Every time I hear someone mentioning "balancing a checkbook" I realize that it's one of the many tedium tasks that I've managed to escape ever having to do. Technology has revolutionized my life in ways I don't even realize at times. Here are a few things which I've never had to do that my parents did, due to technology or modernization.
I have never:
- Balanced a checkbook
- Online banking and electronic bill payments pretty much got rid of this. I've written perhaps 10-15 checks in my life and they were mostly for rent and payment to friends. I'm still not entirely sure what it means, though I've got some notions and am glad I won't need to do it any time soon.
- Gotten cut while shaving
- The ads have some merit: never get cut again. Well, I haven't yet. Electric razors don't really cut, nor do the three-bladed ones; that's all I've ever used.
- Sent taxes via postal mail
- I've filed all my taxes electronically. This is definitely a good thing as it reduces the amount of people in the system considerably.
- Used a typewriter for work
- They're still used for filling out forms on occasion, which I've only ever done electronically (most of my College applications had magical type-in PDFs).
- Sent a fax
- OK, this is just a silly thing that I'm glad I never had to do. I've only heard bad things about fax machines, yet somehow a faxed signature is legally-binding. I don't get it.
- Used a print encyclopedia
- This is a bit of a lie, way back in my childhood, I would occasionally look through the one we had for fun. But I've never used a print encyclopedia for any real work.
What have your parents (or that generation) had to do that technology has saved you from?