Índice
    The future of our phones could mean smaller or infact larger handsets.
    Naturally the trend and expectation is for new technology to generally become smaller and lighter in weight but at the same time with more features packed in.

    We generally require and expect an all in one tool, much like a Swiss army knife that we can carry around easily, yet still have a multitude of use from.

    But if manufacturers are to add more newer features to our handsets there will be a point where it cannot all be squeezed into one small and neat gadget.

    Texting, for example is something that now is so common place that huge numbers of us use texting as our primary form of communication with our phones.
    Having said that, if the keypad on a handset is positioned in a less than desirable place, then it can infact make texting less practical for some and lead to discomfort in the hand for people who find themselves using texting as their chosen and favourite form of quick communication.

    Of course texting is only one of the many features now seen as standard on our phones, but if our phones become less practical to use, then it wont matter what our handsets can do if we cant use them comfortably.
    Our handsets have turned into mini computers with internet connections, quality video features and the ability to store and play music.
    We no longer just talk using our phones, we interact with them, we use them in business, for entertainment, their used in a way like never before, allowing us to receive up to the minute news and information, we even flirt using our phones.
    Were able to take full advantage of the technological advances that happen in leaps and bounds.
    It's fair to say that we are spoilt for choice now when its comes to finding our ideal phone.

    Finding a phone that does exactly what you need it to do is rarely a problem, the difficulties tend to be more a case of choosing from the wide array of constantly released new handsets.
    With technology speeding along and many of us doing our best to keep up with the latest in the Cellular/Mobile world, we find ourselves asking what may be next in the communications world.

    Can phones keep getting smaller and thinner, yet at the same time come packed with more and more features.
    Maybe the future will see us recplacing our traditional idea of our phones with something completely different altogether.

    The Cellular/Mobile world naturally faces the same problem as we do with our Desktops and Laptops, we can only go so small when it comes to what we can fit onto our computer processors before we have no other option but to take things to the next level.