ISLAMABAD: Four tech visionaries are quietly steering the world away from smartphones. One iconic CEO isn’t ready to let go just yet. Behind the scenes, the battle for the future of devices is already unfolding. Elon Musk, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, and Sam Altman are signaling the end of the smartphone era. The vision: a world dominated by wearable tech, brain interfaces, and augmented reality. But Tim Cook and Apple aren’t ready to surrender the smartphone throne just yet.Elon Musk, through his company Neuralink, is pushing to make smartphones obsolete by creating brain-computer interfaces. These implants allow users to interact with technology using only their thoughts — no screens, no swipes, no physical input. So far, two human subjects have already received the implant, demonstrating the early feasibility of this concept.
Bill Gates is exploring a different direction, backing Chaotic Moon and its electronic tattoos. These nanosensor-packed tattoos are capable of collecting, sending, and receiving data. Their potential ranges from health monitoring to GPS tracking and communication, turning the human body into a tech platform.
Mark Zuckerberg, on the other hand, is focused on augmented reality glasses. He predicts these will replace smartphones as the primary computing device by 2030, with AR handling most of the digital tasks we rely on phones for today. The idea is simple: overlay the digital world directly onto your field of vision.
While others push for radical new interfaces, Tim Cook continues to believe in the enduring relevance of smartphones. Apple recently released the iPhone 16, which integrates advanced AI capabilities designed to enhance the overall user experience.
Cook sees smartphones as central to modern life — not something to discard, but something to continuously refine. His focus remains on quality and usability, positioning Apple to improve its devices incrementally while still incorporating future-forward technologies like AR and AI.
The question isn’t just what comes next — it’s whether society will adopt these bold new tools willingly, or prefer the familiar comfort of the smartphone for years to come.