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Post by al on Oct 1, 2019 6:02:46 GMT 10
Having a flip phone in 2009 was sorta like having an iPhone 5 or 6 today. You could still get one and they were still viable but nobody was gonna brag about it.
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Post by Telso on Oct 2, 2019 20:28:18 GMT 10
Having a flip phone in 2009 was sorta like having an iPhone 5 or 6 today. You could still get one and they were still viable but nobody was gonna brag about it. Yeah if anything slider phones, keyboard phones and cheaper touchscreen alternatives were much more prevalent.
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Post by unicornic on Oct 6, 2019 22:04:47 GMT 10
It makes you wonder how everything will be in 10 years. It is hard to believe that people still used blackberry phones in 2010. Because when you think about it the early 2010s were not that long ago. But yet look where we are today.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Oct 6, 2019 22:24:57 GMT 10
It makes you wonder how everything will be in 10 years. It is hard to believe that people still used blackberry phones in 2010. Because when you think about it the early 2010s were not that long ago. But yet look where we are today. I think we'll still be using smartphones similar to today's (maybe foldable) in 2030. People mistakenly believe that having "new" gadgets is what counts as progress: we didn't have radios and then we did, we didn't have TVs and then we did, we didn't have computers and then we did etc. But with smartphones the end goal has always been to consolidate everything into one device. Having a second device defeats the purpose. So for people hoping that the future will have some new gadget will be left wanting. The software within smartphones from 2010 is nothing like it is in 2019. We are capable of doing so much more with them now, it has transformed our way of living. I don't think 2010 has much in common with 2019, I would say the year had more in common with the early 2000s than today.
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