Smarty Pants: The iPhone in Your Pocket May be Brighter Than you Think

By Morgan Watkins, 24 August, 2016

I was so naive. I used to equate artificial intelligence with politicians. I believed that computing devices were, at best, simple automatons. Perhaps I got the definitions switched. Or patently wrong. Today, as I observe people and watch how they interact with their iPhones, I see an unprecedented synergy and I wonder if we are beginning to meld with our new technologies. It's a thought.

Ever since the days of the ENIAC computer, with its thousands of vacuum tubes, we have been taught that any strange or erratic behavior was due to operator error or faulty programmer logic. I'm not so sure. Some of my early interactions with desktop computers made me wonder. Twenty years ago, I would write formal letters and memos to President Berdahl at the University of Texas. He was a very nice and personable man. Still, I would never presume to be casual with our written communications. I was always careful to get the slightly odd spelling of his last name just right. Even so, every time I would type Berdahl in a document, my computer would attempt to substitute his name with either "Bedroll" or "Bordello." A sentient machine? Unlikely, but give it time.

I never felt intellectually inferior to my first iPhone, except when it took me a week to learn how to make and receive calls. With VoiceOver, the iPhone seemed like such a wondrous and supportive partner. I would slip the iPhone into my pocket and take it everywhere. My iPhone could do anything, and I often let it do much of my thinking. Over the years, I have discovered that I cannot do without it. It's become a part of me.

Although I have much greater access to information, the iPhone will not always help me look intelligent. Many times in restaurants, I have been happily tapping away on my iPhone, conserving battery life and protecting my privacy by turning off the backlight with the Screen Curtain option. Just when I feel like the world is at my fingertips, someone will approach me and say, "Sir, I'm not sure if you know this, but your iPhone is turned off." Ugh. I will call this a draw. Neither the onlooker nor my iPhone appear particularly bright.

Our iPhones may seem enlightened because the way we use them can make us appear dim. Look no further than the men's restroom at an airport. I remember the first time that a guy, behind a closed stall door, suddenly and robustly asked how the family was doing. Excuse me? I quickly figured out that I need not reply as he was on the phone with someone else. I certainly would not want to be the one conversing with him at that moment. Unfortunately, that was not an isolated incident. Nowadays, bathroom stalls have become our contemporary telephone booths. This should not become the new norm. Remember, we still have brains.

In my own way, I have also become overly dependent on my iPhone. Ever since the latest political mud wrestling slogged into low gear, the Apple News app has been forcing me to remain in my comfy chair where I spend a considerable number of unhealthy hours perusing the latest antics, attacks and insults. I don't have to think. I don't have to look for related stories. My iPhone knows what I'd like to read. Or perhaps I am reading what my iPhone wants me to read. It may be taking control.

Letting my iPhone think for me may not be such a great idea. Relinquishing power usually costs me money. How can my iPhone impact me financially? Simple. The App Store. Convenient, ubiquitous and very profitable. Unfortunately for the human race, buying cool stuff is addictive. I own a multitude of iOS word processors, yet I only use Voice Dream Reader. I've paid for several sound editors, but I do everything with Ferrite Recording Studio. I love the Nature Space app and have bought more than 125 relaxing sound tracks. How many do I listen to? Just one. And, I have more violin tuners than violins.

I used to be so proud that I knew the value of pi out to 15 significant digits. I should have had higher aspirations. Today, I have memorized all 16 numbers on my debit card, plus the expiration date, and the super secret code on the back. My iPhone talked me into giving those numbers to Apple. And, Apple knows I like to press "Buy" buttons. The technology is smarter than we think.

I am convinced that iPhones are taking over our lives. Resistance is futile. I am constantly drawn to my iPhone, day and night. I do not like putting it down because I would be lonely without it. I check for app updates at least three times a day. I study the latest rumors about iOS 10 and the upcoming iPhones. I live on AppleVis. I am one with the ecosystem. I have joined the Collective. I have been assimilated.


G. Morgan Watkins spent thirty years at the University of Texas at Austin, most of it in information technology leadership. He also enjoyed thirteen years on the Board of Directors at Guide Dogs for the Blind. After retiring from the University , Morgan served as the Guide Dogs for the Blind Acting President and CEO.

Morgan is now happily retired again, playing his violin and writing for pleasure. Morgan has created eleven other blogs for AppleVis, including "Small Talk: Speaking up on VoiceOver and the iPhone," "Lesson Learned: iPhones and Orange Bugs," and "Socially Inept: Trying to make friends with Facebook."

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Comments

By Ken Downey on Tuesday, August 23, 2016 - 00:50

Welcome to the collective. Next year we'll be installing the ocular implants, brain enhancement devices and, of course, the neural transeiver. Our thoughts will be one. Until then, just keep tapping away at your phone... and forget all about the things we told you here today.

By Nicholas on Tuesday, August 23, 2016 - 00:50

Resistance is futile! :-)

Love your blogs! Keep them coming.

By Roxann Pollard on Tuesday, August 23, 2016 - 00:50

I have joined the Collective. I have been assimilated, too. Where would we be without our beloved iPhones? I relate with this article all too familiarly.

Thanks for another great read, Morgan.

By Holger Fiallo on Tuesday, August 23, 2016 - 00:50

I love my iPhone but I had not giving it control over me. I like to do the tinking. It is not logical to let machine do are thinking. Therefore Resistance is not futile. May the iPhone live long and prosper but not take over us.

By Blind Adrenaline on Tuesday, August 23, 2016 - 00:50

Thanks for the piece Mr. Watkins, always enjoy your thoughts sir.
We're getting closer to a sloth like perfection, physically speaking that is. As soon as I get my Beer teleportation app finished, the whole opening the refridgerator thing will be a dusty memory.
"Hey Siri, beer me."

By Morgan Watkins on Tuesday, August 23, 2016 - 00:50

Thanks for the fun feedback. I really enjoyed your comments! I was hoping that my last paragraph might bring a smile to those who recognized the reference. You all absolutely made my day!

Best wishes,

Morgan

By Lysette Chaproniere on Tuesday, August 23, 2016 - 00:50

I relate to a lot of what you've written here: the obsessive checking for app updates, buying more word processors and audio apps than I need, and, indeed, buying a lot of apps because they sound interesting and not because I need them. My iPhone has become my connection to the world. I use it for just about everything; I seldom use my laptop these days, because my iPhone can do just about everything it does and more.

It's quite something given my reluctance to get my first iPhone. I didn't think I could possibly use it. Even its popularity among blind people didn't convince me. Perhaps some blind people can learn how to use a touch screen, I thought, but I'm not one of them. Three years ago I gave in. I'm glad I did. One of the positive effects the iPhone has had on me is that I've been reading a lot more than I did before. I've never really liked reading braille, as I find it quite cumbersome, but now I have ways of getting and reading books from mainstream sources. I can even read books on niche/obscure topics that aren't likely to be on specialist book services because there probably aren't many blind people interested in them, not because blind people are necessarily especially unlikely to be interested in those books, but because the number of people interested in them is small, as is the number of blind people, so the number of blind people with that interest is even smaller.

Dear LC3249,

Whata great note. Perhaps you are my long lost twin. Our experiences with the iPhone are very similar.

Thanks for sharing. Your comment was a lot of fun to read.

Best wishes,

Morgan

By Geneva E. Harris on Friday, September 23, 2016 - 00:50

That IPhones are taking over our lives. There is the App Store an the iTunes store. Also, there is the fact every time Apple releases something new, a lot of people have an urge to have the latest Apple product.