A larger phone is nicer to sit down and use with both hands, and while that is a primary use case for many people, it isn’t for me. I want my phone to emphasize portability and one-handed use.
I think there’s a viable market niche for a small phone, bi but I wonder if small phone customers might be unprofitable for other reasons.
I double tap my home button and the screen shinks down to one handed use. I do whatever I need with one hand, double tap again, and we’re back to full size. Only bad thing about the big phone is you need a big pocket.
I wonder if we get adaptable phones that have interchangeable screens, projection based interface, AR glasses/contacts with a powerful microprocessor, or neurolink direct feed into our optic nerve first
A larger phone is nicer to sit down and use with both hands, and while that is a primary use case for many people, it isn’t for me. I want my phone to emphasize portability and one-handed use.
I think there’s a viable market niche for a small phone, bi but I wonder if small phone customers might be unprofitable for other reasons.
I double tap my home button and the screen shinks down to one handed use. I do whatever I need with one hand, double tap again, and we’re back to full size. Only bad thing about the big phone is you need a big pocket.
I wonder if we get adaptable phones that have interchangeable screens, projection based interface, AR glasses/contacts with a powerful microprocessor, or neurolink direct feed into our optic nerve first
We’ve had projection keyboards for years, and consumer AR products are coming out now.
I’m referring to a big change in cell phones in specific
For that matter we have AR glasses too.