Seven Years of the iPhone: hard to believe it hasn’t been longer

I was reading an interesting article the other day about the the fact that it was the seven year anniversary of the introduction of the iPhone and I confess that I was flabbergasted that it had only been that short a period of time. Afterall, the iPhone begat a number of other smartphones (I am looking at you Samsung), killed (effectively) the previously dominant smartphone brand (Blackberry) and has changed the way we live: all in a very, really, short period of time.

Reading the article last week left me to ponder two things:

1. How much my life has changed in the last seven years since the introduction of the iPhone; and
2. Whether those changes have been to the betterment of my life.

The iPhone, and by extension, the iPad has changed so much about the way I, and most others, live that I will only note the top 5 things that have changed in my life since 2007:

1. My days start more swiftly now: I start my day now by checking my iPhone. Actually scratch that, I start my day now by turning off the alarm that wakes on my iPhone and then I check emails, twitter and a couple of news websites before I get out of bed. In the pre-iPhone world I had a clock radio to raise me from slumber and after hitting the snooze button a couple of times I would get out of bed, shuffle to the lounge room and turn on the TV to start the information flow of my day.

2. How I receive news: I once was a newspaper reader, buying up to 3 papers a day most days. Now I can not remember the last time I purchased a newspaper because I read the news of the day either on my twitter feed or on the voluminous number of news aggregation apps I have on my iPhone and iPad.

3. How I place bets: One of my regular Saturday rituals used to be waking up early, doing the form for the coming day of racing and then walking down to my local TAB to place my bets for the day. Now I can place bets without leaving my house on the various betting apps on my iPhone / iPad. This ease of punting has extended to me not going to the race track anywhere near as much as I used to because it just easier to watch the races at home.

4. I follow much more sport now: I am a lover of all sports but before my iPhone / iPad I limited my support of sport to basically Australian sports (save for baseball which I have always been a fan of). Now it is so easy to follow sport world wide because every sporting code has its own app that feeds one news about the code, scores for each week and player movements. I have become much more knowledgeable about the sports that I follow because I access all of the information about each sport straight from my phone rather than having to search for it.

5. My work day is much longer: I often joke with some of my staff about how things are different for them now than when I started my career and the more I think about it the more I am certain that my working days are now longer than they were before smartphones came into my life. Before when you left work you simply left work and the next day would be the next time you would be called on to do anything. Now, with emails coming through to phones / tablets, we are constantly connected with our places of work and have to make a choice to either read the emails and respond or ignore them. I can not resist reading the emails as they come in which often means my working day extends long into the night.

Obviously there are a number of positives that have come from the changes that have arisen in the years post 2007: life is simply faster now and the flow of information, if you love news and sport like me, presents constant fodder for active minds. Equally, the constant connectivity with our places of work and the lack of down time that said connectivity leaves us with has changed my life, I am certain, for the worse. Being always contactable, coupled with suffering from anxiety, has lead to an unhealthy addiction to my devices that I am unsure I will ever break.

So in one way I am extremely thankful for the revolution that the iPhone’s introduction has begat, but I confess that I remain to be convinced that my life is a better because of it.

The Contact List Cull: Cathartic but with a surprising outcome

I mentioned on twitter yesterday evening that I was going spend some of my public holiday today going through my contact list on my phone and undertake a cull. I was scrolling through said list the other day urgently looking for a number (yes I know there is a search functionality in almost phone contact lists but I was scrolling nonetheless) and was surprised at just how many contacts I seemed to have in my phone. Now this is not an attempt by me to say “look at me, I am so cool that I have too many contacts”, indeed because I feel entirely the opposite about myself (which I am entirely happy with by the way), rather it inspired me to actually go through my contact list and remove contacts that are were either outdated, people I actually did not know OR people I know I will never wish to contact again.

My starting point was to look at my calls list and my text messages as well as the Whatsapp app on my phone to determine who had actually been in contact with me or with whom I had initiated contact. That review showed me that of the, somewhere between, 600 and 800 contacts that were in my phone / outlook I have only actually been in regular contact over the 6 weeks (since my phone was replaced) with, optimistically, 25 people. Take out work colleagues and clients and that number shortened to 8 people including my parents and sister. As I do a lot of my “contacting” on social media through twitter that was not an entirely unexpected result but equally it indicated to me that doing a cull now was entirely a good thing.

So I next set about looking at each contact in my address book and deleting them. Some such deleting was easy: I couldn’t remember who the person was let alone how they ended up in my address book in the first place OR they were people who, given events of the past, I will never ever deign to be in contact with again. Other contacts that I was looking took me some time to decide whether to delete or not. Now why is this so? I had not been in contact with some of these people for over a year yet I was torn as to whether to delete their name from my phone address? It struck me during the course of this internal debate raging in my head between deleting and not deleting that what I was doing this morning, in some cases, was the final act to end a friendship or an acquaintance and that I was, in some cases, finding that act very difficult.

Now, I am not that into myself to think that all of these people that I took time to consider whether or not I was “ending the friendship” have spent the last 12 months or more just waiting by the phone just for my call or text. I have no doubt the bulk of people that I actually knew in my address book that I deleted had written off our friendship or acquaintance some time ago. Which, of course, is entirely OK: friendships wane and, to quote a very wise man whose name escapes me, “shit happens”. Indeed, it was somewhat cathartic to press the delete button on some contacts that pushed to the forefront of my mind some fairly rough memories.

There were other contacts in my address book though that I really wrestled with some emotions on just the act the deleting. Some good memories filled my mind about my interactions with those people and I was left to ponder one of the age old questions that people ask themselves and their friends from time to time: why, or more to the point when, did we stop talking? Having had those thoughts I was left with a metaphorical fork in the road: to delete the contact or to keep the contact and actually contact them. In three cases I was pretty sure of the answer to the “why” question and that reason lead me to still hit the delete button. In four other cases I was clueless as to the answer to that same question whilst also genuinely interested in finding out what the person I was reminiscing about was up to, if only to confirm that it was the right time to delete the contact from my phone but also to try and rekindle contact.

10 years ago I would have dialled their numbers and reached out which, for someone like me, would have about as nerve wracking experience as I can imagine. Instead I chose text message as my media of choice to reach out to them. It is here that we get the surprising outcome that I allude to in the title to this post. I have yet to have a response from 2 of the text messages I sent and 1 other message came back with a “think you have the wrong number mate”. The final contact I decided to recontact replied almost immediately and we have since had phone discussion that traversed what has happened in our families, celebrating the recent birth of his second child, lamenting the form of the Australian cricket team and some friendly jousting about the relative strengths of our NRL teams (he is inexplicably still a South Sydney Rabbitohs fan). Toward the end of the conversation I broached the topic of why / when we had stopped talking, admittedly with some trepidation, and, as always seem to be the case when I am most trepidatious, the answer was a simple one to do with life just getting busy and a change in address.

Having had some time to reflect since the culling and the phone conversation of which I speak above, my immediate emotion was happiness that I had undertaken the cull and reconnected with one person. There is also some regret mixed in there though that some of the people who had been my friend in the past I could not bring myself to contact. Nonetheless I am glad I took some time out to tidy up one of the electronic aspects of my life. Similarly inspired I turned my attention to my email inboxes and have gotten my work one down to 16 emails which is a personal record but that is another story.

I leave you with a challenge: have a look at your address book of your phone and if there is someone (or multiple people) in there that you are left with both positive memories and the question of why you stopped talking to them take, to steal from Robert Frost, the road less travelled and reach out. You may be surprised by the outcome!