Life-altering tech

Published 7/14/08

My father is, finally, going to get broadband, and that got me thinking about life-altering technologies.

I don’t mean the major things like the printing press or the Internet — I’m thinking more of consumer-level stuff that, once you get it, you can’t imagine living without it.

Granted, these will differ from person to person, but the ones I’m thinking of seem to resonate with a lot of folks. Another common denominator: You don’t know that you want it until you have it. Then you feel like you’re fighting an uphill battle to convince other people what they’ve been missing.

I can think of four off-hand, but one is a bit iffy because it’s too big:

1. The mouse wheel. When they first debuted, I remember Gus Venditto, who worked with me at Internet World, classify the wheel mouse as one of the biggest tech innovations of the year. And I thought, “It’s just a neat addition to a mouse.” Boy, was I wrong. For a while I had to convince people that mice without wheels were worthless. Now, of course, you can’t buy one without one. (Many have side-to-side scrolling, too, but that’s aimed mostly at spreadsheet users.)

2. Broadband Internet. I was living in Maplewood, N.J., when the cable company called to try to sell me on broadband, which it was offering for the first time. I didn’t let the gal finish. “Yes!” I shouted. “When can you come?” But most people still used modems at home, and it took some convincing that broadband was about more than pictures loading faster. The important thing was that it was always on — no waiting to dial and handshake. I hope my father sees the light soon.

3. TiVo (and DVRs in general). If you don’t have one, you don’t understand how incredible a digital video recorder is. You just don’t. My brother tried to convince me that it was great, but I wasn’t a big videotaper anyway, so I didn’t believe him. Then I got it, and everything changed. Not just pausing a show, and not just fast-forwarding through commercials — a TiVo changes the way you watch television. It doesn’t matter nearly as much what time it is now. Your favorite shows are waiting for you. You never have to worry about not setting the VCR properly and losing the last five minutes of the game. Heck, you don’t have to worry about setting anything.

I wonder if Touch-Tone® phones were the same way when they came out. I remember when we got one, but I was young enough that it didn’t change my calling all that much. I suspect teenagers were a bit more excited.

And maybe Macs are the same way — maybe if I had one I would say, “Oh, sheesh! Now I get it!” Could be. (But it’s a bit expensive to find out; it’s not a $20 mouse or a $100 TiVo.)

Anyone else have any “personal life-changing tech” thoughts?

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The Fray


Vince says:

Being a photographer, I’d say, decent digital cameras are hugely life altering for me.

July 14th, 2008 at 10:52 AM

Andrew says:

Oh, shoot — that was the fourth I mentioned. Digital cameras. I don’t know if I’d count them simply because they’re such an obvious thing, but yes, I agree completely.

I can’t imagine having to A) wait for someone to develop my limited film, and B) pay for the film and that developing.

But I think that most people realized the advantages fairly quickly and didn’t have to be convinced.

July 14th, 2008 at 11:43 AM

gnomic says:

The reliable, small, high-quality cell phone. I can’t believe how much I use (hate) the thing, but now I’m not tied to a wall with a phone cord. I don’t even have home service anymore. Plus it comes with a bunch of gee-whiz features - internet, voice mail, voice dialing, MP3, camera, etc. - that I don’t even use.

I’d also mention small, cheap, data storage. I remember the 160K floppy disk shuffle. Now I have over a terabyte in pictuers, songs, and videos on my PC. All enabled by cheap disk storage.

July 14th, 2008 at 11:44 AM

greyrat says:

Two words: Online Banking. I know, I know, it’s not stricly speaking tech. We needed computers, broadband, etc, etc, first. But after all that came together, doesn’t everybody just queue up their payments one or two at a time as they come in instead of that old one or two night a month check writing orgy? And when’s the last time you actually wrote a paper check? And yes, don’t even get me started on regulary scheuled payments…

RE Digital cameras: I fear the end of quality photography in some ways. When I was using film and having to spend time in the dark processing, cropping and printing, I always spent a lot more time in the viewfinder composing and deciding if I even wanted to take that picture. Now it’s just point in the general direction, press the button, and fix it later in Photoshop.

July 14th, 2008 at 3:27 PM

tommy says:

I don’t watch TV so I can take or leave the tivo concept.

Online banking is the bee’s knees.

Digital Cameras, yes. But I also agree with greyrat: I don’t take as much time composing shots as I used to anymore because I’m not wasting film when I shoot - I can delete the crappy shots to conserve memory before I get home to download. I think the lack of that limitation naturally leads to the atrophy of some of the art in photography; it leaves much more to chance. What I really miss in my digital camera is the split circle manual focus tool. :-(

I also still don’t see us having beaten the resolution of 35mm Kodachrome 64 slide film, at least not in the consumer sector. OTOH you can’t buy Kodachrome 64 anymore can you? And who processes it? And what do you do with those slides anymore? Break out the projector?? Makes you think about whether you’d want to go back…

Mobile phones I cannot stand. I don’t want people to expect me to be reachable at all times. OTOH, they’re incredibly useful, and free you up in ways you take for granted as soon as you have one in your hand. I know a LOT of people who would be lost without their mobile phones, literally lost. That scares me a little.

What about GPS navigation systems?

Digital music players? I only ever break out a CD to rip it, and then put it away again… Who needs to deal with all that physical media? Cover art is the casualty there.

July 18th, 2008 at 12:31 AM

tommy says:

cheap data storage… like this:

http://picasaweb.google.com/tommynoble/GeekLaughs/photo#5224218794388729506

July 18th, 2008 at 12:37 AM

Andrew says:

GPS and digital music players are nice things, but neither is something I would say, “Oh my gosh, I can’t believe I waited so long to get this!”

That was the case with TiVo and high-speed Internet and digital cameras.

Remember, it’s not about “really great tech ideas.” It’s about the kinds of things that, now that you have them, you can’t imagine not having.

And by the way, if you want that split-circle focusing tool, change lenses. ;-)

July 18th, 2008 at 6:18 AM

tommy says:

it’s not in the lens, it’s in the prism; if it were in the lens, you’d see that split circle appear on all my old photos! I would need to change cameras.

July 18th, 2008 at 9:40 AM

Andrew says:

Oh yeah, yeah. You’re right. Look, I’m tired and sick.

July 18th, 2008 at 9:43 AM

Tech Historian says:

Steve Jobs has dramatically altered the tech world five times so far:

• Apple (company and the computers, especially the Apple II)
• Macintosh
• NeXT (which became Mac OS X and upon which the World Wide Web was created, see Tim Berners-Lee and his Nextcube)
• iPod
• iPhone (and iPod touch - first mainstream mobile Wi-Fi platform)

What’s next up Jobs’ sleeve?

July 21st, 2008 at 3:02 PM

lionemom says:

Life altering tech for me is definitely broadband internet access! I use the internet for looking up stuff every day, multiple times a day. Between tech issues at work and casual conversations where a fact comes into question, I am on a computer a lot of my waking hours and the instant access to the information is what I use it for the most. Well, that and if we go back to pen and paper I am screwed because my handwriting is almost entirely illegible.

I also vote for digital cameras. At one time I had like 10 rolls of film set to develop. They had built up over time during a rough spot financially and I ended up getting them all done at the same time and was extremely disappointed at the letdown. I had been wondering what was on some of them for so long that it was anti-climactic when I finally saw the pictures. I really really really want a digital SLR though. That is my dream….

Tommy - how funny that you mention digital music players when you have the largest vinyl collection of anyone I know personally! For me, it’s not just the cover art that suffers though. It’s the whole experience of putting on a record and listening to the whole thing - side 1 and then flipping to side 2. Looking at the cover art and lyrics while listening. I do the same thing with CDs. I have not totally bought into the download thing yet. I still go out and get CDs.

Oh, and you can still get slid film….. (sorry about the Amazon link Andrew, it was the first one there…)
http://www.amazon.com/Kodak-Kodachrome-64-Film-Daylight/dp/B0000520IT

July 23rd, 2008 at 4:00 PM

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