do we desire more simple tools ?

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Is it inevitable that technological tools feature creep. Mobile phones started as a tool to make a call, with a small facility to store numbers. Then SMS arrived and gradually phones have had more and more things added to them. So much so that the basic talking to people function is not the focus of the device anymore.
I have also been reading an article on the possible future of camera like devices and some thoughts struck me - is there a market for a simple phone or simple camera and what do I carry with me and what do I really need and use.
I have my camera, a Canon Powershot A70; my phone, a Sony Ericsson T68i and my PowerBook. Bluetooth connects them together via a D-Link USB Bluetooth Adapter DBT-120. I tend to carry my PowerBook, phone, camera and of course I bring my iPod (30GB, 15GB and 10GB) virtually everywhere with me. The new ones do look very nice, particularily the ability to use AA batteries with them.
My palm pilot sits forlorn and dormant at home, until I get moblogging ideas from time to time. It has been displaced by my phone and a sheet of paper.
I did use my palm quite a lot, but with a powerbook, there just isn't the call for it and it is just easier to use paper to keep my todo lists on. I've found that a folded bit of A4 in my jeans pocket is perfect for running my life, much faster to use than a pda. It affords use, there is virtually no user interface to it, the idea is almost funny. I can check it anywhere, to integrate with everything else, I manually transfer tasks from it to my laptop from time to time, usually when rewriting it. Most of the jobs on it are transient tasks, like call someone etc, so there need be no record.
My phone keeps my numbers and a snapshot of my calendar via iSync with my PowerBook which is the home for everything. With a digital camera I do take a lot more pictures than I did on film, but it is still quite in fits and starts.
I think that three to four devices is my limit, one to communicate with, one to listen to and one to capture pictures with. Plus my computer for writing, organising and storing all of this. Realistically I cannot see any of these devices disappearing.
I like taking pictures too much to loose the amount of control that camera phones represent. I need some manual control and a decent lens, this is present in the A70, but my film camera is still much more of a picture taking tool. I cannot imagine putting a bulky device like a combo pda phone in my pocket and carrying it around with me everywhere. I dislike the P800 or the new three phones for this reason, much too big.
The iPod is pretty perfect, even better now it is smaller and lighter. the design has been thought about clearly and it is just right for use as a music playback device. It would never work as a camera, though it could have a radio or video playback added without spoiling it too much.
So for me it is focused devices that do one job well and do not obscure it under a morasse of other functionaility. Certain features might be handy, GPS can give me location and then with internet access this can give me local information. However this is an add on, like word processors, phones have got to the point were they attempt to do everything badly.
This seems to be turning into an anti-pda and or smart phone rant and it sort of is I suppose, laptops are getting cheaper and better, so a phone, laptop and camera dispenses with the need for a pda smart phone type device. I can't see the point anymore, I'd rather have a decent screen to read and a large keyboard to type on. I know that my pda can offer me amazing things, but are they really just a glorified notebook for the laptopless. I don't want to have to carry another device around and keep it up todate with everything else. Technology is meant to solve problems, not create them. More on this and short reviews of some things I like in the next few days.

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2 Comments

You might still be within Steve's reality distortion field ;-)

I refer to his pick that you do not need a complex smartphone but rather a simple phone that has an agenda/phone book/todo list that can be synchronized with a master on your computer ("people prefer to type on a computer").

I don't buy it anymore. Now that I have a smartphone with a touch screen and keyboard there are many situations in my everyday life where I don't need anything else to note an appointment or take a note. And even so it's slightly bigger than a regular phone, it's way better than carrying a PowerBook!

However YMMV and you are right about the size/weight (like for the P800, which I would prefer cheaper, smaller and without that mediocre camera). I think we have not yet seen what they can achieve in terms of design of those things, if only they can get back to earth and design for usability instead that for hype.

I might have to recant on some of this, I've now bought a 6600 and use it for small emails, and taking pictures for Flickr, the 6600 camera is just good enough and the digital camera too bulky or just not pocket sized.

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This page contains a single entry by Gavin Bell published on July 23, 2003 5:54 PM.

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