The smart phone has replaced television, books, magazines, the radio, stereo systems, newspapers, gaming consoles, computers, and even movies. Oddly enough, some people even use it as a telephone!
Screen time has become a big issue these days. People complain they are addicted to the smart phone or that kids are spending too much time staring at screens. This sounds to me like an echo from an earlier time when people worried so much about how much television they watched - and their kids watched. Average person, back then, watched 4 hours or more a day!
If you add in the time spent reading books, magazines, and newspapers, well, it pretty much equals the amount of "screen time" people spend on their phones. Remember when "flip phones" first came out and the cashiers at WalMart would spend all day on the phone, even while checking out your groceries?
The point is (and I did have one) that we have simply transferred our obsessive-compulsive behavior from one type of technology to another. Spending four hours a day staring at your phone is no worse (or no better) that gaming for four hours a day, or watching banal network teevee for the same time period - or any activity that consumes large portions of your "free" time or even encroaches on your not-so-free time.
In a sense, the smart phone has merely consolidated all of our "time-wasters" into one device.
But something else is afoot. Some are calling it "the dead internet" - going online these days is as unfulfilling as humping one of those inflatable sex dolls. It just isn't even close to real satisfaction. Similarly, the Internet these days seems to be one giant shilling machine, trying to sell, sell, sell you something, as if buying stuff was the answer to all of life's little problems.
I wrote before how tourist attractions always have a gift shop that you have to exit through, and how tourists feel obligated to buy junky tchotchke whether they need it or not. To most people, vacation means a series of spending opportunities, and people will eagerly queue up to buy things or get tickets to an attraction.
The people running the Internet (and they are running it, now) realized this and turned every Google inquiry into a sale opportunity. Pretty soon - if not already - the Internet will be reduced to merely AI-generated superficiality and "sponsored content" links.
Even - or especially - the "News" is all about selling - selling your eyeballs to advertisers or your soul to a political party. News articles are no longer informative, but just click-bait and rage-bait to get you to watch some ads. Even "mainstream" news sources preface article titles with phrases such as "You'll never believe..." (you will) or "Is it true that..." (no, it is not) just to get you to click.
I am done with articles that have titles like, "You'll never believe what outrageous thing Trump said/did today!" Let me guess - something outrageously stupid, right? Saved us all a click.
I have been trying, instead, to read more books, preferably the real kind you hold, or failing that, the thousands stored on our pad device.
Rather than read the news or look at social media, I have found an entertaining and educational alternative. I go on Wikipedia and hit "random article" and read about some obscure British politician, a soccer (football player) who died in 1996, a long-dead English cricketer, a famous Bollywood actor, an obscure township in Minnesota, or a random train station in Japan. There is nothing to sell or buy - although Wikipedia does whore for donations about once a year. There is little in the way of a political agenda, despite the claims by the GOP that reality has a left-wing bias. Best of all, no AI-generated spew or sponsored content ads.
This is not to say all the articles are unbiased. The wiki nature of the site allows people to edit articles and often people try to "spin" an article with a certain slant, or merely vandalize a page if they don't like the topic. But usually such vandalism is cleaned up in short order, and it isn't hard to spot a political white-wash job on some other pages. Since I am reading random articles, well, there is little in the way of click-bait or rage-bait on the agenda.
It feels good to learn something new, even if it seems like useless information at the time. One quickly realizes that there is a lot that most all of us don't know, which gives me (at least) a feeling of awe and wonderment about our world.
It isn't the solution to the screen time problem, but it beats Facebook, Tick-Tock, or Reddit!