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When I was lost on a country highway or popped out of the subway, the iPhone gave me my precise location. |
| By Maureen Post OnMilwaukee.com Staff Writer E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Maureen Post |
| Published Oct. 29, 2009 at 11:06 p.m. |
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Before I got the iPhone, I had a faint fear it would put too much information at my finger tips any hour of the day.
I hypothesized I might become addicted to checking my email 60 times a day, using a calculator to perform even the simplest of math equations and quickly jump to quell disputes on actors or movies with a jaunt to Wikipedia.
Simultaneously, I reveled in the thought of checking my email from anywhere, mapping my route in any city and letting go of my separate phone, iPod, and camera. It was an internal argument between good and evil with uncertainty on which side of the slope my iPhone or user's behavior would ultimately fall.
But of course, I got the iPhone.
And so, now six months into ownership, I admit I'm a fan of most of the iPhone's abilities. It's easy and convenient, fun and constantly evolving.
It was only once I took it on a few short trips that I started to see it; I have a feeling my former iPhone fear might just be on the verge of realization. I'm starting to think it might be making my travelling life just a little too easy.
With the iPhone in hand, there was no need to analyze maps, invoke directional assistance or employ my stellar sense of direction. Google Maps showed me the way. When I was lost on a country highway or popped out of the subway, the iPhone gave me my precise location.
This being said, while I admit it stirs a fear of complacency and general inability, it often quells overwhelming uncertainties of meandering completely unfamiliar neighborhoods.
And so, a trade-off emerges in the age of technology. On one hand, lose the iPhone and you regain a sense of pioneering self-reliance. But, on the other hand, the iPhone dramatically helps me do more, see more, and be in more places for more experiences every day.
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1 comment about this article. Post a comment / write a review. |
Posted by ssspinball on Oct. 30, 2009 at 9:17 a.m. (report)
This kind of semi-disdain for technological progress confuses me. These things are invented to make our lives easier and maps on your internet-enabled cell phone are a good example of something that is a huge improvement over the old methods. There's nothing "better" about paper maps, in fact when that was all there was you could make the same complaint about progress and say "it's it a shame we don't have to draw our own maps by hand or visit the local cartographer anymore?"
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