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The cell phone, and especially the smart phone has indeed changed everything. I think of my smart phone as my brain's spare drive. I have countless notes, and tons of contacts.
I remember the old days of ALL phone equipment, ALL of it was owned by Bell Telephone. The phone almost never broke, but if one had a problem stop my the Bell store, and they threw the old one in a bin, and handed you a new replacement, and walk out. All phone equipment was rented, and a long distance call was EXPENSIVE. I was dating a chick I really liked. She moved to TX and we called each other a lot. I had a long distance bill that was over 50 bucks for the month, and I broke up with her. My favorite author is Isaac Asimov. He wrote a short story about the far far future where everyone had a small computer with them that was connected to Multivac the giant single computer so any question could be answered. He described it as glowing letters. No full color, no movies, no video calls or high resolution photos much less a phone to call anywhere for free. We have outstripped Asimov's imagination. |
Having trouble with being knocked off the net (comcast cable), Cindy called the help line.
Help line girl led her though the usual plug/plus routines... But phreaked when Cindy said we didn't text. Wanted to know how we got on the net? Girl was shocked to learn no wifi, no smart phone...just a desktop. LOL! Yep, we're just analog old folks, trying to survive in a digital world. But at least we're not always walking into posts while staring at a small hand held screen. We do have a dumb track phone..only used when we're out & about. Probably wouldn't have bought it except no pay phones anywhere these days. $100 worth of minutes lasts us a year.. |
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Then you could read/post on PPOT while out and about.:) I pay $25 for 3 months service with data. |
For a couple of years in the late 90's I made money by switching carriers on my land line.
Sprint would offer me $200 to switch to them. 6 months later ATT would offer me $200 to switch back. I went through several carriers for a couple of years. And yes, the smart phone has changed our lives. Never before have we had the ability to quickly check for lowest product prices/available at any location, world wide. The internet/smart phone is the biggest inflation fighter and marketing device ever developed. I no longer have a computer, land line internet, or land line cable or satellite. My smart phone and tablet are my phone, internet, and TV. |
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My favorite author is Isaac Asimov. He wrote a short story about the far far future where everyone had a small computer with them that was connected to Multivac the giant single computer so any question could be answered. He described it as glowing letters. No full color, no movies, no video calls or high resolution photos much less a phone to call anywhere for free. We have outstripped Asimov's imagination.[/QUOTE] Pretty impressive. I don't think about it now, but I remember a few years back when smart watches popped up thinking about... https://commandwear.com/wp-content/u...cy-970x600.jpg |
Yep, had a cat scan at the hospital yesterday and when I got there, had to check in on my smartphone, plus more restaurants are having you scan a thing to get the menu.
We have not only caught up to Star Trek, but gone beyond http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1624041182.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1624041182.jpg |
Chester Gould was very proud of his 2-way wrist tv invention.
Me, I'd be hooking those big honkin' knobs on anything and everything around me to the point where it would probably end up in my pocket or in the trash. |
My wife and I had the "keep the land line" conversation five years ago.
At my age, having a land line somehow meant "better" in terms of availability after storms, 911 calls, etc. Nothing could be farther from the truth. The physical phone lines in my area are left completely unattended, trees leaning against them, etc. In a hurricane, the phone lines are doneski. We dropped all physical lines and have never had an issue...and won't unless the Cat 4 hits. My company is working with Verizon on some UAS projects (all cell phone capability/tower related, post disaster relief) and the engineers have all been very blunt, land lines will not be supported in a relatively few years. The apps on cell phones have changed everything. The key is putting it down. |
If 30 years ago someone were to tell you that you could look at porn on your phone 24/7 instead of a VCR you'd think they were crazy.
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I was really, really pissed when they got rid of popcorn. How in the world will we be able to set our clocks?
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There are some bargains out there....
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When I was dating my now wife in the mid 90’s I lived in Georgia and she in California with her parents. My phone bill was no joke, $300-$400 every month.
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The pre-paid card was so that you could use a pay phone to answer your pager. I had both. Unbelievable now to even think how much better AND WORSE life has become because of the mobile phone. |
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I think the cell phones have also changed smoking.
In the old days people would light a smoke if waiting or just bored. Now they have their phone to read/watch/text and distract them instead of fiddling with their hands & face. |
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