In the
beginning, there were no telephones. When people wanted to communicate, they
walked up to someone and said, “Hi.” If they were far apart, they sent someone
with a message. “Go to the village across the valley and tell George I said
hi.” If they couldn’t send someone, they either went themselves or forgot about
it. If they forgot, George would think they stopped caring. Before long, people
invented drums, hollow logs, and smoke as ways to communicate over distances,
that worked for a long time because Grandma didn’t live too far away.
Over time we
came up with different ways to communicate, but they mostly involved writing on
paper — letters. While it got the job done, people craved the intimacy of
speech. It’s hard to emote on paper unless you’re Elizabeth Barrett Browning.
Morse did his
best with the telegraph, and it did provide an instantaneous form of
communication (as long as people who knew Morse code were doing the
communicating), but can you imagine “How do I love thee/stop/let me count the
ways/stop”?
Then along
came Alexander Graham Bell with the telephone. Crude at first, early phones
involved cranking and party lines, but finally George could reach out and touch
someone across the miles, as long as someone else with the same number wasn’t
already using the phone — the party line, FYI.
Eventually almost
every home in America
had a phone — and a number they could call their own. Now George would know the
call was probably for him when the phone rang, and he’d be able to hear “I love
you” or “Your prescription for Epidermathinaglim is ready” without worrying
that someone was listening — providing he didn’t miss the call.
Answering
machines solved that problem. Now if someone called when George wasn’t home,
they could leave a message and he’d call them back. Maybe. Some people would
just hang up because they hated talking to a machine.
Finally
someone came up with the perfect solution — the cellphone. Now George could
take his phone with him and never be out of touch, and if Lucy wanted to invite
him to a Fourth of July BBQ at the last minute, he wouldn’t miss the call. Of
course, early cellphones weren’t much smaller than phone booths, so it was hard
to put one in your pocket or purse. But now cellphones are small, and despite
their size you can do a lot of things with them besides make calls — browse the
web, order something from Amazon, text a friend, play games, locate a
restaurant, take pictures, watch a movie, find George’s cellphone if he’s
kidnapped, make a latte.
Okay, I made
that last thing up, but everything else is almost true. No kidding.
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