Sensitive
Nanomaterials and techniques could also enable future mobiles to be more sensitive to their environment - by being able to sniff out pollutants or chemical traces in the user's environment. For instance, Nokia's Morph concept shows the user scanning an apple to check it's clean enough to eat.
Nokia also reckons nanoengineering will enable additional properties in future mobiles, such as the ability for devices to be self-cleaning and also able to power themselves by harnessing solar energy.
More photo stories: Has the Zune HD got what it takes on Apple's iPod Touch?
Another sense-friendly device is this Ericsson concept pictured above: one of three future mobiles known as 'smart take aparts' that were designed in conjunction with students at Linköping University in Sweden last year as part of a project exploring mobile hardware in 2020. This concept is called the Harmonizer and one of its features is the ability to record and send scents (as seen below).
While sending smells may seem bizarre enough - despite the Japanese aroma-phone - the same part of the device doubles up as the scent transmitter, worn on the nose of the person receiving the scent.
Click here to watch a video of the Harmonizer in action.
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Photo credit (top): Ericsson; (above): Linköping University/Ericsson








Comments
There are 4 comments. Join the discussion
1. anonymous
I think some of the people in Design have way too much time on their hands.
I haven't seen such a complete waste of time since the bizzare Octopus Router from Talk Talk a few weeks back.
The people at Nokia, Ericsson, Motorola should maybe be contemplating why as the market leaders they flushed their businesses down the toilet and let Apple with the iPhone steal all the glory, and what they can do to recover ground.
What people want...
- 3G phone
- Decent 3G coverage
- Lasts a week on a charge
- Full VGA Touchscreen that does not scratch or get grubby
- Does video and Music
- Has 32-64Gb flash memory
- Has built in SatNav
- Does internet
- Does Apps
- WiFi/Bluetooth
- Costs <£250 (people genuinely don't mind paying for a phone, as long as they don;t get ripped of on monthly subs too).
- Monthly Unlimited Voice/Data/Text/Wifi plan for < £25
Apart from battery life and O2's shoddy 3G network and high subs, Apple are pretty much there.
2. Richard Arblaster
I think anonymous isn't seeing the bigger picture, we all know we want those things.
However we want our mobile devices to be increasingly environmentally friendly, we want to have our mobile devices take up less room in our pockets, bags etc..
We want our devices to consume less power.
Some of us want our mobile devices to look trendy and modern, not stuck with lugging a brick around.
I'm really looking forward to these designs hitting in the market in some form in the future.
3. anonymous
Put it all on one page, you idiots.
4. Richard
Totally not what you want from a mobile not always.
Don't forget that mobiles are becoming miniature computers, something I doubt you could deny is best loaded with tech.
While some of them are flashy and frivolous, such as ericssons offering, Nokia (although entirely wishful) design is jawdropping.
And MIT's offering is amazing, imagining the applications for it.
the reasons it's presented as a mobile is obvious, it's one of the most commonly carried and accessed pieces of equipment which would benefit, but there's nothing to stop it's use in other fields, such as AR, or limit a phone to doing only that which you expect of a phone.