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    7 Gadgets That Won't Be Around in 2020

    NEW YORK (MainStreet) -- Hindsight may always be 20-20, but you don't need particularly great foresight to know many of the gadgets on today's market won't be around in 2020 given how quickly the tech industry keeps changing. In the first half of the 2000s, retailers were buzzing about the prospects of MP3 players and netbooks, but by the end of the decade, those products had largely been replaced by smartphones and tablets.

    As tempting as it may be to imagine otherwise, some of the gadgets you may rely on most right now will likely suffer the same fate and be killed off or made obsolete by the end of this decade. Sure, you may still be able to find these products for sale in certain niche stores, but they will no longer be produced for a mass-market audience.

    Many of the products you rely on most right now will likely be phased out by the end of the decade, starting with standalone GPS systems.

    "You can still find and buy VCRs and there are people still using mainframes from 1992, so it's not like this stuff disappears forever," says Stephen Baker, an industry analyst at the NPD Group. Baker notes that the main reason retailers continue to market and sell outdated products is to cater to shoppers who buy them for nostalgia's sake, but for all intents and purposes the market has left these products in the dust.

    So which popular products today will join the likes of VCRs, cassette players and transistor radios in the next few years? We asked five tech analysts to offer their thoughts on the gadgets that will largely be phased out by the end of this decade.

    Standalone GPS Systems
    The days of spending $200 or more on a standalone GPS device won't last much longer, analysts say.

    "Portable navigation devices like those sold by TomTom and Garmin will probably not be sold in 2020, just because mobile phones will have taken on that function themselves and because GPS systems will be standard equipment in cars," says Charles S. Golvin, an analyst at Forrester, a market research firm. As a result, there won't be much of a need to buy a product whose only function is to tell you directions.

    If there is a demand for these GPS systems, it will likely come from a very specific segment of consumers.

    "Maybe you could argue there will be a market for guys climbing Mount Everest or long-distance truckers or the military, but for the vast majority of consumers, standalone GPS systems will be irrelevant and redundant," Baker says.

    E-Readers
    The e-reader has already undergone significant changes in its short history, evolving from a product with a keyboard to one with a touchscreen and more recently being integrated into a kind of a tablet-hybrid, but according to Golvin, the market for e-readers will mostly disappear by the end of the decade.

    "The tablet will largely supplant the e-reader in the same way that the iPod increasingly gets displaced by smartphones," Golvin says. "Tablets will take on the e-reader function of handling magazine, newspaper and book reading." In essence, spending money on an e-reader that can only handle reading when tablets can do this and more will come to seem as useless as buying a GPS system that can only look up directions when other technology does this as well.

    Just how small the e-reader market becomes may depend somewhat on advancements in display technology. One of the biggest incentives for consumers to buy a pure e-reader is to have an e-ink display (like reading from a book) rather than a backlit display (like reading from a computer screen), but according to Golvin, manufacturers are already working on ways to merge the two reading experiences and create a tablet that doubles as an authentic e-reader.

    Even then, there may be still be some e-readers on the market at the beginning of next decade, but not many.

    "It could be that by 2020 you can still buy a super cheap e-reader for $20, but by and large, the volume of sales will be so close to zero as to be indistinguishable, like CD players are now," he says.

    Feature Phones
    Several of the products that are likely to be phased out will ultimately be the victim of advances to smartphones, and none more directly than feature phones.

    Tim Bajarin, a technology columnist and principle analyst with Creative Strategies, predicts that 80% of all phones sold in 2015 will be smartphones and every phone sold in 2018 will be a smartphone. This rapid decline will come about thanks to a drop in prices for consumers and an increase in revenue opportunities for carriers.

    "Even today, the money that is made is not on the phone itself but on the services," Bajarin says, noting that carriers will opt to "fade out" their feature phone option in favor of smartphones with more services.

    Low-End Digital Cameras
    When Apple unveiled the iPhone 4S last week, smartphone competitors probably weren't the only ones beginning to sweat. Digital camera makers also have much to be worried about. Apple's newest phone has a killer 8-megapixel camera that takes in more light and records video at 1080p HD video. Until recently, those kind of specs were unique to digital cameras, but increasingly smartphones are taking over the market.

    "Flip cameras went bye-bye and now low-end camera functions are being taken over by smartphones," says Rob Enderle, principle analyst for the Enderle Group. Going forward, consumers will have less incentive to carry around a camera when they already have a phone in their pocket that takes quality pictures. "The point-and-shooters -- and particularly the cameras that sell for under $200 -- will eventually go away and be replaced by cellphones that do the same thing."

    On the other hand, Enderle predicts more expensive and high-tech cameras may have a brighter future, though not by much, as a smaller market of photo enthusiasts seek out professional-quality cameras that go above and beyond what's offered on a phone.

    DVD Players
    DVD players are in the process of being phased out now by Blu-ray players and will likely be erased from the consumer landscape by the end of the decade.

    “The DVD player should be replaced by digital delivery,” says Ian Olgeirson, a senior analyst at SNL Kagan, who points to streaming movie services like Netflix as being the future. “Blu-rays and whatever the next generation high-end movie format emerges could prolong the lifespan because of challenges around streaming, but eventually the disc is going to be phased out.”

    The idea of placing a disc into a DVD player to watch a movie will eventually seem as outdated as placing a record on a turntable, which brings us to the next product on our list…

    Recordable CDs and DVDs
    Using CDs and DVDs to view and store content will soon be a thing of the past.

    "CDs are clearly not going to make it over the next 10 years because everything will shift over to pure digital distribution, so all those shiny discs will be gone," Bajarin says. This will be due in part to more streaming options for music and movies and a greater reliance on digital downloads, combined with more efficient storage options for consumers, including USB drives, external hard drives and of course the cloud.

    "All a CD is is a medium for distribution of content ... and within 10 years, you won't need a physical transport medium," Bajarin says.

    Video Game Consoles
    Popular video game systems such as the Wii, PlayStation and Xbox may still be in homes next decade, but they will look much different. Rather than buy a separate console, Enderle expects that consumers will instead buy smart televisions with a gaming system built into it, not to mention tablets and smartphones that will continue to ramp up their gaming options.

    “It looks like analog game systems won’t make it until the end of the decade,” Enderle says. “You are already seeing the Wii have a tough time holding on to the market and PlayStation has been struggling for a while.”

    The gaming systems that will succeed in the future will be those that manage to move away from being focused solely on video games and more on other entertainment options such as movies, evolving from a traditional game console into more of a set-top box.

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    190 comments

    • Aldrien  •  6 months ago
      I think this is true, my teacher told us after 10 years we are already for new technologies.
      • Aron 6 months ago
        almost everyday, there's a new technology. :p
      • Boost Er 6 months ago
        bobo` extrapolation ka pang nalalaman. exploitation kamo tanga`
      • King Ely III 6 months ago
        tanga k pala eh balik k nga ng grade 1
    • 101010  •  6 months ago
      Bakit Nokia N95 nasa pix? is this true? u mean pang oldies ang nokia? hehehe
      • Boost Er 6 months ago
        oo prang brief na butas
    • julius  •  6 months ago
      these are just predictions.yada,yada, yada. it can only be applied conveniently to the rich minorities who have deep pockets to buy the "next big thing" gadgets.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  6 months ago
      LCD is NOT the same as e-Ink, no matter how much Apple tries to tell you that their iPad is an eReader. eReaders will NOT be supplanted by tablets until the human eye is magically more comfortable reading backlit screens than naturally reflective paper-like e-ink. Oh wait, that'll never happen.
    • Bob  •  6 months ago
      how about karaoke vcd and dvd they don't play well with blue ray player...and pinoys love those karaoke machines...
      • Arison Ichi 6 months ago
        well pinoy's are oldies dude,,lets move on to the future,,dont cha wanna see flying houses and cars :p lets just pray we see it :}
    • Jhun Casareno  •  6 months ago
      Casette tape nga may gumagamit pa rin e DVD pa kaya, kalokohan to!
    • Takumi  •  6 months ago
      Nah...I don't think so! We humans like to reminisce and collect things from the past and use things from the past to bring us to that happy place once again. For the smartphone...The smart phone will never replace the digital camera what we would want for example is a super hightech gadget that specializes on a specific job not a gadget that does everything in a mediocre way.
    • Spartacus  •  6 months ago
      Ha???? Ako hanggang ngayon di ko pa napapasa ang GRADIUS....
    • PVC ID MAKING  •  6 months ago
      kailangan bumili na ng smartnet phone 701...
    • Blurry  •  6 months ago
      Reading the comments, looks like almost everyone still would like to hang on to their toys. :)
    • Arvyn  •  6 months ago
      12 mega pixel of nokia n8 means only the number of pixel or to be exact printable picture size.... but it may not have good quality or vivid pictures..Its not just about the pixel but the quality so if its 1080p Hd its far more better.
      • Nato 6 months ago
        Well... but it (the N8) does take good quality vivid pictures at 12 megapixels :D see a sample from someone who owns one. I think that's why in reviews that I've read, they say that the iPhone 4s may have the best camera in the '8 megapixel' class (amongst available phones of course). So it's not necessarily the best amongst all phone cameras ( which I guess is still subjective). Mind you I really like the iPhone, just being objective :D
      • Dan 6 months ago
        Nokia N8's camera quality @12 megapixel is the best among 12 megapixel camera phones to date, it was even rated higher in a blind test by users against 12MP Sony HX5v digital camera. On the other hand, most of the reviews by photo experts on iPhone 4S 8MP camera concluded that it is no match against Samsung Galaxy SII 8MP camera in most aspects (exposure quality, color accuracy & sharpness) and the same goes with video quality.
      • Randy 6 months ago
        very well said. pixel is not the whole thing. QUALITY. the author seems to be an apple fanboy saying competitors sweat at the 1080p...duh? other thing, 1080p HDs are useless if your player or PC is not high spec'd it will just be unwatchable.
    • wildhero2008  •  6 months ago
      surely that would likely to happen...one gadget with all the services you wanted and important functions in tranferring informations...so if you are wise consumer on electronic goods, buy those that offer at least 50% of common services we are doing today and replaced it on the next decade...dont be an enthusiast of these tools otherwise you'll be spending to much on its fast evolution, like some were working hard to buy the gadget which they felt they just like, but on the following month it's no longer top of the line...they end up wanting again.
    • AxeP  •  6 months ago
      exactly it will happen...
    • Ramar820  •  6 months ago
      We won't live to see these changes anyway if the mayan's prediction comes true in a little more than a year from now.
    • Miles  •  6 months ago
      back in the day...
    • ed  •  6 months ago
      Call Center Companies will be gone by 2020, Iphone 4s can answer all questions. This is base on facts right now companies are talking about bring that crap in a higher ground why pay for people when you can have a device to answer all your questions.
    • Silent Scorn  •  6 months ago
      I hope corrupt politicians will be vanished too by the year 2020.
    • Joyce Margs  •  6 months ago
      whatever any hightech inventions always believe in yourself first and that makes you a smarter person than anything else, gadgets???? its just only a kind of spice in our life.....
    • RRJ  •  6 months ago
      hindi ako naniniwala dito..yung GPS navigator sa cellphone matagal ng meron sa us..pero marami pa ring gumagamit ng stand alone GPS. at saka yung iphone walang sinabi yan sa image quality ng sonyericsson ko..yung sa akin mas maganda pa nga kesa sa ibang digicam..pero di pa rin napapalitan mga digicam ngayon..yung iba siguro na sinasabi dyan pwede. sa tingin ko nadooon na tayo sa sukdulan ng technology..may kaunting pagbabago na lang dyan.
    • Saint Jude  •  6 months ago
      i hope gays and lesbian will be phase out too.
      • John 6 months ago
        i wish people like you will be phased out instantly in the world!
      • B.A.C. 6 months ago
        At the phase gays and lesbians are multiplying and coming out, I think it's gonna be the other way around.
      • Gorio 6 months ago
        like
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