Have you seen this visual essay from one of our ActiveMobile teams? Download the PDF here. By Alec Babala, Kyle DeHovitz, Sam Jau, and Amrit Mazumder.
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Have you seen this visual essay from one of our ActiveMobile teams? Download the PDF here. By Alec Babala, Kyle DeHovitz, Sam Jau, and Amrit Mazumder.
Mobile phones are the computers of tomorrow.
I believe that mobile phones are the computers of tomorrow. One day, the MP3 player, the tablet, the laptop and the mobile phone will be one single object but fulfill all the functions of the different items with the same physical attributes. This would be made possible through the versatility of the mobile's physical design: screens would evolve into holographic screens which would be adjustable to be the size of our palm or the size of a television.
The final video from one of the two RISD ActiveMobile groups consisting of Daniel Giuditta, Tommy Park, Michelle Wainer, Elizabeth Goodspeed, and Elio Icaza. The group pitches an idea for an application that helps to cull and sort all the content and media being created in our lives.
ActiveMobile Meeting Tonight!
Friday, February 15 7:30pm Location: Most likely Carr Haus
Links from the ActiveMobile Group
On the ubiquity of mobile in the developing word Sorry, America: Your wireless airwaves are full "$20 tablet Aakash was hashed out in India. Technology in the developing world can put another 3 billion people into the digital world. That's double the number of people already on Facebook. Something to think about when thinking mobile..." Intel Insights Gazing into the Future of Mobile Fabian Hemmert: The shape-shifting future of the mobile phone Iqbal Quadir says mobiles fight poverty
Hi, TED! Waving from the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence, RI.
@tedactive Meeting! vine.co/v/bnMv07BBrnQ
— Carly Ayres (@carlyayres) February 6, 2013