I made a big decision this past weekend: I decided to give up my Blackberry smartphone.
Why? Like a good geriatrician, I considered the benefits and the burdens of sticking with the Blackberry. And since the burdens seem to outweigh the benefits…bye-bye Blackberry.
This was a difficult decision for me, however. To begin with, becoming comfortable with a new device for one’s daily work takes time. During the transition phase, one is slower in getting work done. Plus, the frustrations of figuring out something new can suck up a lot of mental and emotional energy. (This is part of why clinicians have conniptions when EMR systems are installed or changed.)
Furthermore, just as with my new Samsung tablet, I expect the new smartphone will also require me to spend time identifying and installing suitable apps before the device becomes truly useful. For some functions, I’ll be able to use the same apps on the phone as I do on the tablet, so that provides a certain economy of learning energy.
But in other cases, I’ll have to find apps that are specific to phone functions, such as a good voicedial app. (The Blackberry has excellent voicedial, and this is a feature that I use often.) And I’ll have to figure out how to import my phone contacts — I don’t like installing my bazillion email contacts into a phone — as well as my ringtone.
In short, although I expect to be better off eventually by switching to a new Samsung phone, the transition will cost me time and energy. Plus a fair bit of money, as the new phone is not cheap.
The burden of frequent technology transitions
As best I can tell, modern life seems to demand such transitions with increasing frequency.
For instance, my first cell phone – a Sanyo phone from Sprint – lasted from 1999-2005. Six years! I only gave it up because I was leaving the country for an extended period of time. Otherwise, it was still dutifully maintaining battery charge, had adequate signal, and kept track of everyone’s phone number for me.
In other words, after six years, this cell phone could still function as if nearly new. Furthermore, the demands I was making on the phone hadn’t really changed.
Whereas today, I find myself replacing a phone that I purchased only nine months ago. Why?
- Phone frequently malfunctioning. This phone (a Bold 9930) worked pretty well when I first got it, but now frequently hangs and freezes.
- My expectations for smartphones have evolved. In particular, I’ve decided I need better access to a good to-do list while out and about. This means installing a task manager app, and all the good ones are on iOS or Android.
- Blackberry no longer being supported for certain apps I use. It’s not just that cool new apps aren’t being made for the Blackberry; developers are also withdrawing support in some cases for Blackberry.
howdy
Although mobile technology has been expanding rapidly over the last few years, it will slow. All technology platforms eventually reach a point of maturity, after which enhancements become increasingly less valuable. It's the classic S curve. Manufacturers will continue to crank out new devices, but you will feel less pressure to upgrade because the differences will be harder to tell apart. Can you tell the difference between this year's macbook pro and last years? Exactly
PCs and laptops have been mature for some time. Smartphones are just now reaching the point of maturity where future upgrades will simply be less relevant. The iPhone 5 and Galaxy S3 are 2 iconic devices that represent "Good enough" moving forward. These devices are extremely powerful, run modern and powerful OSes, and feature all of the hardware sensors that 99% of people need 99% of the time. The difference between the iPhone 5 and 6 will be even less than that between the 4S and 5, which was already small.
A similar thing has happened in web and cloud technologies. As the iPhone and iPad and Android exploded, so did social networking and cloud computing, which in turn created ripples throughout the web. Virtually every major website has been completely re-written in the past few years as mobile and web technologies offered new methods to deliver world-class quality as relatively low cost. Services are now being delivered across devices, and are synced through the Cloud.
There may not be another round of mainstream consumer disruptive technology like this ever. There are still many opportunities in areas like nanotechnology, genetics, robotics, wearable computing (IE Google Glass), but each of these competes with the status quo: super amazing smartphones. Most of these new platforms simply aren't needed by 99% of people, so they will inherently be less disruptive.
I'm presuming you purchased a Galaxy S 3 or 4, or Note. The only factors that may prevent you from keeping that phone for 5 years will be physical fragility, and battery. Everything other component onboard will be good enough for years.
hi Kyle, thanks for this comment.
well, here's hoping you're right and that the phone lasts me a while. it's a Note 2.
I only hope it won't be showing me a green droid everytime someone calls me…
Dear Leslie,
Not everyone dislikes these changes ! My teenage daughter is very happy to upgrade to the newest model , so she can play with all its cool new features ๐
Dr Aniruddha Malpani, MD
Medical Director
HELP – Health Education Library for People
Excelsior Business Center,
National Insurance Building,
Ground Floor, Near Excelsior Cinema,
206, Dr.D.N Road, Mumbai 400001
Tel. No.:65952393/65952394
Helping patients to talk to doctors !
Information Therapy is the Best Prescription – http://www.informationtherapy.in !
Read over 20 health books free at http://www.helpforhealth.org
Read my blog about improving the doctor-patient
relationship at http://doctorandpatient.blogspot.com/
Check out the Healthwise Knowledgebase at http://www.healthlibrary.com/healthwise.php !