I feel like I haven't written anything in quite some time. So, here are my comments on a couple of different things that I've read recently. cmccabe wrote about the replacement of his employer-provided BlackBerry[1] with a touch screen device. I read that 'rant' -- and solderpunk's reply-rant[2] -- with some interest. Unlike solderpunk, I'm not too worried about giving phones too much attention. I love/hate mine. I love a few of the functions, but some days hate the connectivity, which is actually quite minimal in my case. I have used a BlackBerry for years now. I maintained a couple of threads on CrackBerry on using the Bold 9900 without BlackBerry's Internet Service, with tips on setup, apps that work without BIS, creating service books to enable MMS messaging, and syncing PIM. I moved that information to my own website about a year ago. I've been toying with the idea of moving those sites to my gopher server, and may do so soon. It would involve a lot of gophermap creation, since the pages are loaded with links, but I like self-hosting, so it would probably be worth the effort. As cmccabe noted, it is very difficult to switch away from a physical keyboard. I also agree with solderpunk that a removable battery and headphone jack are necessities. For me, it's not yet necessary to give those things up. I only text, email, and listen to music and podcasts on my phone. Calling is a rarity. All I need is the equivalent of a feature phone. Canada still has well-provisioned 3G networks, so for now, the Bold 9900 (3G) is still usable, and BB10 devices (with LTE) should be usable for many more years (as long as they aren't incapacitated by the server shutdown at the end of the year). If the BB10 devices do work after the shutdown, they'll share a real benefit of BBOS devices without BIS -- in that they connect to no particular vendor's centralized server system. When I use the Bold 9900, if I don't actually DO something, it uses zero data. Days can pass with absolutely no usage. I like that, for reasons political, philosophical, and economical. * * * On an unrelated note, snowcrash, you're definitely not alone in feeling like you're spinning aimlessly around the wheel of time. When I read your phlog entry[3], I thought, that's me. Right down to the 15 years until I can retire. Maybe the impetus is on us to do something different in our lives -- to break the cycle. I can't think of any other solution to the endless and monotonous repetition. [1] gopher://zaibatsu.circumlunar.space/0/%7ecmccabe/11-producer-to-consumer.txt [2] gopher://zaibatsu.circumlunar.space/0/%7esolderpunk/phlog/phone-ranting.txt [3] gopher://sdf.org/0/users/snowcrash/phlog/2019-02-08-0539_THE_WHEEL_OF_TIME.txt