The smartphone is the ultimate convergence device. It takes a number of useful gadgets and combines them into a single, portable device. A smartphone can act as your portable computer, navigation device, camera, music player, and much more.

It’s also a phone.

And the phone is the most useless bit.

Read more: Apple confirms iMessage locks users into iOS, and putting it on Android would hurt Apple

If you’re anything like me, you rarely, if ever, make a call. Instead, you send an email or a quick message. And as for calls you get in, a good 95 percent are junk, and the remainder could have been an email or a quick message.

Calls are a wasteland. Pretty much every time I hit that green button on a call from someone who isn’t in my contacts, I end up regretting it.

And folks on my contacts list know not to call me.

A quick look through my calls list for the past year shows little more than scams, timewasters, nonsense, and garbage. Perhaps one percent was useful, but again, could have been a message.

The phone is a device from a different era. It’s a device that emits an annoying noise, demanding immediate attention. While the device itself has changed, it retains the worst of its original qualities — a device that emits an annoying noise and demands immediate attention.

You could argue that text messages and emails are the same, and you’d be right. The difference is that these technologies have evolved a bit in order to try to remain relevant and useful.

That said, I’d happily ditch text messaging too, because the signal to noise ratio is very poor there too.

Maybe something could be done to make calls and texts a bit better. Visual voicemail on the iPhone has made this feature a tiny bit more bearable. Maybe something along the lines of Sign in with Apple ID, where I have the option of hiding my true phone number and use disposable ones that I can manage — and by manage, I mean block — down the line.

Now, I’m not suggesting that Apple and Google rip the phone part out of their smartphones. Some of you still use the phone and text messaging. What I’m asking for is a way to kill both of them.

I don’t know about you folks, but I could live without them. I’d even pay to have a smartphone that does everything a smartphone should do except be a phone.

Let me know what you think in the comments below.



Source link