With the arrival of a new year and a new decade all at once, tech predictions for 2020 are plentiful. While we won’t see flying cars or a robot helper in every home, there are plenty of predictions for what can come true over the next 365 days. Let us take a look at some practical and exciting tech predictions for the new year.

5G Rollouts

This one likely goes without saying and is probably the most obvious addition to this list of predictions. In the U.S., in particular, there is plenty of expectation that 2020 will see 5G rollouts increase exponentially. T-Mobile has already landed the first punch with a “nationwide” launch, but AT&T and Verizon expect major updates next year. AT&T is already on record as saying they expect the 5G device cycle to start in the new year.

Europe is also planning its own massive 5G rollout in 2020 with every major city expected to be covered by year’s end. That is a lofty prediction but one Europeans would gladly welcome. China hopes to hit 300 cities by the end of 2020, and the rest of Asia is on its way to solidifying 5G news. In other words, 5G rollouts are less of a tech prediction and more of a virtual certainty by the beginning of 2021.

Instagram Becomes the New Shopping Network

Instagram has already proven itself as a place customers will window shop and potentially buy. Everyone from popular retailers to influencers are taking advantage of Instagram’s “Checkout” feature launched early in 2019. Expect to see a full-court press by Instagram (and Facebook) to have customers shop on Instagram without having to leave the app. Adding an augmented reality feature to “try on” clothing, glasses, etc., in recent months only serves to further validate the company’s efforts. Rest assured that in 2020 Instagram will go big in the world of e-commerce and not yield any ground to the competition.

Privacy Finally Wins

There is little question this one might be a bit of a longshot, but it is a tech prediction we need to come true. Hopefully, 2020 will see a fundamental shift by tech companies to tout privacy as a feature and not an afterthought. Apple, for example, already does this during its keynote announcements, but in 2020 we want to see this become the global standard.

The hope is for tech companies and other industries to look at privacy as part of their approach to customer relationships. Consumers are all but begging for privacy, and in 2019 it was at the forefront of far too many conversations in the tech sphere. We all know privacy winning out should have happened years ago, but better late than never.

Voice Assistants Move to the Car

The Streaming Wars

Cloud Gaming Continues to Struggle

Cloud gaming has a lot of promise, and if done right, gamers may gravitate to new avenues to play their favorites. If the launch of Google Stadia taught us anything, it’s that the cloud is not quite ready for gaming. There was plenty of reason to suspect that if any company could do cloud gaming right, it was Google. Unfortunately, gamer reaction has been tepid at best, and the platform is struggling to gain new users.

Conclusion

David is a freelance tech writer with over 15 years of experience in the tech industry. He loves all things Nintendo.

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