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- <h2 id="org9bb3fa0">Don't Use a Smartphone</h2>
- <div class="outline-text-2" id="text-org9bb3fa0">
- <div class="PREVIEW" id="org54e5354">
- <p>
- Back in 2018 I wrote an article explaining <a href="http://nuclearkev.org/articles/back-to-webos.html">why I went back to using webOS</a>. It
- talked about how my iPhone broke and I finally had the opportunity to use a
- Palm/HP device. This experience only lasted a year due to some carrier issues
- but it changed my take on cell phones entirely. Since the phone was so old, only
- a few things worked - mostly thanks to the awesome <a href="https://forums.webosnation.com/forum.php">community</a>. This left me with
- a sort of semi-smart phone. It didn't have social media but I could use the web
- a bit and get my email. Most importantly not having tons of apps and features
- really made me "wake up" to the reality of things: People are being controlled.
- </p>
- </div>
- <p>
- I have always loved phones and small technology. Maybe it was because I spend so
- much time playing GameBoy? My love only got deeper and deeper around 2007-2010
- when all these super cool feature phones were coming out. Some of them flipped
- <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samsung_U740_Alias">horizontally and vertically</a>, others slide up portrait-style, and one even
- <a href="https://www.phonearena.com/phones/Samsung-Juke_id2392">slide in a circular motion</a>. Then around 2009 or so the <i>smartphone</i> became a
- thing! It was so cool that I would do anything to get one. I spend hours and
- hours watching videos on phones such as the <a href="https://www.gsmarena.com/palm_pre_plus-3249.php">Palm Pre Plus</a>, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Kin">Microsoft Kin</a>, and
- early android phones like the <a href="https://www.gsmarena.com/motorola_droid_3-4036.php">Motorola Droid 3</a>. There was so much uniqueness in
- each one of these devices that picking one was basically impossible!
- </p>
- <p>
- As time went on the market began to settle…. Palm was destroyed by HP,
- Microsoft gave up, and even Blackberry succumbed to the two powers: Apple and
- Google - well, Apple and android. In my opinion the market officially became
- stale around 2014. You either had an iPhone or an android device or bust. This
- same thing is still true today - which begs the question: What if you don't want
- an iPhone or android phone?
- </p>
- <p>
- Before we can answer this question we need to firstly examine why someone
- wouldn't want an iPhone or android phone. Well, the easiest reason is that the
- person is old and just wants a phone to call and lightly text. But why would
- someone who is <i>totally tech savvy</i> want neither of these? Well, there are
- really 3 reason: privacy, mental health, and price.
- </p>
- </div>
- <div id="outline-container-org98a504a" class="outline-3">
- <h3 id="org98a504a">Privacy</h3>
- <div class="outline-text-3" id="text-org98a504a">
- <p>
- Let me make this abundantly clear no matter what you do an iPhone is not safe in
- terms of privacy. No matter what Apple tells you. Their entire system is
- proprietary so we have no way to prove that the system is safe. As far as I'm
- aware not even jailbreaking an iPhone would keep you safe from their spyware. If
- you think Android is safe, you're wrong again! It was made by Google, the worst
- of the worst when it comes to privacy. Their entire business model is: "sell
- user data." How do you think they got so rich from just being a search engine?
- The only way to run android in a semi-safe fashion is by using <a href="https://lineageos.org/">LineageOS</a>
- (forked for CyanogenMod) or, better yet, <a href="https://replicant.us/">Replicant</a>. Lineage is basically a
- de-Googled Android, which is great but still has proprietary blobs in the
- kernel. Replicant is as free as you can get with Android yet it lacks decent
- hardware support. That being said, there is basically no way to run iOS or
- Android, in a reasonable way, safely!
- </p>
- </div>
- </div>
- <div id="outline-container-orgf0efeae" class="outline-3">
- <h3 id="orgf0efeae">Mental Health</h3>
- <div class="outline-text-3" id="text-orgf0efeae">
- <p>
- If you know me, I don't usually say "mental health." I find that phrase overused
- and kind of annoying. However, in this case, it is proper to use it. Smartphones
- mess with your mind! Just like how <a href="https://www.unixsheikh.com/articles/social-networking-suck.html">social media is cancerous</a>, smartphones only
- aid to its power. If you take the poison of social media and constantly carry it
- around in your pocket, you're asking for trouble. Social media causes people to
- constantly wanting attention - you gotta have the most upvotes, gotta have the
- most friends, gotta check out this chat! This will drive you crazy, without you
- necessarily knowing it. Not to mention you'll only see what other <i>want</i> you to
- see: only the good of themselves or, in a seasons, only the bad of others. This
- is incredibly divisive. Once you got many months without having that crap
- constantly annoying you, you'll begin to notice how much more <i>free</i> you feel!
- It honestly is a great feeling.
- </p>
- <p>
- Smartphones only amplify the toxin by constantly reminding you that so-and-so
- posted this and this guy liked that. Not to mention, smartphones add another
- ingredient to the nauseous mixture: connectivity. If you were obsessed with
- social media and all you had was a desktop you'd have to either quit your job
- and do social media all day or wait until you got home. With a smartphone,
- you're always connected. Which <i>could</i> be a good thing<sup><a id="fnr.1" class="footref" href="#fn.1" role="doc-backlink">1</a></sup> but ultimately just
- gives you the ticket to stay hooked on it forever. The addiction of the
- smartphone will never stop until you remove the smartphone.<sup><a id="fnr.2" class="footref" href="#fn.2" role="doc-backlink">2</a></sup>
- </p>
- </div>
- </div>
- <div id="outline-container-orga4ed131" class="outline-3">
- <h3 id="orga4ed131">Price</h3>
- <div class="outline-text-3" id="text-orga4ed131">
- <p>
- Smartphones are so damn expensive. Seriously, they are! The new iPhone 12 and
- Galaxy S20 XXX MAX EPIC are like $1,000. The worst part is that in like 2 years
- you'll probably need a new one due to all the planned obsolesce these companies
- do. Some people would rather put their money into something that will actually
- last!
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- Well, couldn't you have all those problems on Blackberry OS – or on any
- smartphone OS? Yes, you could - and I don't recommend them either. Although
- you're significantly less likely to have those issues with on something like
- <a href="https://postmarketos.org/">postmarketOS</a> which doesn't have native social media apps, doesn't have
- proprietary spyware, and isn't designed to fail after a few years. That being
- said, I recommend that you <b>don't use a smartphone</b>. Get rid of it and use
- something that will let you live your life without constantly worrying about
- social media and without spending $1,000 every 2 years.<sup><a id="fnr.3" class="footref" href="#fn.3" role="doc-backlink">3</a></sup>
- </p>
- </div>
- </div>
- <div id="outline-container-org9d58a0b" class="outline-3">
- <h3 id="org9d58a0b">EDIT {2020-12-02}</h3>
- <div class="outline-text-3" id="text-org9d58a0b">
- <p>
- I didn't realize that I didn't mention the evils of companies uses the GPS,
- camera, microphone, and other techniques to sell your data. This is another
- good reason to avoid smartphones. Since virtually all smartphones come with a
- GPS module, 2 cameras (at least), many microphones, and proprietary drivers
- and software that prevent you from knowing if something bad is going on, it's
- quite the good argument <i>against</i> smartphones. As I explain in my article on
- <a href="dumb-dumb-phones.html">why modern dumb phones are dumb</a>, I talk about how non-smartphones are plagued
- by the same issues.
- </p>
- <p>
- Another item I didn't talk about was the use of a <a href="https://www.pine64.org/pinephone/">PinePhone</a> or <a href="https://puri.sm/products/librem-5/">Librem 5</a>,
- which are rather safe devices, don't have native social media apps, and are
- reasonably priced with little chance of planned obsolesce. I agree that these
- are the <i>best</i> option for a smartphone currently. Two things to keep in mind
- here are that there are currently (as of 2020-12-02) no operating systems
- that are stable yet and that they <b>will not be anything</b> <b>like iOS or
- Android</b>. To extrapolate on that last part: there won't be tons and tons of
- apps that you can download. For the most part, these will be smartphones but
- without the massive number of apps. You should expect the "basics" such as
- phone, messaging (SMS/MMS), email, calendar, notes, maps, browser, alarm, and
- probably a few other games and <i>maybe</i> an app for <a href="https://joinmastodon.org/">Mastodon</a> or something. That
- being said, these devices aren't really in the same league as iOS and Android
- phones so I can't really say that they'll have the same negative
- effects. However, I have a feeling that even though they don't have the
- "same" capabilities currently, they will still cause the same effects just in
- a different fashion. What I mean is that you'll still probably stare at your
- phone all day long - scrolling and scrolling… Either way, these devices are
- the <span class="underline">only</span> smartphone that I can recommend at this point if you must have a
- smartphone.
- </p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
- <div id="footnotes">
- <h2 class="footnotes">Footnotes: </h2>
- <div id="text-footnotes">
- <div class="footdef"><sup><a id="fn.1" class="footnum" href="#fnr.1" role="doc-backlink">1</a></sup> <div class="footpara" role="doc-footnote"><p class="footpara">
- I have a philosophy called <i>The Fine Line of Technology</i> which talks
- about how every technological advancement has a fine line between using it for
- good and for evil.
- </p></div></div>
- <div class="footdef"><sup><a id="fn.2" class="footnum" href="#fnr.2" role="doc-backlink">2</a></sup> <div class="footpara" role="doc-footnote"><p class="footpara">
- Some folks think you can keep the smartphone and just delete the
- accounts. This <i>can</i> work but it's kind of like fighting an alcohol addiction
- while living next to a Wines & Spirits store…
- </p></div></div>
- <div class="footdef"><sup><a id="fn.3" class="footnum" href="#fnr.3" role="doc-backlink">3</a></sup> <div class="footpara" role="doc-footnote"><p class="footpara">
- I didn't mention privacy here because most non-smartphones still run
- proprietary systems that are based on <a href="https://www.android.com/versions/go-edition/">Android Go</a> (and still have Google
- services) or <a href="https://www.kaiostech.com/">KaiOS</a> (which is owned by Google and therefore has their spyware
- installed). Read about it <a href="dumb-dumb-phones.html">here</a>.
- </p></div></div>
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- <div id="postamble" class="status">
- <p class="author">Author: Kevin "The Nuclear" Bloom</p>
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