all the time there are keyboards, there will be desks; if there are desks you'll have a mouse as the only thing against them is needing a bit of space. I think touch screens will be available on most displays, but i just dont see everyone ditching the mouse. there's nothing driving away from...
you say that low-end cameras have been killed, yet there are dozens of sub-£100 models still available and presumably sold. I dont think the point of performace is wrong, maybe over stated, on current experience. theres more to cameras than pixel count, i have 3 recent smartphones in the house...
first, "some" would break the premise of the article. main point though, millions of people will not have streaming films in 5 years time and millions more would still buy physical if if they did. remember how MP3 was going to wipe out CDs? people have been able to get services for streaming...
i think they've got all them wrong. the fax tells the tale of how "obsolete" technologies linger, i've still got a tape deck in my 2000 car and reports of the death of vinyl have greatly exaggerated. calling bluray and DVD as dead in 5 years make me wonder if the author knows anything about...