Extinction by smartphone?

How did we ever cope before smartphones came along? They have become such a crucial part of life that they are making other things obsolete.

Published by Boc Ly on May 29, 2012

It’s difficult to imagine our lives without smartphones. A low battery alert on my Nokia Lumia 800 is enough to get me in a state of panic.

While we have become inseparable from our phones, the phones themselves have been responsible, at least in part, for replacing things that were also once considered essential.

So, here, in no particularly order, are things from my childhood that are now (largely) redundant because of smartphones and the communications revolution.

Encyclopaedias

As a child, it was incredible that so much of the world’s knowledge could be stored on a couple of dozen books. Now, we take it for granted that all the world’s knowledge is easily accessible in the palm of your hand.

A full set of encyclopaedias could take up a whole bookcase, they were not cheap and were often sold on a subscription basis, volume by volume.

How many families started their collection full of good intentions, but then stopped after a few volumes as the cost-to-usage ratio became exorbitant?

Pen pals

In my early teens I had a pen pal in the USA called Marilyn. We didn’t have much in common other than we both enjoyed receiving letters from the other side of the world. 

I imagined that she lived an impossibly glamorous life because a) she lived in the USA and b) she was called Marilyn.

It’s not just the physical act of writing a letter with a pen on paper that has been lost. The concept of fostering a friendship with one person in a foreign land has been superseded by the ability to simultaneously connect with millions of people all over the world.

Calculators

The calculator was once a staple of every pupil’s schoolbag.

For most kids now, a calculator is just a basic function on their phone and not a particularly exciting one at that.

Sadly, the art of inputting a series of numbers and creating a ‘funny’ word when you turn the display upside down has been lost forever.

Cassette tapes

Anyone born after the mid-90s will probably not even know what a cassette tape looks like, or used one. It was how we used to listen to music. One tape was typically 60 or 90 minutes long.

A choice needed to be made before embarking upon every long trip: Which cassettes do I take with me? How many tapes should I take?

Rest assured that you would pine for the tapes that you had left behind.

Atlases and Maps

This should be self-evident to anyone who has ever used Nokia Maps or Nokia Drive.

Men are famously reluctant to ask a stranger for directions when they are lost. Now, the only thing they need to be worried about is the battery draining on their smartphone.

Plus, you don’t need to fold it away afterwards.

Address books

The ability to store hundreds of phone numbers in your phone has been profound.

Who can actually recall any phone numbers anymore? Who actually knows their own phone number?

Public phone boxes

Public phone box

A rather obvious choice perhaps, and phone boxes do still exist but they are no longer the lifeline that they used to be.

Phone boxes were inherently seedy places. One would often be making a perfectly innocent phone call while face-to-face with business cards featuring pictures of semi-naked women.

It is a measure of the smart phone’s triumph that they have not only beaten phone boxes to the verge of extinction but for many people fixed phone lines in the house are also obsolete.

Postcards

This is not strictly true but it seems to me that their function has changed.

Postcards are traditionally bought on holiday so that you could send them to friends and family. Often, you would arrive home before the postcards had been received.

Now, you can immediately post photos and updates of your trip on social media, and you buy postcards for yourself as a holiday keepsake.

Cameras

No doubt there is still a market for stand-alone cameras and high-end equipment. But the camera phone has been nothing short of revolutionary.

Anyone, anywhere can take a photo and then share it with the entire world in a matter of seconds.

Polaroids used to take instant photos. Now, our phones do.

The desktop computer

Too soon? Possibly. But I wouldn’t swap my Nokia Lumia 800 for the Commodore 64…

This is not a definitive list by any means. What else do you think has been pushed to the brink of extinction by the smartphone? Is there anything you miss?

image creditandrewmalone and RachelH_

Comments

  • disqusthatqus

    I miss video calling app on my N8

    • Andy Hards

       why cant you still use it? I keep my N8 around as it has a much better camera than my current phone and when wifi s available the kids use it for iplayer and youtube.

    • epdm2be

      I miss automatic call recording on my Lumia 800… wanna trade?

  • http://conversations.nokia.com/ Heidi Lemmetyinen

    I recently got rid of my books & bookshelf. It was a painful decision, but I couldn’t justify dragging hundreds of books from one flat to another, considering that I read everything from Kindle. Thanks to Nokia Music & Spotify, I had already chucked out my cd’s years ago. Not to mention the DVD player…

    Do kids today even know what a typewriter is? Or what it’s like to record mix tapes to someone you love? I feel ancient…

    • http://conversations.nokia.com/ Adam Fraser

      I used to make mix tapes when I was younger. I suppose kids nowadays will just share a playlist via a social site.

      Not quite as romantic and thoughtful, though, is it?

  • http://twitter.com/Hdrules Hradayesh Nimavat

    Gaming consoles will be extinct too in next 5 years 

  • http://twitter.com/thehotiron Mike Maddaloni

    This post is not really about smartphones, rather than the evolution of technology.  Let me give the example of a recent conversation with a friend…

    My friend and I were talking about how schools were more and more using computers in the lower grades.  She said in her daughter’s elementary school the teacher will bring in a box with iPod Touch devices and distribute during class.  I started laughing out loud, as I recalled when I was in junior high school – in the late 1970′s – when the teacher would come into class with a box of basic function calculators and distribute them for class!

    The same principle is there, just more evolved technology.

    mp/m

  • Erkki Ruohtula

    Public phone boxes did not disappear because of smartphones, but because of mobile phones in general. In fact, the existence of affordable low-end phones is more to blame: because of them, everybody now has some kind of mobile phone in his or her pocket or handback.

  • mumbajumba

    someday our natural resources will run out. and I wonder how are we going to charge our phones if we don not have enough fuel to burn?

    • http://conversations.nokia.com Ian Delaney

      I’m sure you may be right. However, smartphones replace a whole bunch of other devices you might have otherwise had to keep charging.

  • Sanjay_Sharma

    I wrote earlier on engadged that we should stop calling these devices smartphones, they are not phones. We should call them, may be, something like – MFSD’s (Multi-fuction Smart Devices), because they have so many things rolled into one. They have - phone for sure, calculator, diaries, books, dictionaries, compass, torch, FM radio, camera, credit/debit card, business card, walkman, music player, hand-held gaming devices, navigators, calendars, watch, (pen,pencil, eraser), typewriter, and secretary (ok, not the last one).

    • http://conversations.nokia.com/ Heidi Lemmetyinen

      We at Nokia used to call them multimedia computers (back in 2005)! Converged devices and mobile computers are some other terms that I’ve had to work with… To be perfectly honest I used to hate all of those names! Smartphone might not be the perfect name for today’s gadgets, but at least it’s simple and everyone knows what it means.

    • http://twitter.com/Hdrules Hradayesh Nimavat

      Former Nokia ceo used to call Nokia Meamo running phones mobile computers

  • epdm2be

    “But I wouldn’t swap my Nokia Lumia 800 for the Commodore 64…”
    Actually not for a C64 but I definitly would swap it for an N9

  • Samarth Singh

    The Wrist Watch guys. Its nowhere to be seen nowadays.

    • Samarth Singh

      And the MP3 players are gone too… LOL, those days when we used to run after mp3 players…

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/N3ISVHEOFERQTRU4A7TWXVENJE Jinx

    Though I love my phone, I only have it for calls, texting and the e-reader. $200 for a Kindle Fire because I’m unhappy w/ Nook’s lack of good free books was a bit much. But a free phone upgrade? Woo! I’m all for that! XD

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