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The Anti-Smartphone Revolution

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Manage episode 154271805 series 1118431
Contenido proporcionado por CodyWillard. Todo el contenido del podcast, incluidos episodios, gráficos y descripciones de podcast, lo carga y proporciona directamente CodyWillard o su socio de plataforma de podcast. Si cree que alguien está utilizando su trabajo protegido por derechos de autor sin su permiso, puede seguir el proceso descrito aquí https://es.player.fm/legal.
The Smart Phone Revolution is dead. Long live the Smart Phone Revolution. There's a rising backlash against the smartphone dominant culture we find ourselves living in these days and that backlash is finally catching steam. I read an article today called "We've reached peak smartphone" and it captures some of the smartphone angst that's growing every day right now, including this quote: "Smartphones are in a ridiculously boring place." Are they? Or does such a statement say more about the author than the state of smartphones. I don't find my smartphone boring when I'm getting the latest real-time commentary about the stock market from people I respect on Scutify or when I open the Marketwatch app to read the articles they're featuring. I don't think it's boring when I check my stock portfolios on my brokers' apps on my smartphone. In fact, I prefer to use the apps over their websites even when I'm in front of my computer these days. When I read headlines, answer emails, talk on the phone, update my social media, post pictures, text and message friends and so on, I'm pretty sure none of that is ridiculously boring. Moreover, it's not like we've seen the end of innovation in smartphones. Smartphones are going to become ever more interactive with our voices, our gestures and our actions. Siri still sucks right now, but in another five years with lots of artificial intelligence and other improvements, it and other voice interactions will actually be helpful. Motion sensors in smartphones will make it easier to navigate from one app to another without having to touch your screen. Wearables will also tie into smartphones and will enable both voice, motion and other interactions and features -- in another five years. You can't take the snapshot of smartphone technology in 2016 and think it will apply in 2020. Smartphones, and future versions of "smartphones" are going to be the dominant personal computing center for billions of people for the next couple decades. Smartphone fatigue is another factor that's impacting the way people think about the smartphone market right now. I'm sick of people looking at their smartphones, checking facebook, group messaging friends, reading emails, checking the news or otherwise not focusing on the real world going on around them. And I'm as bad as most other people about doing that too. We're all sick of smartphone-dominant culture, but we all do our part to create that smartphone-dominant culture anyway. Is that going to change?
  continue reading

125 episodios

Artwork
iconCompartir
 
Manage episode 154271805 series 1118431
Contenido proporcionado por CodyWillard. Todo el contenido del podcast, incluidos episodios, gráficos y descripciones de podcast, lo carga y proporciona directamente CodyWillard o su socio de plataforma de podcast. Si cree que alguien está utilizando su trabajo protegido por derechos de autor sin su permiso, puede seguir el proceso descrito aquí https://es.player.fm/legal.
The Smart Phone Revolution is dead. Long live the Smart Phone Revolution. There's a rising backlash against the smartphone dominant culture we find ourselves living in these days and that backlash is finally catching steam. I read an article today called "We've reached peak smartphone" and it captures some of the smartphone angst that's growing every day right now, including this quote: "Smartphones are in a ridiculously boring place." Are they? Or does such a statement say more about the author than the state of smartphones. I don't find my smartphone boring when I'm getting the latest real-time commentary about the stock market from people I respect on Scutify or when I open the Marketwatch app to read the articles they're featuring. I don't think it's boring when I check my stock portfolios on my brokers' apps on my smartphone. In fact, I prefer to use the apps over their websites even when I'm in front of my computer these days. When I read headlines, answer emails, talk on the phone, update my social media, post pictures, text and message friends and so on, I'm pretty sure none of that is ridiculously boring. Moreover, it's not like we've seen the end of innovation in smartphones. Smartphones are going to become ever more interactive with our voices, our gestures and our actions. Siri still sucks right now, but in another five years with lots of artificial intelligence and other improvements, it and other voice interactions will actually be helpful. Motion sensors in smartphones will make it easier to navigate from one app to another without having to touch your screen. Wearables will also tie into smartphones and will enable both voice, motion and other interactions and features -- in another five years. You can't take the snapshot of smartphone technology in 2016 and think it will apply in 2020. Smartphones, and future versions of "smartphones" are going to be the dominant personal computing center for billions of people for the next couple decades. Smartphone fatigue is another factor that's impacting the way people think about the smartphone market right now. I'm sick of people looking at their smartphones, checking facebook, group messaging friends, reading emails, checking the news or otherwise not focusing on the real world going on around them. And I'm as bad as most other people about doing that too. We're all sick of smartphone-dominant culture, but we all do our part to create that smartphone-dominant culture anyway. Is that going to change?
  continue reading

125 episodios

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