[citation][nom]Niva[/nom]I'm not sure how/why your post is being up-rated. We live in a material world. Where supercomputers are concerned money is not an issue for these companies. If something existed that could be feasibly produced and perform as you've described it would've already been done. The technological and economical aspects of these challenges function in one world, the real world. On topic, phones will continue to duke it out in terms of performance just like PCs have since the mid 90s when benchmarking performance became important. Performance will continue to be important and better performance will cost more to put in your pocket than lower performing parts of the same generation hardware. We can never have enough peformance and this is where Qualcomm is just wrong. Until I can run a super-computer equivalent out of my pocket, have it capable of installing a windows virtual machine, run desktop monitor, keyboard and audio when docked (meaning: simply rested against a charge pad on my desk) I will not be satisfied. I'm waiting for the day they start plugging us into the matrix directly.[/citation]
If He/she is talking about in the future, then actually everything will level out and form factor won't be such a big deal. More specifically, in Quauntum Computing, All the rules change. Not even cost will have much of a factor. The only way it would is if the capitalist society that we live in, purposefully raise the costs of larger versions even tho the benefits are non-existant and they have no justification, which is a possibility, but he isn't wrong when he said Mobile phones would be as powerful as supercomputers in the future.... just, a fair ways away that's all.