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Cellphones Canada Social Networks

Could You Live Without Your Smartphone? (theglobeandmail.com) 157

Three-quarters of Canadians own smartphones-- and 94% of 15- to 34-year-olds. But this week the Globe and Mail profiled "digital refuseniks" who are "deliberately logging off -- and they say it's done wonders for their imaginations and peace of mind." They are hidden among us, neither jobless nor friendless, and living quite happily. Cut off from Uber, yet somehow thriving. For example, Tony North does not live for his smartphone, because he's never had one. "I just didn't want to get into the habit of distraction," he says simply, in an interview conducted over landline from his home in Paris, Ontario. The high-school teacher spends about 20 minutes a day [on his laptop] on his one social-media platform, Facebook, which he uses to keep in touch with family back home in Australia. In fact, you could blame Australia for Mr. North's desire to be digitally unleashed: He remembers leaving home to travel overseas, and the wonderful feeling of being uncontactable that came with it. "It was such a feeling of freedom, and I guess I wanted to keep a bit of that."

As a teacher of English and drama, Mr. North, 53, is worried about the consequences of teenagers' near-constant devotion to their online lives (his own two children, 12 and 13 years old, do not have phones). In drama class, he makes his students put away their phones and engage in face-to-face exercises: "I'm basically forcing them to interact," he says. "When I ask for evaluations at the end of the semester, it's one of the things they most seem to appreciate...." Canadians between the ages of 18 and 34 spend nearly five hours a day online, according to a 2017 survey from Media Technology Monitor... "Have Smartphones Destroyed a Generation?" the Atlantic magazine asked last year in a cover story designed to keep parents up at night, frozen in the blue light of further bad news.

North says in the extra time "he reads many novels and enjoys quiet moments of reflection and watching the world go by." And 18-year-old Bethany March is also severely limiting her phone use. ''I saw the way that people got so invested, not just in their phones, but in social media, and I didn't want to be that person," she says. "So many times people would be zeroed in on their phones. It was just rude, to be honest. I'd think, 'I'm here with you, talk to me.'"

71-year-old John Moir insists that living without a smartphone makes him really experience new locations, "rather than trying to be in two places at once," adding that "Whenever I tell people I don't have a phone, they say, 'Oh, that's so great. I wish I didn't have to have one.'" That's "one thing digital refuseniks never have to worry about," the article concludes: "Who is the servant in their digital relationship, and who is the master."
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Could You Live Without Your Smartphone?

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  • Yes. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 29, 2018 @03:38PM (#57876182)

    No problem, EVERYONE can live without their smartphone. Next question.

    • We must be doing reasonably well that not being able to live has come to mean suffering minor discomforts.
    • Some people won't be able to find their way home, won't know who to call, and won't have any money without their phone.
    • Anyone who says that they can't live without their smartphone needs to seek medical attention immediately.

      • Can you live without a cell phone, then?

        Live as in survive? Yes ... obviously.

        But I for my part hated SMS ... super complicated to type something. My "smart phone" has like 6 messanging apps ... super easy. Ah, no ... I don't use my phone for phoning ... I don't phone.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      No problem, EVERYONE can live without their smartphone. Next question.

      This! I don't even use mine, and wouldn't be caught dead using it.

      Sent from my iPhone.

    • Intentionally misunderstanding the question is not an option. Could I live without the scientific understanding of bacteria or virii? Sure. Could I live without a generalized scientific understanding, outside of my experience, about bacteria and virii? No.

    • Obviously it's possible. Life and civilization existed before them. And no one would drop dead of apoplexy if they gave it up. But why should we? Yeah... I know it's the hip and trendy thing nowadays... even on Slashdot for some strange reason... to hate on technology, the fruits of the same, and those of us, people and companies, who make our living creating it. But frankly: to hell with that. Your newfound luddist pseudo-spirituality doesn't make you any better than those of us who enjoy our modern

  • No (Score:5, Insightful)

    by JMJimmy ( 2036122 ) on Saturday December 29, 2018 @03:39PM (#57876184)

    I could live without "apps". I could live without social media. I could live without games. I could even live without a browser.

    I cannot live without a map - I'd be forever lost or limited to what I could locate without getting lost.

    • Someone should invent paper Maps!
    • by ls671 ( 1122017 )

      If you have problems getting lost, you should try a full size map. They are usually available in printed on paper format and they are foldable. You unfold them when needed and they give you a bird's-eye view of the whole area.

      • It's not even close. A smartphone has the advantage of being able to guide you from wherever you are to wherever you want to go, using spoken turn-by-turn directions for safe, hands-free navigation. If you miss a turn, no big deal, it re-routes you from there.

        There are plenty of worthless or "minor convenience" apps out there, but navigation apps are one of the absolutely killer features of smartphones. I've used plenty of paper maps over the first half of my life to know that they don't even come close

      • If you have problems getting lost, you should try a full size map. They are usually available in printed on paper format and they are foldable. You unfold them when needed and they give you a bird's-eye view of the whole area.

        Steven Wright has one of those...

        I have a map of the United States... Actual size. It says, 'Scale: 1 mile = 1 mile.' I spent last summer folding it. I hardly ever unroll it. People ask me where I live, and I say, "E6".

      • I have one of those in my car too (ring bound so no folding required) but it's not nearly as practical

    • yeah, I do love having gps maps, live.

      I check personal email, but not work email (work email is not 'safe' since they insist on using exchange and that forces me to use a client that grants their admin WAY too much privs (full wipe ability!) on my *personal* phone.)

      I rarely do anything web based. even with a rooted adblocked phone, the web sucks badly on phones, for many reasons. I can usually wait until I'm on my safe linux box to do web things.

      sometimes I take photos, but for things that matter, I use a

      • >"I was recently in an eye dr's office and every single kid there was playing with his phone. I guess that's ok, they are not running around and bothering anyone ;)"

        However, it is NOT OK when the phones are making noise, which seems to be extremely common now and that sure as hell bothers ME. I can't even enjoy dinner in a restaurant without some parent allowing their kid to either watch video with the audio BLASTING or playing some annoying game with sound. It is utterly amazing to me that the parents

      • I must admit that I’ve been having this debate with myself for a while. Basically, I do feel like, at times, I spend too much of my free time playing “apps”, browsing Slashdot... all the things having a smartphone or tablet make trivial to access on a whim. But have I done anything about it? No, not really... at least yet.

        There are certain things I really would not want to be without. GPS-based live maps have been mentioned already. There’s also the calendar - smartphone calendars ar

      • My workplace pays for my phone, in order for me to receive email on the MS Exchange based system. I access my personal email with a distinct application, precisely to avoid conflating them or confusing them, and avoid personal applications like FaceBook or LinkedIn except for work activities. If I gave up the phone, it could mean losing the job, since I am frequently on call or a high leval escalation point for technical issues.

    • People can talk and answer questions about location, you know...
    • How did you live before smartphones? Were you constantly waving down police to ask them for directions?

      • I got lost, a lot. I'd forever be pulling over, checking maps, asking directions. It was rather comical. Still do but at least it tells me to to a u-turn quickly.

    • Interestingly, if I want a more "deep dive" into consuming media, I'm not using a smartphone, even my iPhone X. That's better suited for my iPad Pro 10.5", especially reading e-books and watching Netflix/Amazon Prime Video.

    • I could live without "apps". I could live without social media. I could live without games. I could even live without a browser.

      I cannot live without a map - I'd be forever lost or limited to what I could locate without getting lost.

      Since getting a smartphone about six years ago, the only thing I have never gotten used to is real time, turn-by-turn directions. I much prefer to look up directions ahead of time and write them down or commit them to memory if brief enough. It makes me feel like I can focus on driving and not on listening to the stupid voice.

  • by known_coward_69 ( 4151743 ) on Saturday December 29, 2018 @03:41PM (#57876194)

    In the 80's we had lots of celeb and other magazines along with shows like Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous. In the 90's we had America's Funniest Home videos.

    All this blended into social media and Youtube

    Even then the whole point of magazines was to put advertising in front of your eyes. The content was secondary. And the subscription prices never covered the costs of running the magazine.

    • The question was not "do people enjoy having entertainment in front of their eyeballs 24/7?". It was, and this is important, could you really say you are alive, without a smart device giving you the information to which you have been accustomed?

      I get lots of information via phone, if it were cut off against my will, I would not be "alive". It's like cutting out your own eyeballs. Do you really want to live that way? Most people don't. Some people actually really want to.

      People ask surgeons to cut off bod

  • by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Saturday December 29, 2018 @03:42PM (#57876198)

    Those who have been alive longer than smartphones, cellphones or pagers will have an easier time going without such things as they have done it before.

    Those who have never known a life without them, not so much.

    It would be akin to denying a heroin addict their daily fix I think.

    • by Misagon ( 1135 )

      You're likening smartphone users to heroin addicts.
      I see that likeness too, and it is one reason why I don't have one.
      The drug/the phone, comes first before anything else.

      The singular event for me why I don't have a smartphone was maybe a decade ago, before iPhone and Android -- but when texting had already commonplace. I saw a woman immersed in her phone walking slowly out onto railroad tracks on a railroad crossing right as there was an oncoming train. I saved her from danger but not once did she look up

      • I think I like my plan better:

        1) Get a smartphone
        2) Don't become a slave to the damned thing

        All of the benefits, and none of the downsides. Win-win.

      • by fazig ( 2909523 )
        The choice to become a zombie or not is yours; regardless of whether you own and use such a phone or not.

        Personally I know plenty of people who don't pull out their smartphone at every occasion they may get bored. And pretty much all of them are Millennials (if that term is even appropriate for people outside of the US). Anyway, most of them owned a cellphone in middle school already.

        A smartphone is basically a hand-held personal computer with a terrible (but under the circumstances practical) user inte
    • For the record, I've been calling out a lot of idiots here, and this response is the only non idiotic one so far. The question is about *YOU* and this answer pretty much summarizes the expected responses of a very large number of people.

      Anyone hating me for my response to them below should ponder the above response.

    • age has nothing to do it. When I was in high school, we did not even have calculators. we did have mechanical adding machines. computers were big old mainframes and had to keypunch cards for it to read. Now my apartment is nothing but tech - alexa, google home, computers, tablets and more. so could I live without my smartphone, maybe but as I said in another post, as long as I had my tablet. need something for two factor authorization and read my newspaper subscriptions :-)

  • by Anonymous Coward

    One of my favorite stories to tell is about the phone book.

    A long time ago (almost 15 years) I was supposed to visit a customer about their home computer and needed to reschedule, the phone number was not recorded on the work order, I tried looking it up in our databases, no joy, tried finding it online, nope, so I didn't call.

    Of course the next day he calls angry that I didn't show up and didn't reschedule, I spoke with him and said I didnt' have his phone number and he quickly replied 'its in the phone bo

    • It was probably good to be apologetic in that case but... why didn't he call around 15 minutes after the appointment was set to check on if you were coming?

      Not that he should have had to do that, but it's what U would have done in his place instead of getting mad and calling the next day... I'd personally be very understanding of someone having lost a number.

      • "It's in the phone book"

        Can you put yourself in the place of someone who has a published number, who didn't get a call, whose response is "It's in the phone book"?

        IT'S IN THE PHONE BOOK

        Why wouldn't someone have his number if it was in the phone book? The number that is in the phone book?

        And how do you surmise it's what OP would have done? He didn't know about the phone book. Or didn't remember at the time, which is not knowing.

        And last, this guy had an appointment, no one showed up. How to you not get ma

    • "put down the phone" is not the same as "never use it".

      "Never use it" is not the same as "never have used it".

  • by BrendaEM ( 871664 ) on Saturday December 29, 2018 @03:51PM (#57876234) Homepage
    I hate the whole Ap software culture, where what a web browser can do has been split into 1,000 diferent programs. I hate the Android every permission culture. I hate the Apple no-strange-flash-card-before me thing. I hate curve screens that cannot be protected. I hate facial scanning. I hate the lack of smartphone keyboards. And at least if you could get cellphone enabled tablets here in the U.S., then it would be more useful, where allowed.
    • by TheGratefulNet ( 143330 ) on Saturday December 29, 2018 @04:14PM (#57876326)

      yup, same feelings here.

      we control so little on the phone (the os, the hardware, the radio).

      they track us, they spy on us, we can't even know if the mic and camera(s) are live. truly, we cannot know, and that's something that should scare everyone. yet, we ignore it completely.

      apps are 'free' since they fucking SPY on you. you can't trust them.

      the whole system is fucked up beyond fixing. needs a whole new re-do. new business model, new freedom policy, new encryption-by-design policy, new user-has-full-control policy. we NEED this. but I doubt we'll ever get it. the current broken model is too embedded in the culture. its quite sad what it could have been, but its now a spy, advertising and tracking tool for THEM.

      I gave up on phones years ago. I use only the very bare minimum and even then, I feel unclean using one, knowing that each layer of hardware and software is actively working for SOMEONE ELSE, not me. bugs the crap out of me.

    • where what a web browser can do

      webpages have MBs today, you know... (I feel sorry for our data plan!)

    • by tepples ( 727027 )

      I hate the whole Ap software culture, where what a web browser can do has been split into 1,000 diferent programs.

      Other people hate the web application culture, where a web browser will automatically download and execute unvetted JavaScript and WebAssembly software written by who knows whom.

  • I find this puzzling. I ignore my mobile most of the time. I've disabled most notifications (and rely on email notifications for the most part, and check at my leisure.) Even with text messaging, thanks to the new Android app, that's in a browser for me, and I respond at my own convenience. Although to be honest that's pretty low traffic as well.

    I can't be the only person who has one of these, and can go several hours without attending to it....maybe adopting an attitude more along these lines would help.

    Fo

    • You're obviously not in the majority. And, the question was not about "minimal usage". It was "not at all usage". You find it puzzling because you are waaaaaaay far away from average. Not that it's a bad thing, but you are NOT AVERAGE AND NOT REPRESENTATIVE.

  • he reads many novels and enjoys quiet moments of reflection and watching the world go by.

    Hey you know what - I do that too! Only I'm generally reading on my smartphone. And while I might grab a picture once in a while, I too love to just sit sometimes and watch the world.

    It's fully up to you how much and just plain HOW you use a smartphone. But it seems incredibly short-sighted to get rid of them because you lack self-control - that is a value that can be self-taught, and brings benefits to all areas of

    • by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Saturday December 29, 2018 @04:32PM (#57876382) Journal
      Exactly. There's a negative view of using smartphones regardless of how you are using them. If you are sitting quietly reading a paper book or newspaper, people think you're spending quality time. However if you are sitting quietly reading a book or newspaper on your smartphone, they think: "Oh great, he's glued to that thing again". Same if you have a few minutes at the bus stop or on the train. Use your cell phone, and older folks will shake their heads in disapproval. Whip out a book and they'll smile in approval.
      • Exactly. There's a negative view of using smartphones regardless of how you are using them. If you are sitting quietly reading a paper book or newspaper, people think you're spending quality time. However if you are sitting quietly reading a book or newspaper on your smartphone, they think: "Oh great, he's glued to that thing again". Same if you have a few minutes at the bus stop or on the train. Use your cell phone, and older folks will shake their heads in disapproval. Whip out a book and they'll smile in approval.

        Yes, exactly.

        I don't think it makes much sense to lump the time I spend on a computer learning a second language in with "screen time" like watching cat videos.

      • If you are reading a paper book they can see that you are reading a paper book, and (if they can see enough of the cover) what book you are reading.

        One of the advantages of books on shelves is that they tell you a lot about people's tastes and interests, and from that become a starting point for conversation etc.

        It may not look like a big difference from the readers point of view, but from others point of view a paper book is very different.

  • Well that was easy (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Saturday December 29, 2018 @04:01PM (#57876272)

    Three-quarters of Canadians own smartphones

    That means 25% of Canadians are living without a smartphone. Meaning that yes, you could in fact live without a smartphone.

    Next question please?

    • Sure, are you an idiot or a fucking idiot?

      You read the headline and nothing else, and responded to the literal meaning, without considering any context.

      Could the 75% of Canadians who have experienced smartphones live without them?

      I assume you will have a hard time parsing that, so do pause for a moment.

      How do you define "live"? If you mean "Know that a technology is not available and be denied using it" then almost everyone on DashSlot would say no. If you mean "Voluntarily give up" for any reason, then o

  • is that they harass those of us who do.

    Unfortunately, the world has gotten to a place where you really need one to survive.

    I was out with my dad for dinner (who absolutely refuses to own one) the other night and he wanted to know:
    - What did the Dow Jones ended off at
    - Read the article about the guy in England who saw and photographed Air Force 1 when Trump was going to Iraq on Christmas day
    - Use the scientific calculator on the phone to figure out the angular width of Air Force 1 when it is 25 miles away an

    • Problem is with people who don't use smartphones is that they harass those of us who do.
      [...]
      it's nice to have a browser available and a lot of apps do make our lives more efficient and allow us to be more mobile.

      I would respect that if all the smartphone users agreed to actually look and listen to other people. Seriously, when I'm talking to someone, eye contact and a real conversation is what I expect. Smartphone users have decided instead to opt for "mhmm..." as they stare at their phone scrolling through their social media feed and then at a break they ask questions about information you just provided ago seconds ago. These smartphone zombies are the worst people because they aren't really there.

      TL;DR: [dis]

      • I actively use a faked "smartphone zombie" mode to avoid conversations on the bus. I'm not interested in spending my commute getting to know some homeless dude with no edit button. I find being intent on my phone and telling him "sorry, I'm texting my girlfriend." tends to shut that down early.

        And if it doesn't I feel free to just tell him to fuck off out of my face.

        • I actively use a faked "smartphone zombie" mode to avoid conversations on the bus. I'm not interested in spending my commute getting to know some homeless dude with no edit button. I find being intent on my phone and telling him "sorry, I'm texting my girlfriend." tends to shut that down early.

          And if it doesn't I feel free to just tell him to fuck off out of my face.

          Truly, a hero for our times.

    • by Misagon ( 1135 )

      What kind of harassment are you referring to? That was missing from your post. You also did not post anything that could be considered necessary .

      [i]Sitting down[/i] and looking up things on a device with Internet access is not something that people tend to have an issue with.

      Issues are with people who have in effect become tethered to their phones, who have developed disruptive manners.

    • All that stuff, if it really mattered, could be looked up when you got home. Meanwhile, what non cellphone addicts see is the person across from them, who they only have a few hours with, having their head down, eyes and ears zombiefied, reflected in the ghostly glow of their tiny sun (that their lives seem to revolve around). Instead of talking and being present with them in the moment. Most people don't care what you talk about, especially family, but that you are there and present and talking with them.

      Y

  • by kackle ( 910159 )
    I've never owned a cellular phone. In this day and age, there are some advantages:
    1) I save ~ $1000 (pretax) per year on the cellular service bills. (That's $10,000, or a brand new, cheap car, every decade.)
    2) I don't have to worry about losing it.
    3) I don't have to worry about it being stolen.
    4) I don't have to worry about being robbed for it.
    5) I don't have to worry about whether its battery is charged.
    6) I don't have to worry about its software updates and whether they broke anything.
    7) I don't h
    • I don't knock anyone for having one - I would like the same courtesy.

      Who is denying you that courtesy? Who even knows you exist?

      • by kackle ( 910159 )
        Those who roll their eyes at this "backward" person.

        Obviously you know I exist, or you're just posting to yourself. Now who's the crazy one?
    • Smartphones are pocket computers: it's was a dream to me when a kid... you don't need to use it as the makers instruct, you know...
    • $1000 (pretax) per year

      My cell phone cost me $120 to buy, and it costs me less than $50 per year (on average about $4 per month) to run. This is because I chose a plan with few voice minutes or text messages and no data.

      2) I don't have to worry about losing it.
      3) I don't have to worry about it being stolen.
      4) I don't have to worry about being robbed for it.
      5) I don't have to worry about whether its battery is charged.
      [...]
      10) I don't have to worry about breaking it.
      11) I don't have to worry about it being hacked/malware.

      Instead, you have to worry about the six of these with respect to your non-phone pocket computer, non-phone digital media player, or non-phone portable satellite navigation device.

      12) I am never bothered by people or robots via it.

      If your employer required you to carry such a phone (with such a plan) in order to take elevated support calls after hours as a conditi

    • Anyone paying more than 50/mo per plan is being robbed. That's $600. Family discounts add up. How in the holy fuck did you get $10k?

      Seriously, show your work here or shut the fuck up forever.

  • >""Whenever I tell people I don't have a phone, they say, 'Oh, that's so great. I wish I didn't have to have one.'" That's "one thing digital refuseniks never have to worry about," the article concludes: "Who is the servant in their digital relationship, and who is the master."

    This is just silly. You don't have to NOT have a smart phone to prevent being rude, unsafe, or being obsessed. Smart phones are great for so many other things- news, easy texting, hotting down a note, maps and directions, flashli

  • Easily (Score:5, Interesting)

    by MpVpRb ( 1423381 ) on Saturday December 29, 2018 @05:00PM (#57876520)

    I live my digital life on my desktop computer with a 30" screen
    My smartphone sits unused on the desk unless I'm on the road
    I'm rarely on the road

    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      Ditto. I rarely use my iPhone 4S and go out. I do go online with the Internet a lot at home though!

    • by tepples ( 727027 )

      I'm rarely on the road

      Others' habits differ. For example, they may have a bus commute of an hour each way to and from work.

  • People had paper maps of nations, cities.
    Needed to call a person? They had a answering machine, a secretary.
    Games? That was a desktop computer, board games.
    Wanted to see the new tech? Printed catalog.
    To meet someone/sell something? A classified magazine/contact magazine.
    Read something? That was a library, a book shop. Microfiche.
    The world worked before walking around with tracking, games, maps and ads on a "smartphone"
    • Paper maps don't include your current location or directions. They're also incredibly unwieldy to use when walking about.

      Who makes phone calls anymore?

      Eh. I don't game on the phone apart from Pokemon go.

      Printed catalogs are woefully out of date.

      Yea. Classified ads are dead. that's not coming back.

      Libraries around here are where hobos hang out. I once read a book when I was a kid that described a device that a kid could carry around that was an encyclopedia and any book or reference that could be accessed. I

      • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
        The ads and tracking is better now?
        All that "free" "current location or directions" is paid for by the users. The user is the product.
        The idea was to remove the smartphone, not the internet.
        So the person would have the best maps that could be printed on the day :)
        The only thing that is "better" now is ads have sound and location tracking :)
        • You're focused on the bad parts. The question is, could someone (not necessarily you, but feel free to answer) who owned a smart phone up to this moment, suddenly find a way to live without it.

          You probably don't have one. Fine, you're not part of the question. Don't feel special.

          • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
            Could people move around and stay in contact without a smartphone was the question.
            The answer would be yes.
            Its almost a cargo cult but products and services do exist to fill in "free" services like the loss of real time maps.
  • by DaMattster ( 977781 ) on Saturday December 29, 2018 @05:58PM (#57876772)
    I am strongly considering giving it a try because I've had it with technology! I mean I've absolutely had my fill of it. Technology has created a dystopia that it was meant to stave off. I want to be more present in my own life. Reading this article makes me think of how much joy that my smartphone has stolen from my life. I can no longer just sit down and watch TV without reaching for my smart phone. It's even become a distraction from reading. I used to lie down and read myself to sleep. Now I just "fuck around" on my smart phone and I don't really get super sleepy. I am sure it's negatively impacting my sleep biorhythms. I think my new year's resolution this year is to ditch the smart phone. I'll buy a printer so the few times that the few times I need directions, I can just print them out. Hells, maybe I'll just buy a used hardware GPS.
    • I now have a rule at my home that when someone comes over for dinner or to watch a movie, everyone's phone goes gets left in their car or put in the drawer by the door until the evening is over. Nothing is more rude than someone who must reply or smiley or upvote something as mundane as someone's pic of new socks on facebook. They might as well just pull pull out a book and start reading.
      Interestingly, most people so far have been OK with this,

      • by tepples ( 727027 )

        Until the movie ends and you discover that your manager has been sending you increasingly irate texts and/or voicemails asking why you haven't addressed an URGENT!!!!11 issue with whatever system you are paid to maintain.

    • I think my new year's resolution this year is to ditch the smart phone. I'll buy a printer so the few times that the few times I need directions, I can just print them out. Hells, maybe I'll just buy a used hardware GPS.

      I did buy a hardware GPS, but the only way it can get live traffic data is through a smartphone app, lol

  • I mean it. Did you notice refugees have smartphones? It is not because they are rich, it is because they can't afford to do without.

    First thing. Can you live without internet access nowadays? Difficult, if not downright impossible if some administrative procedures can only be done online. Now, how do you access the internet? For the hardware, you can use a smartphone or a computer, but the computer is usually more expensive and less portable. For the access, you can use a land line, which is also (usually)

    • but the computer is usually more expensive and less portable.

      Only because manufacturers killed entry-level 10.1" laptops in fourth quarter 2012. In addition, good luck training for (say) a programming job using a phone unless you dock it to an external keyboard and monitor, at which point you might as well buy a low-end 11.6" laptop, such as a Dell Inspiron.

      For the access, you can use a land line, which is also (usually) more expensive and less portable than an entry level data plan.

      Even after you pay overage fees? It's a lot harder to get into overage fees on an entry-level cable data plan, which provides 1000 GB/mo (source: Xfinity by Comcast) than on an entry-level data plan from a cellula

    • I do use my smartphone a LOT for navigation. Programs like Waze and Google Maps are very useful looking for most new places. And Waze's ability to crowd-source traffic information is very useful, especially during commute hours.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Ha, ha, ha, the younger generations are so much like sheep.

    Nobody needs a smart phone.

  • I could live without my smartphone with absolutely no problems - as long as I have my tablet :-)

  • From the article, some 71 year old dude is saying "it makes him experience new destinations".

    I'm 60. Smartphones came out 11-12 years ago. If you're 71 years old and need a smartphone to experience new destinations then I'm guessing you have bigger issues in your life than lack of a phone.

    What gets me are the surveys "do you sleep with your smart phone". Guess what? Soon as they were available I got a wireless phone. Think '82 or so. I slept with that phone. Fast forward 35 years, wireless hand
    • From the actual article, and you're really too old to qualify to answer. I'm sure my 90 year old grandparents are fine, and can live, without a cell phone. They still have AOL. They sleep with their phone because it's by their bed.

      Anyway, here's the non read bit you dork:

      John Moir is another refusenik, although he is quick to say, with a laugh, that he is not sanctimonious about it. He does have e-mail and Skype, after all, and a basic flip phone. However, the 71-year-old Vancouverite has the phone only b

  • I've never owned a smartphone, and don't plan on ever owning one, either. They're impossible to secure properly access-wise, easily hacked, overpriced, and so-called 'data plans' are a ripoff. I understand what all their capabilities are, am capable of even writing my own apps for them if I really wanted to, and I don't regret not having one, not for a single moment. A basic clamshell cellphone capable of calls and texts is all I need, and I don't even use it for those things much. If I need internet access
    • by tepples ( 727027 )

      If you claim you can't exist without a smartphone then you need to take a hard look at your life and your priorities.

      And for anyone who develops smartphone applications for a living, being able to test the application you're developing is likely to beat having to find a different job.

    • "Could You Live Without Your Smartphone?"

      Response: "I've never owned a smartphone"

      Oh, you don't count here. Your smartphone never existed. You don't have a relevant opinion. You think you do, but no, you did not answer the question. You don't understand the question.

      You actually don't understand people, but let's just start with words on a screen. You should understand them.

  • North says in the extra time "he reads many novels and enjoys quiet moments of reflection and watching the world go by."

    Well, I read novels on my smartphone, so there ;)

  • Yup - I'm already doing that. I can't stand them - wouldn't want one if someone bloody paid me to have it. I enjoy being able to get up and walk way from my job (a Network Analyst/Engineer) and be off the grid. There is no need for anyone to be connected all the time, other than addition.

  • I forgot it at mom-in-law yesterday :(

  • I'd say that it would be very hard to live without a phone at all. It's become a way to verify identity, and not having one would mean I could lose access to some important stuff.

    Beyond that, the only reason I went back to a smartphone (I was an early adopter, but went back to a Nokia S60 phone) is because my wife wanted me to have access to Whatsapp. And really, that's something that a lot of people expect these days (I imagine other message apps, depending on your region), so although I could theoreticall

  • I lived the first 30 years of my life without a smartphone, so yeah, no problem. But since the age of ~10, I've always had a computer and television. I don't really think I'm any more addicted to the phone than those things from years ago.

    The only real change is how much information advertisers have about us these days. For me personally, not a big deal. I plan my budget months in advance and I'm not all that affected by advertisements. Getting ads for things I actually want isn't that big of a deal.

    Necron6

  • I mostly use it for a phone.

    In some respects, it's worse than my old flip phone.

    I can't see it in sunlight. I cannot feel the keys. I cannot just open it to answer. It's bigger, and more expensive.

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