cable modem. Smartphone processors become more powerful each year and the devices get more storage capacity
This is 24/7 Wall St.’s list of the devices that the smartphone has begun to replace, and in some cases, that process is so far along that the older products have almost disappeared.
1. PDAs
Personal digital assistants, the device that transformed personal organization in the 1990’s, are almost obsolete.
2. Flip Video Cameras
Cisco Systems’s line of Flip video cameras has been modestly popular over the past few years, bringing in about $75 million between February and May 2010, according to Cisco
3. MP3 Players
Companies that make MP3 players have sold fewer and fewer units ever since smartphones began to provide the service
4. Digital Cameras
As handset phone cameras improve in quality, the demand for separate, low-end digital cameras may begin to decrease. Many phones already have 5-megapixel camera capabilities.
5. Handheld Video Games
For 2010, factory unit shipments of game-capable mobile phones are expected to reach 1.27 billion, according to iSuppli. This will be an increase of 11.4% from the year before
6. GPS
The increase in smartphones with GPS capabilities poses a huge threat to standalone GPS devices.
7. PCs
There are plenty of studies which insist that smartphones will begin to replace the PC as the common vehicle for accessing the Internet.
8. Regular Cell Phones
Just as smartphones are making other single-function devices more and more obsolete, they are pushing regular, “featureless” cell phones out of the competitive marketplace.
9. Watches
As more people have become equipped with mobile phones, fewer people have found a need to wear wrist watches.
10. Remote Controls
Although it is hard to imagine there being a successful replacement for the television remote, smartphones are beginning to do just that.