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In reply to the discussion: Life without a smart phone [View all]Dollface
(1,590 posts)It is a radio, an mp3 player, a library, a book, a book reader and a dictionary. I send it articles I find at work that I don't have time to read so I can read them later, perhaps waiting at the doctor's office for a parent, or standing in line at the DMV. It has games if I get tired of reading. I can access DU, the Nation and the New Yorker; McClatchy and Mother Jones and TED lectures. It is a GPS and a compass and a clock (alarm) and a calendar and a little tiny TV. It tells me movie times and restaurant specials and pharmacy hours. I can travel without my laptop and therefore don't have to deal with carrying or securing it. My family texts each other randomly about little things, funny things and things we don't want to forget to tell each other; things too small for a phone call. (We are a far flung family.)
Thinking about it now, I just realized how much of my life was spent waiting for people in random places. Welcome to the sandwich generation.