I wonder how many of you still have a land line. I do and I
use it a lot. I also have a smart phone, which I use as a phone, a map, a
search engine and a social media viewer and I use it for group messages with
family. I find it hard to use all of the capabilities of my smart phone,
because my fingers do not work well, and I am not used to using my thumbs or
whatever the younger generation use to work their phones. I and my friends
still rememb3er waiting to use the land line when others were on the party
line. Young people may never understand the torture of waiting your turn to use
the one household phone — which had a tangled up spiral cord that stretched
halfway into the next room, if your call required any privacy.
According to data by the U.S. Census, 84% of households had
at least one smartphone in 2018, and as of 2020, over 80% of adults ages 25-34
had opted to go entirely wireless, says the National Center for Health
Statistics.
Heading out alongside landlines and rotary phones — remember
those? — are the days when you needed to remember all your buddies’ phone numbers.
Now that most of us have cell phones that we use for notes,
phone numbers and calendars, the phenomenon of “digital amnesia” has grown.
Research by multinational cybersecurity company Kaspersky Lab has shown that
with a rising reliance on technology, people don’t try to remember these things
because they know they have it in the cloud somewhere.
I suspect that land lines may go the way of other extinct
technology, but the telephone companies may figure out new ways for us to use
the land line as the boomers are still a huge market force. It won’t be long
now before the only land line phone you’ll find will be in a museum but it will
be a few years before all of us who use the land line give it up. We will not
go quietly into the night on this issue.
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