Dating apps kickstarted the ‘dating apocalypse’; others showed us we could get someone to do our sh!tty jobs for us. Now there’s an app for basically everything, Mel Evans asks, is it ruining our capacity to think?
That’s how many apps I have on my phone. Not including the ones pre-installed by Apple. 76 apps I felt I truly couldn’t live without. I’ve got everything from Facebook and Instagram, to Tinder, Pokémon Go and some app that makes it look like you’re bald (weird, but I felt it necessary to download one day at the pub). There are apps to measure my heartbeat, to order food, to hire a car, to put a border on a pic and to check the weather more specifically than the Apple app does. Then there are the apps to sell things, to buy things, to make people do things for me, like fetch my groceries. Basically, my life is in my phone. I ain’t alone.
Only four per cent of 18- to 34-year-olds don’t have a smartphone in this fair country, so I’m willing to bet my breakfast you can spot your phone out of the corner of your eye. And with 85 per cent of us apparently choosing mobile apps over websites, there is supply meeting demand – in the Apple App Store alone there are 2.2 million apps for iOS devices. Suddenly my 76 doesn’t sound so bad. But before you surrender to the phone Gods, clinical neuro psychologist Ash Nayate sees two problems with the spread of apps.
This story is from the July 2017 edition of Cosmopolitan Australia.
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This story is from the July 2017 edition of Cosmopolitan Australia.
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