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Where Have All the Gadgets Gone?

waderoush writes "How many electronic gadgets did you own in 2005? How many do you own today? The answer is almost certainly a lot fewer. Counter to the dominant trend in consumer technology since the 1920s — and despite predictions of a coming 'Internet of things' — there may actually be *less* electronic stuff in our homes and offices today than ever before. That's thanks largely to the rise of multipurpose wireless devices like smartphones and tablets, which are now powerful enough to replace many older, dedicated devices like point-and-shoot cameras, music players, digital voice recorders — even whole home entertainment systems. To prove the point, here are before-and-after photos from one San Francisco household (mine) where the herd of digital devices has been thinned from about three dozen, eight years ago, to just 15 today."

7 of 278 comments (clear)

  1. "Personal experience as evidence" (and more) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Uh? What's going on here?

    Also note the pictures: It seems he changed, not the world in general.
    In 2005 we see a microwave and stuff that seems to be a lot of mobile phones and remote controls. What is preventing him from getting lots of unused mobile phones today? The remotes seem to belong to the stuff below the TV, he got rid of his fancy stereo (with CD-player, amp, loudspeakers).

    Yes, the world changed. Yes, you need fewer gadgets. No, personal experience is not evidence and I think those pictures show only a change in his personality: From a young "I need to have every crap" he went to understanding he does not need every crap. Apart from that, the reduction we see in the pictures is not impressive at all. And apart from that, "personal experience" is no evidence for global developments.

  2. Hmm. by Psychotria · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't even have a mobile (cell) phone. I think my collection of gadgets is about the same.

    Anyway, the more important question is "what is the sacrifice you are making by embracing multi-purpose devices?" A DSLR will produce better photos than your iPhone (or whatever). A point-n-click camera will also. A dedicated scanner is likely to produce a better scan than a scanner tacked on to a printer. I could find examples relevant to the other examples as well but there is no point because they are easy to find. I, personally, would prefer a dedicated "gadget" that does one thing and does it well over a gadget that does many things but with less quality. YMMV.

  3. Where Have All the Gadgets Gone? by Smidge204 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Where have all the gadgets gone?
    Long time charging
    Where have all the gadgets gone?
    Long time ago
    Where have all the gadgets gone?
    Gone to smartphones, every one
    When will they ever learn?
    When will they ever learn?

  4. The author is wrong by aaaaaaargh! · · Score: 5, Funny

    I've just purchased two old Casio organizers via E-Bay and a calculator! This proves conclusively that the author is wrong.

  5. Geeks, don't throw out stuff . . . they hoard. by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 5, Funny

    It can be old, broken and useless . . . but a geek will still hoard it. Every geek has a drawer, a box, a closet, or a garage stuffed with useless stuff. There just might be some possibility that it will be good for something in the future. Maybe the Zombie Apocalypse will infect Ethernet, so I will need that PCMCIA Token Ring card?

    Every time I go digging for something it's like a Computer Archeological Wonderland. Wow! BASIC programs on paper tape! The old HP 41C calculator!

    I never own less gadgets . . . just more. Where have all my gadgets gone? Who knows. But they are around here somewhere, and can find them if I look hard enough.

    --
    Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
  6. All ur stuff soon belong 2me by CuteSteveJobs · · Score: 5, Interesting

    > To prove the point, here are before-and-after photos from one San Francisco household (mine) where the herd of digital devices has been thinned from about three dozen, eight years ago, to just 15 today.

    Awesome. Once burglary was a real hit and miss. Now your victims case their places for you. Even lists his dog. Google tells me his dog it is an Australian Sheppard. Sound docile enough. I can always get it drunk lol.
    http://www.wikifido.com/page/Rhody
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_Shepherd#Temperament

    Now when will Wade be out of town?
    Xconomy robotics event 4/11 https://twitter.com/wroush
    "Far too many people have too much information online as to their schedules and what they will be attending and where." http://protectitnow.blogspot.com.au/2011/07/your-home-security-never-before.html

    I'll just have to arrive early to beat the crowd. I have dibs on the Canon Powershot S5 IS and the iPhone5.

  7. Re:Trashcan by nine-times · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Doomed to mediocrity too, given that a multi-function device is always a jack of all trades, master of none.

    Part of the difficulty is that they're really a jack of all trades, master of many. I gave away my old point-and-shoot camera, that cost me a few hundred dollars a just few years ago, because the camera on the iPhone gave better results. Not only do the pictures look better, but it automatically tags the photo with positional data, which is something that I specifically want.

    My iPhone is also a great at other things, and I don't think that it's limited to Apple. Modern cell phones do a lot of things incredibly well. Yes, you're forced to do business with a big corporation to have them, but really, what's the alternative that you would advocate? Building your own computers out of sticks and dirt?