Things Babies Born in 2011 Will Never Know

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things-babies-born-in-2011-will-never-know: Personal Finance News from Yahoo! Finance

Huffington Post recently put up a story called You're Out: 20 Things That Became Obsolete This Decade. It's a great retrospective on the technology leaps we've made since the new century began, and it got me thinking about the difference today's technology will make in the lives of tomorrow's kids.

I've used some of their ideas and added some of my own to make the list below: Do you think kids born in 2011 will recognize any of the following?
Video tape: Starting this year, the news stories we produce here at Money Talks have all been shot, edited, and distributed to TV stations without ever being on any kind of tape. Not only that, the tape-less broadcast camera we use today offers much higher quality than anything that could have been imagined 10 years ago -- and cost less than the lens on the camera we were using previously.


Travel agents: While not dead today, this profession is one of many that's been decimated by the Internet. When it's time for their honeymoon, will those born in 2011 be able to find one?
The separation of work and home: When you're carrying an email-equipped computer in your pocket, it's not just your friends who can find you -- so can your boss. For kids born this year, the wall between office and home will be blurry indeed.
Books, magazines, and newspapers: Like video tape, words written on dead trees are on their way out. Sure, there may be books -- but for those born today, stores that exist solely to sell them will be as numerous as record stores are now.
Movie rental stores: You actually got in your car and drove someplace just to rent a movie?
Watches: Maybe as quaint jewelry, but the correct time is on your smartphone, which is pretty much always in your hand.
Paper maps: At one time these were available free at every gas station. They're practically obsolete today, and the next generation will probably have to visit a museum to find one.
Wired phones: Why would you pay $35 every month to have a phone that plugs into a wall? For those born today, this will be a silly concept.
Long distance: Thanks to the Internet, the days of paying more to talk to somebody in the next city, state, or even country are limited.

Newspaper classifieds: The days are gone when you have to buy a bunch of newsprint just to see what's for sale.
Dial-up Internet: While not everyone is on broadband, it won't be long before dial-up Internet goes the way of the plug-in phone.
Encyclopedias: Imagine a time when you had to buy expensive books that were outdated before the ink was dry. This will be a nonsense term for babies born today.
Forgotten friends: Remember when an old friend would bring up someone you went to high school with, and you'd say, "Oh yeah, I forgot about them!" The next generation will automatically be in touch with everyone they've ever known even slightly via Facebook.
Forgotten anything else: Kids born this year will never know what it was like to stand in a bar and incessantly argue the unknowable. Today the world's collective knowledge is on the computer in your pocket or purse. And since you have it with you at all times, why bother remembering anything?
The evening news: The news is on 24/7. And if you're not home to watch it, that's OK -- it's on the smartphone in your pocket.
CDs: First records, then 8-track, then cassette, then CDs -- replacing your music collection used to be an expensive pastime. Now it's cheap(er) and as close as the nearest Internet connection.
Film cameras: For the purist, perhaps, but for kids born today, the word "film" will mean nothing. In fact, even digital cameras -- both video and still -- are in danger of extinction as our pocket computers take over that function too.
Yellow and White Pages: Why in the world would you need a 10-pound book just to find someone?
Catalogs: There's no need to send me a book in the mail when I can see everything you have for sale anywhere, anytime. If you want to remind me to look at it, send me an email.
Fax machines: Can you say "scan," ".pdf" and "email?"
One picture to a frame: Such a waste of wall/counter/desk space to have a separate frame around each picture. Eight gigabytes of pictures and/or video in a digital frame encompassing every person you've ever met and everything you've ever done -- now, that's efficient. Especially compared to what we used to do: put our friends and relatives together in a room and force them to watch what we called a "slide show" or "home movies."
Wires: Wires connecting phones to walls? Wires connecting computers, TVs, stereos, and other electronics to each other? Wires connecting computers to the Internet? To kids born in 2011, that will make as much sense as an electric car trailing an extension cord.
Hand-written letters: For that matter, hand-written anything. When was the last time you wrote cursive? In fact, do you even know what the word "cursive" means? Kids born in 2011 won't -- but they'll put you to shame on a tiny keyboard.
Talking to one person at a time: Remember when it was rude to be with one person while talking to another on the phone? Kids born today will just assume that you're supposed to use texting to maintain contact with five or six other people while pretending to pay attention to the person you happen to be physically next to.
Retirement plans: Yes, Johnny, there was a time when all you had to do was work at the same place for 20 years and they'd send you a check every month for as long as you lived. In fact, some companies would even pay your medical bills, too!
Mail: What's left when you take the mail you receive today, then subtract the bills you could be paying online, the checks you could be having direct-deposited, and the junk mail you could be receiving as junk email? Answer: A bloated bureaucracy that loses billions of taxpayer dollars annually.
Commercials on TV: They're terrifically expensive, easily avoided with DVRs, and inefficiently target mass audiences. Unless somebody comes up with a way to force you to watch them -- as with video on the Internet -- who's going to pay for them?
Commercial music radio: Smartphones with music-streaming programs like Pandora are a better solution that doesn't include ads screaming between every song.
Hiding: Not long ago, if you didn't answer your home phone, that was that -- nobody knew if you were alive or dead, much less where you might be. Now your phone is not only in your pocket, it can potentially tell everyone -- including advertisers -- exactly where you are.
#2011
  • Profile picture of the author seasoned
    HEY, for at least 79 YEARS we have been told that ALL phones as we know them will be GONE! They will be on the WATCH! NOW, this article says the WATCH will disappear? What they SHOULD do is put EVERYTHING on the watch, and we can get a tablet of sorts to wirelessly communicate with the watch that would make it like a computer. Outside of the size problem, they have ALL the technology to do that NOW! Did you know that the average CPU is only a tiny FRACTION of the size of its case?

    Videotape started dying out around the late 1980s. I think everyone saw the writing on the wall. When I stepped into a store, and realized beta was almost GONE, it was like WOW!

    Travel AGENTS probably died out in the 70s. Around the 80s, they were merely salespeople. I mean it would be HARD for priceline to replace a good agent, but EASY to replace a salesperson. It would be nice to have travel agents again. Ones that could offer options, suggest good points, know laws, etc.... Alas, today you have to know almost EVERYTHING about the trip in question.

    Rental stores made more sense in the early to mid 80s when tapes cost MUCH more, Still, I bet stores will have their place, but probably be in vending machines, since it can be stored digitally.

    Retirement plans have also been gone for most public jobs.

    Steve
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  • Profile picture of the author 82ana
    Really, wires too? Everything else seems plausible except the wires and the useless encyclopedias. Where could we dump them? )
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    • Profile picture of the author seasoned
      Originally Posted by 82ana View Post

      Really, wires too? Everything else seems plausible except the wires and the useless encyclopedias. Where could we dump them? )
      Oh yeah, I meant to mention. PC boards and the plastic conductive cables, HAVE replaced a lot of wires, but wires are STILL needed for MANY things. The idea of fiberoptic iss overdone, a lot that is said about fiber optic is HYPE! Connecting them is more difficult, and you need trunsducers on BOTH sides. So they are impractical for say the average stereo speakers, etc... And wireless communications can cost more, have less fidelity, etc... Wires may be here to stay. BTW antennas, inductors, transformers STILL require WIRE!

      Steve
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  • Profile picture of the author Hanz
    Originally Posted by Aussie_Al View Post

    Film cameras: For the purist, perhaps, but for kids born today, the word "film" will mean nothing. In fact, even digital cameras -- both video and still -- are in danger of extinction as our pocket computers take over that function too.
    Do pocket computers record at full 1080p? Sounds interesting.
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    • Profile picture of the author strategic
      OMG! this is all so true... I have a lifetime of experience with all these things...

      I was thrilled in the late 70's when modern clip in golfball font Electric typewriters came on the market, and thought I had died and gone to heaven when they produced a carbon ribbon cartridge that worked with a 'lift off' sticky eraser tape to correct typos even better than the fantastic invention of ... oh yeah ... TIPEX!

      And am I the only person on the planet to still have a file with some spare carbon paper?

      And we had one of the first little desktop photocopiers! Rolls of shiny light sensitive paper that had to be kept in dark files once you made the scan ''photocopy" as it would fade back to a blank page if left in the sun long enough! Imagine what this could do to records in a law office - ROFLMAO!

      It's only a few years ago that I upgraded from the common faxes with photosensitive rolls of paper, to the plain paper printing faxes.

      My first Video recorder was a Grundig... huge square double scroll cassettes... we debated about beta v. pal but decided in our wisdom that Grundig was definitely the one to bank on - lol!

      I was amazed by the Dictaphone... such a timesaver instead of sitting there listening to dictation taken in shorthand.... (yes, I am that freaking old!)

      I even trained to use the Telex (typed paper strip code for transmitting telegram type message) before I bought a FAX machine for my office (it was the size of a large washing machine!)

      Hey, whatever happened to TELEGRAMS? Remember when you could be contacted anywhere in the world with an urgent Telegram message?

      And in 1987 I refused to get one of those new-fangled mobile phones because I would have to carry a heavy battery BRIEFCASE for it - It was so much easier later when everyone had their mobile installed into their CAR.

      Remember when everyone would proudly (and loudly) announce "I'm just going out to my car to make an urgent call" .... so terribly sophisticated and JetSet 1980's ...

      Nowadays everyone just screams into mobile phones... no, correction, nobody talks even when face-to-face because they are too busy texting to other people 24/7 - WTF? I will happily go to my grave without ever mastering that skill. eg: C U L8tr ... no wonder people can't spell anymore!

      Then in 1990 I was dragged kicking and screaming (literally!) from my electric typewriter to learn how to use computers on the brand new Apple Mac desktop (with I think they were about 8" screens!)

      I still have my first privately owned Personal Computer with Word from 1994. I can't get internet on it anymore because I was told it only had 2gb memory/harddrive/whatever. I asked if that isn't less than the average wristwatch has nowadays.

      I think my latest computer has 700gb which will last me another few years since I don't store games etc. Last one melted down with my business documents exceeding the 100gb storage

      I felt like a Neanderthal the other day when I took the last picture frame in my camera and had the roll of film developed... I just hope I can keep buying films (and getting them developed) for a while longer, as I'm sentimental.

      I doubt that many people born as recently as the past 20 years would have a clue what most of the above things are... I still feel faint and need "a cuppa tea and a lie down" whenever some young adult serving me in a store turns out to have been born in the 90's! I have shoes older than them!

      I still have a box full of "Thank You" cards that I send occasionally, along with Birthday and Christmas cards. No-one much seems to send Christmas cards anymore, which I do miss. But with Post Offices closing all over the place for lack of profits, we might literally be using 'snail mail' in the future - lol!

      And I had great pleasure in canceling my mobile phone when I retired. Now I can screen or choose to just ignore a call on my land-line and let it go to the answering machine when I don't want to talk to anyone. And the harassment to get on Skype et al will continue to fall on deaf ears here.

      I definitely feel that I have more privacy now and feel much less hounded.

      There was absolutely no way to escape from people who assumed I have nothing better to do than drop what I'm doing right now and take their VIP call/text/email/whatever.

      The demand for 'instant attention' is too draining for my poor old soul, ... "so please leave a message and I'll get back to you ... when I jolly well feel like it!"

      Helene Malmsio
      Official Old Fart!

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