If smart phones disapeared how would you cope?

I would cope fine as I don't have one, they're smarter than me for a start, but I know most people do have them and use them all the time.

How would you do your banking and benefits, could you cope with having to talk to an actual person?

What about if the internet got blasted back 15 years and there was no AI, an internet that was smaller but in many ways friendlier and easier to use. If there were only texts and phone calls and no real social media? No streaming either, you either watched something live or recorded it!

I think I'd be happier and find things easier as I've never really got to grips with technology, I found things hard enough 15 years ago, now many things seem impossible.

Parents
  • I think I'm one of about 6% of people who don't own a smart phone, my Mum dosen't either. I wonder how many people who do have smart phones actually know how to use them though? I've seen lots of confused people in carparks not knowing how to use a parking app, or how to download one, especially when you end up on an Irish network instead of a British one. I've seen people so fed up with app based parking that they turn round and go somewhere else, that must lead to a fair bit of lost business?

    I still use a map, I prefer a map to a sat nav, sat navs are still a bit useless round here out in the boonies, post code area can be quite big and the sat navs can't cope, many can't cope with house names with no numbers, some of our little lanes are unnamed too. Not that I really go anywhere that requires a sat nav.

    I did try and use the NHS app thingy, but the link didn't work, so I still use the phone and go and drop off repeat prescription forms in person. I have to be careful with the automated check in thingy in the surgery as once I crashed it and it hadn't registered that I was there and I waited about an hour before realising the doctor wasn't running late.

    Obviously now things are so integrated that many things wouldn't work with out all the tech, but I do wonder how people would cope?

Reply
  • I think I'm one of about 6% of people who don't own a smart phone, my Mum dosen't either. I wonder how many people who do have smart phones actually know how to use them though? I've seen lots of confused people in carparks not knowing how to use a parking app, or how to download one, especially when you end up on an Irish network instead of a British one. I've seen people so fed up with app based parking that they turn round and go somewhere else, that must lead to a fair bit of lost business?

    I still use a map, I prefer a map to a sat nav, sat navs are still a bit useless round here out in the boonies, post code area can be quite big and the sat navs can't cope, many can't cope with house names with no numbers, some of our little lanes are unnamed too. Not that I really go anywhere that requires a sat nav.

    I did try and use the NHS app thingy, but the link didn't work, so I still use the phone and go and drop off repeat prescription forms in person. I have to be careful with the automated check in thingy in the surgery as once I crashed it and it hadn't registered that I was there and I waited about an hour before realising the doctor wasn't running late.

    Obviously now things are so integrated that many things wouldn't work with out all the tech, but I do wonder how people would cope?

Children
  • I still use a map, I prefer a map to a sat nav

    It is illegal as a drive to be holding a map while driving or even waiting at traffic lights now (even eating an apple while driving has been made illegal) so you woud have to park up in order to be able to do this.

    With sat nav and voice activation you can change the destintation etc much more safely while on the go.

    post code area can be quite big and the sat navs can't cope

    I've never had this issue before. You normally enter an address (eg 151 High Street, Cardiff) and it will literally take you to the door or show you parking failities nearby if you ask. If the house has a name then so long as it is in the Postal Address FIle with the Post Office then it will show when you enter the house name and postcode.

    Even if that doesn't work in extreme situations then the map will not show you to any greater detail either, so it is of no more help than the satnav. In the sat nav you can at least zoom into the map, identify the shape of the building you think it is and "stick a pin" in it and navigate to it directly and with some accuracy.

    On balance I would say maps are much worse as they are out of date as soon as they are printed, cannot adapt to changing traffic conditions and are not aware of things like road closures.

    I threw all my road maps out about 20 years ago as I they were less than helpful.