What’s the future of electronics? Grzegorz Janczyk, PhD, Eng: The future is promising (there is no alternative), and challenging (the development touches the limits of knowledge) but as always the devil is in the details like economy, politics, ambitions, priorities… It’s more than likely that social demand for gadgets will be effectively stimulated in order to sell piles of unnecessary garbage and e-waste.

Grzegorz Janczyk, PhD, Eng: The future is promising (there is no alternative), and challenging (the development touches the limits of knowledge) but as always the devil is in the details like economy, politics, ambitions, priorities… It’s more than likely that social demand for gadgets will be effectively stimulated in order to sell piles of unnecessary garbage and e-waste.

Chat GPT: It is difficult to predict the exact future of electronics, as it is constantly evolving and being shaped by advances in technology, changing consumer needs and preferences, and a variety of other factors. However, some trends that are likely to continue to shape the future of electronics include miniaturization; electronics are continuing to become smaller and more portable, with a focus on devices that are lightweight, slim, and easy to carry.

Grzegorz Janczyk: The most important issue is the power supply and the case of battery. Powerful consumer mobile electronics face functionality shortages emerging from battery limits. On the one hand, old-fashioned mobiles operated for weeks without charging, on the other –  cutting-edge mobiles are out of power after as little as a few hours of activity. Technology compromise is somewhere in the middle. Another pole is professional / research / industrial electronics with justified demand for computational power, endurance, environmental hardness, etc. 

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Published On: 5 January 2023, 10:43|Categories: Aktualności, Grupy Badawcze, Projektowanie Układów Scalonych i Systemów|Tags: , , , |