Smartphones are useful for ordering dinner on the go, checking traffic, taking a picture, and making actual phone calls. If you use it for anything more than that, it will warp your personality in a bad way.
In an unlimited potential world, it would be great to have a phone that was like an A0 sheet of paper folded into an A7 or A8 sheet. So you could "unfold" your phone several times to get a display ranging from a standard cell phone up to a meter across display. No more conference room TVs, someone will just unfold their phone and hang it up.
In a far more advanced world, I expect some kind of human-machine interface will crop up. The twist I expect is that I think they'll be genetically engineered, a la CRISPR. Rather than cutting people open and putting metal inside, they'll inject you with a virus or something that leverages your body's existing systems to make your body build that feature itself.
I.e. if you want that human - computer interlink, they give you a virus that causes your body to deposit iron inside your ears in the shape of an antenna and causes the growth of new nerve tissue to convert those into nerve signals to the brain and maybe a new part of the brain that can "decode" the new nerve signals.
We know that people will sacrifice power and medium-term convenience for portability and always on connections that work in the real world, so if we maximize those:
I am thinking of an Apple glass with AR holographic display that is hooked up to a controller you can keep in your pocket for when you can't use Siri as much closer to the ultimate interface. You want access to all the information, but at the same time have your hands free and the privacy required when you are out and about.
Eventually there will be a direct neural interface to your pocket terminal with POTS compatibility and you won't need either voice Siri on a hand based input.
I would love to be able to carry my phone anywhere, hook into an available monitor/keyboard/mouse "dock"/dongle/kiosk[1], ala the Motorola Atrix 2[2], and use it as a general purpose computer.
1. Assuming the skimming and other security vulnerabilities could be addressed.
I'm imagining something closer to Star Trek (though we're pretty close now)
The wristphone will replace the pocketphone as surely as the wristwatch replaced the pocketwatch, and for the same reasons.