Dbumba [none/use name]

  • 8 Posts
  • 21 Comments
Joined 4 years ago
cake
Cake day: November 28th, 2020

help-circle




  • I’d say it’s a little of both.

    People of all ages are certainly conditioned to record and photograph every little thing out of the ordinary, which takes away from being present. Phones in general are incredibly distracting from taking you out of the moment.

    It’s also incredible technology the ability to capture any photo/video at any time. There’s no real tangible loss of taking too many pictures ie you aren’t wasting any film/money.

    Photos/video are really just a way to remember the past. People in the 90s would record pretty benign stuff too with camcorders and cameras, just the tech was more expensive and not readily affordable and available like it is today.

    Also the zoo in particular brings out the nature photographer larp. Documenting nature in the wild takes an incredible amount of skill, luck, and patience. At the zoo you cut out all the hard work and get the instant gratification of shots which would be borderline impossible irl

    Is anyone going to look back fondly on sleeping zoo animals or shaky concert footage? Prob not. I just think the conditioning of it is a way to help us remember the past, so at the end of the day it’s only mildly annoying at worst, and pretty harmless.

    I think a better example of technology alienation is a couple/family all scrolling on their phones during dinner together.



  • I took the Android leap from Apple about six years ago and never looked back. Androids are superior in almost every way when it comes to privacy and customization

    Apple stopped being innovative around the time Steve Jobs died; each update is just more ways to spy and spam you with a slightly better camera. I will say iPhones are very user friendly, so there is like a 20 min learning curve converting from Apple to Android.

    Also not sure where you are getting your phone plan, but there’s only 3 tower providers in the US now. Verizon, At&t, and T-Mobile. I’d avoid any of those as a carrier because they tend to overcharge.

    Low cost carriers still operate service under 1 of those 3 company’s towers, so you’ll still get the same service but at a cheaper price. I use Boost Mobile, $50 a month with no hidden fees, month-to-month and somehow the price hasn’t gone up in five years.