Jeeves wrote:I'll start.
PC components become much, more expensive toward the end of the decade and competition is reduced as hardware manufacturers slowly begin to pull out of plug-in component manufacture, and focus on supplying tablet/console OEM's with components for solder; thus Custom Pc building begins a steep decline in popularity.
You may be right on this one. We can already see intell delivering soldered CPUs and this process is unlikely to stop here. Lets face it: Having to upgrade our pcs every month to play the latest games has been reduced to once every year, or even less. The market for components is shrinking, manufacturers will no longer be able to make a profit for this shrinking market. Premade pcs are the future, simply because of that. Just like we saw the end of individual radio components (one tuner, one casettedeck, one radiodeck, one recordplayer all turned into one not too long ago).
Besides computers will be more powerfull because compontents dont have to be randomly pairable anymore.
The reason Apples are so popular for their *stabilty* and *speed*, is largely due to the fact the os doesnt have to support the millions of devices windows has to.
Jeeves wrote:'Mouse and Keyboard' becomes obsolete in the home by 2020, becoming the preference of only the remainder of the pc fps crowd.
Not too sure about the keyboard (cant imagine a better input method; speech isnt as multifunctional or as fast and tochscreen/boards are just meh inho), but i can see better devices than mouses usin Kinect-like setups. Much better for RSI protection anyway.
Jeeves wrote:End of the decade doesn't quite precede: the failure of valves 'piston' and other micro-pcs with open hardware/software due to: poor user uptake, the freefalling prices of consoles and the aforementioned component sector consolidation.
I do think valves shitty idea of pcs is likely to fail, simply because it has little advantages over ordinary consoles (try replacing stuff in such a micro-pc), however the future of the pc IS what you currently see as the micro-pc. Without modularity the pc can be much smaller, simple as that.
Jeeves wrote:PS3 and Xbox resume support of Linux and thus Steam OS, enabling new games to be released on the 'consoles', which are now basically the hardware locked pcs that we had in the late 80's( amiga 500s etc) .
This depends on soo many factors i cant even make an educated guess on this
