Is Technology Bad Now or Has the Magic Just Gone for Me? – CNET

I’ve been a passionate tech nerd for pretty much all of my life, from getting excited as a kid over tape-based dictation machines I used to record “radio shows” at home, Casio watches with built-in calculators and my family’s first Acorn Archimedes home computer, through to my 12 years as a tech writer for CNET. But in recent years things have changed, and technology has gone from being a point of genuine excitement in my life to a cause of real frustration that’s made me less excited when new innovations come along. So I’m left wondering: Has technology changed or have I?

It’s not that I don’t like tech anymore. I’m pretty sure I do. It’s that so many of those gadgets designed to make our lives easier and more fun actually don’t work as they should. Take game consoles, for instance. My Xbox Series X is great fun when it works. But more often than not when I find myself in the mood for some button bashing and fire it up, I’m met with a lengthy wait while massive updates are downloaded for both the console and then whatever game it was I wanted to play.

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By the time I’ve made a coffee and stared out of the window while the updates install, I’ve usually lost that urge to play and I end up doing something else. Ditto for the PS5. Then there are the numerous games that launch essentially broken, with huge day-one patches required to make them even barely tolerable. I’m looking at you, Cyberpunk 2077. Do you know what doesn’t require gigantic updates and patches? My Scrabble set. 

A vinyl record player and collection of records. A vinyl record player and collection of records.

My record player and Tesseract’s Portals on the turntable. Great stuff. 

Andrew Lanxon/CNET

Last Christmas my brother gave me a vinyl record player. I then immediately bought myself a whole range of records from some of my favorite bands, including Periphery, Incubus and Royal Blood. I’ve honestly found the whole experience to be something of a revelation.

I’m not going to opine on the “warmth” or “character” of the audio quality from vinyl because I’m honestly not that bothered as long as it’s “good enough.” What’s refreshing is putting on a record and having it actually play, without the need for establishing wireless connections or having the connection inexplicably cut out. I drop the record onto the turntable, move the needle and it just plays. 

I’ve found, too, that I love listening to whole albums again, rather than simply adding a few songs to a playlist or shuffle playing all my “liked” songs on Spotify. Going out to record shops to find specific artists I want is a much more satisfying process than simply scouring the infinite abyss of Spotify’s catalog. Perhaps I’d also enjoy getting back into DVDs instead of endlessly scrolling Netflix and failing to decide what to watch. Probably not though.

It’s worth noting that in January 2024 I’ll turn 36. And there’s a certain cliche about people who hit their mid-30s and suddenly start getting into vinyl. I’m a professional photographer and, yes, I’ve even started dabbling in film photography too, enjoying the more stripped-back approach that my Canon R5 lacks. 

To be fair, I’ve always felt a bit older than my years. I prefer bubble baths to nightclubs, I’ve made homemade scented candles since my mid-20s and I’ve always been able to identify the most comfortable chair in any given room. 

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