Top 10 tech innovations that have made life better

With all the buzz from Apple’s latest invention ringing in my ears, I started thinking about gadgets and new technology, and how much of it really has value. In this world of constantly-updated gadgetry, it’s hard to separate the wheat from the chaff.

iPad this, iPad that.  Status updates about purchasing the shiny things, news reports about Apple store lines that stretch for days. Techies singing its praises and luddites slagging the device, and vice versa. I admit that without any particular interest in its features, I’ve been partially detached from the media glaze regarding this new laptop-esque contraption. But it’s hard to ignore when folks are so obsessed with their new playmates that websites are cropping up suggesting that one person + one iPad = a couple.

With all the buzz from Apple’s latest invention ringing in my ears, I started thinking about gadgets and new technology, and how much of it really has value. In this world of constantly-updated gadgetry, it’s hard to separate the wheat from the chaff. Inventions come and inventions go, some claiming to be breakthroughs and ending up just wasting our time and money. I think it’s easy to get sucked into a pattern where we expect the latest and “greatest” of whatever gadgets are available, throwing caution to the wind. My general rule of thumb is that if it’s new, free, and performs some time-saving function, try it out!  If it costs something, you need to figure out if its time-saving function is worth that cost.

Being tech-savvy is a treacherous conundrum. On one hand, you could become a gadget-obsessed fiend, interested only in your toys and grasping for the latest version, no matter what its reviews were like. You can become so concerned with trying out every new application that comes out, that it ends up being all you do — upkeep your various profiles and devices. And of course you’re never satisfied, because there’s always something newer and shinier that you just can’t live without. Then you realize you haven’t gone outside in weeks. This is not good.

On the other hand, keeping abreast of technology’s trends can help save time on life’s more mundane tasks and get you back to doing what you really love to do. Spending hours driving around in the mall parking lot can be replaced by just minutes of online shopping, and it cuts out having to deal with crowds and a greater temptation to impulse buy. Making special trips to get film developed or pick up prescriptions can be cut out completely by shooting with digital only and using online ordering of medications. A spreadsheet really can do in seconds what a pen and paper take hours to do. And so on, and so forth.

The key is to remember that when you choose certain technologies to espouse, you have to decide wisely what to do with the extra time they free up. So for example, spending that extra time drooling over more gadgets and signing up for more online profiles is probably not a wise way to spend your extra time. Going for a walk or trying a new recipe probably is. You get the picture.

In the spirit of taking stock, here’s my list of technological innovations that have made my life easier and better, without adding unnecessary bulk to my daily routine.

1. Gmail

Fast and a zillion times more reliable than other free email services, Gmail is integrated with my calendar, documents, and chat. It’s easy to organize, and has a lot of cool Labs features that enhance the overall experience. Special thanks goes out to the friend who relentlessly peer pressured me into trying Gmail.

2. Ping.fm

The trouble with taking advantage of the numerous free services you can sign up for online is that you have to actually upkeep all of your profiles. Unless, of course, you want to send the message that you’ve been “working” since 2006. Sign up for Ping.fm, link it to your different profiles (Facebook, Myspace, Twitter, Google Chat, etc. etc.), and bam — you update in one place and the change is reflected on ALL of those sites. I’ve got it set up so that if I send an IM to the Ping.fm bot on my Google Chat list, it updates all my various statuses. None of this running around logging into eight different things each time I want to update friends. Done and done.

3. iPod

Good riddance, giant CD wallet of doom. Hello, podcasts, audiobooks, and music for days. Tiny plastic box: $249. Tackling Dickens’ entire catalog while walking to and from work: priceless.

4. Google Reader

My adoption of this service signified the end of checking 97 web sites compulsively every time I opened a browser, and signified the beginning of letting just the updates from those sites come directly to me. Besides saving a lot of time, this also enabled me to pick up with reading the Internet right where I left off at any given instant.

5. Google Calendar

A planner that lives on the Internet, can be accessed and updated from wherever you happen to be sitting, can be shared with others, and can never be lost or “forgotten” on my desk at home. I can organize my own calendar, along with the other calendars that matter to me, and then I can color code them. It reminds me to give the cats their flea medication, and that I need to pay certain bills. And it keeps my husband and I from double-booking without the use of some unwieldy refrigerator wipe-off  board.

6. GPS

Completely idiot-proof to use, and it means you will never, ever be lost in DC again. The stress and danger of dealing with maps and written directions while driving is now gone. You just listen to the voice that says “Left turn in point. Five. Miles.”

7. Delicious.com

Like browser favorites, but instead of living in your browser, they live on the internet. You have the ability to make them public or private, of course. And you have them at your fingertips no matter WHERE you are in the world. Need to find that one article that you’re sure you saved three years ago?  A simple search through your delicious will do the trick. And these babies never need to be transferred to a new/additional machine, and can never be lost by a crashed browser, either.

8. USPS Click n’ Ship

Click n’ Ship means NEVER HAVING TO GO TO THE POST OFFICE AGAIN. Suddenly, the universe seems like a kinder place.

9. Alice.com

This web site will sell you tons of different toiletries, household items, snacks, etc. with free shipping. The only catch is that you have to be buying six items at a time — no big deal for most of us, whose errand lists are never shorter than 10 things. If you’re like me and hate to travel out of your neighborhood and into the trafficky, sprawl-laden abyss just to pick up toothpaste, toilet paper, and household cleaners, Alice.com will change your life. I spend a few minutes ordering things, they get to me in roughly two days, and I never have to waste an afternoon buying too many things I don’t need at Target.

10. Buying groceries online

Just kidding, this hasn’t happened yet, but I needed another item to make it an even 10.  As far as I know, there are no services available for Richmond, but I am patiently waiting / hoping Alice.com will expand. You see, I really don’t mind doing most chores. Gardening, cleaning, organizing, bookkeeping, etc. Love it. Love it all. But grocery shopping is something I absolutely loathe and detest. I just hate the stress of the situation: the crowds, the rotten produce (ahem, Kroger), the infinite choices (for someone who loves all food, this is daunting), the way all stores are organized differently and you can never find the olives, the self-checkouts that are either broken or yelling at you in robot voices, the milk that’s sitting in the cart as you wait 40 minutes to be checked out, the crazies in the parking lot, and so on, and so forth. I know technology will save me from this too; it’s just a matter of time.

Alright people, list us your favorite, life-changing tech innovations.  We’d love to hear them!

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Tess Shebaylo

Tess Shebaylo is a freelance writer, crafter, history geek, and compulsive organizer. She works at Tumblr and lives in Church Hill with her daughter, Morella.

Notice: Comments that are not conducive to an interesting and thoughtful conversation may be removed at the editor’s discretion.

  1. Kory on said:

    IRT grocery shopping online:

    http://www.peapod.com/. Too bad it never really took off but you may have a shot with it. :)

  2. “We’re sorry, the Peapod grocery delivery service has not yet reached your area.”

    Stop playing with my emotions, Kory!

  3. Brando on said:

    I like using KeePass to store passwords to all my shit in an encrypted database. This allows me to generate unique and secure passwords for everything while all I have to remember is the one to decrypt the database.

    Of course, using one of these databases kind of necessitates the usage of something like Dropbox to automatically backup the thing online. Because when your computer crashes like mine did a week ago you can’t get into any of your sites to pay bills and stuff. D:

  4. [note: I didnt read this particular article, but was so sick of RVa top ten lists, I gave up and just joined the fun]
    Top ten reasons why top ten lists are laziest form of journalism (and why they are used frequently by young, non-journalism sites like RVa)

    1. they require no research, just opinion
    2. they appeal to short attention spans
    3. they are formatted
    4.. they are short
    5. they are easy
    6. they are pointless
    7. they are boring
    8. they are familiar
    9. they are cliched
    10. they are passe

  5. Gmail’s Task application has become my new favorite thing. It lets me keep up with my to do list without having to open something else — it’s right there in my Gmail which, let’s be honest, is open all day.

  6. Brando: Awesome idea. I feel like one of the top complaints people have of the internet age is “having to remember” a million passwords.

    Jim: Fine…envision bullet points instead if you will, instead of numbers.

    Val: I totally should’ve listed Tasks instead of my wishful thinking with #10. I use it all the time too, and I love not having some scrap of paper to drag all over town with me so that I can keep my to-do list at the ready. And having it peeking out of my Gmail ensures that I don’t forget that I even have a to-do list, which I would actually do back in the days of paper.

  7. I just learned this the other day and have to share. When you pull up your task list you can hit the > symbol thing to the right of the task and add a due date to your task. The task will then show up on your calendar with a little box to check when you’ve finsihed the task. !!!

    I’ve been using the task list forever and had no idea that feature existed until Dan showed it to me. Pretty neat! I <3 Google.

  8. I just discovered Google Tasks the other day when Val talked about it on Twitter, and holy crap this is great! I was using a Tasks calendar in my Thunderbird client, which wasn’t synchronized and I could only access from my laptop. I also subsequently lost it when I switched to Thunderbird 3 and lost calendar support because of unsupported plugins.

    Now I’ve found Tasks and holycrap it’s awesome!

  9. Oh, yeah. Totally forgot about Instapaper: http://www.instapaper.com/

    It’s become so much a part of my daily Internettings that it slipped my mind.

    Basically, you set up an account and then use a bookmarklet to save the current page for later reading. That’s good as it is but even better is you can then put your “read later” RSS feed into Google Reader. Fannntastic.

  10. Whoa…I use the little due dates in Google Tasks but I had no idea they actually put something on my calendar. Sheesh!

    And instapaper sounds rad…especially the importing your “read later” items into Google Reader. Ah, consolidation.

  11. To be fair, Delicious could do that as well, I’m sure. Just not with Google Reader because it doesn’t work with authenticated feeds yet. D:

  12. Also, if you go to your Google Reader settings and go to the “Send To” tab you can enable a drop-down in that bar at the bottom of each item that lets you stick things into Instapaper without having to open the page itself.

    How’s that for consolidation?

  13. Dang it!!

    I forgot that I have all my Delicious bookmarks set to private. If they’re public you can probably get them into Google Reader.

    I think I’m going to stop commenting on this post now. I *always* forget something and have to leave a million comments. D:

  14. Yes — that is nice! Being able to send Reader items to Instapaper. I’m going to have to figure that out on Delicious, because as it is I have to open it separately. But yeah, I hope Google’s working on getting Reader to authenticate. That’d be awesome.

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