Tuesday, February 14, 2017

Stop Shooting on Millennials

If you are older than the millennial generation, you may find your favorite pastime is shooting on millennials. Yes. Everything is our fault. The Great Twinkie Crisis of 2012. That was us. The reason you spilled your coffee on your tie this morning. Yup, right here, we did it. This buzzfeed article perfectly highlights many things we are killing. Democracy even makes the list.


Glad we could be here for you. We are more than happy to be your scapegoat.



Monday, February 13, 2017

How We Listen to Music

By Frank Manriquez
In today’s society, people do not exactly seem to know what they want when it comes to music. Some want old technology to be improved and perfected, while others want the latest and (supposedly) greatest. Companies are always making improvements and creating new products. The question is, is technology moving too fast when it might not be quite ready yet?
The evolution of how we listen to music has changed drastically just in the past twenty years. Cassette tapes were big when we were growing up. This was the primary way we listened to music in the car. If you wanted to listen to a different artist or album, you had to eject the tape and put another one back in. The Walkman was a portable device where people were able to play their music while on walks or at the ballpark. I believe this device was very influential to the technological advancements shortly after that. Being a millennial, I have been able to see technology change dramatically throughout the course of my short 22 years.

Thinking back, I do not remember seeing many people walking around listening to music like they do today. In 1984, CD players came out, and they too had portable devices just like cassette players do. Although it was portable, the CD players were inconvenient and cumbersome in addition to frequently skipping when one would walk with it. In 2001, music would change forever when the first generation Ipod came out. Before the Ipod, the only way to listen to a variety of different music was to purchase a hard copy of each album. The Ipod quickly replaced that when the Itunes store was created where anyone could purchase individual songs rather than having to buy the full album.
This advancement not only changed the way we listen to music, but also the accessories surrounding it. For example, headphones became more of a necessity. Having this quick access to music resulted into people wanting to have the best sound quality. This created a whole new market of competitive headphone businesses such as Beats, Skullcandy, and Bose.

As time has passed, these companies have remained successful. People typically love anything that is new, but what the people really want is a product that sounds great and has been perfected. However, they are always trying to make their products better by pushing for things like wireless headphones. Consequently, this causes the quality of music to go slightly down and another thing to worry about: battery. In turn, this has impacted companies such as Apple in the recent release of their wireless headphones. Not only do the headphones lack sufficient sound quality that one might get with wired headphones, but the design is a weak as well.
  
Our society has come a long way in the recent years when it comes to music and how we listen to it. I do believe that this has been a good thing, but also a bad thing too. Because of the high demand for constant change, companies have been forced to work faster. That being said, with less time comes less investment into a single product to perfect first. Although I don’t deny that music in general has made leaps and bounds in the past twenty years, I feel like companies still have work to do.

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

Making “The Flip”

10 Reasons I Ditched My Smartphone For A Flip Phone And You Should Too

By Presence Massie

My grandmother would tell me at the dinner table, “You’re like Edward Scissorhands but instead of blades and scissors attached to your fingers, it’s your smartphone!” She was right. The communication, games, and tools a smartphone provides causes us to be enslaved to our devices so much so that it becomes an appendage.


It is an appendage in the likeness of Edward’s that not only harms ourselves, but others we come in contact with. The tyranny of the notification has conditioned us to check our phone when we imagine it vibrating. It keeps us from observing the world around us and showing care to those with whom we are physically present. We are, as Thoreau once wrote, “tools of our tools,” enslaved to the very thing said to make us free.


I ditched  my smartphone for a flip phone and it was one of the best decisions I made. Here are ten reasons you should too.

1. Save Money
Flip phones are relatively cheap. I purchased mine for no more than $20. If you buy a flip phone instead of the new Iphone 7, you will have saved $750. In addition to the cost of the phone, your phone bill will be significantly less. My Iphone’s phone plan added to $60 a month and my flip phone is half that. My bank account has seen this frugality and yours will too.

2. Battery-Life
Flip phones have an incredibly long-lasting battery compared to smartphones due to fewer programs running on your flip phone. I had an Iphone 5S and would find myself charging it by mid-afternoon. If I was nearing 30% battery (even on battery-preservation mode) and would open an app such as Snapchat, my phone would give up and die. My flip phone can go a week on a full charge.

3. Little-to-No Glitching
Have you ever had you smartphone die on you unexpectedly? Has it ever frozen or crashed as you were trying to start up an app? Flip phones do not have this problem. Our blog’s Chief Creative Officer has only had a flip phone and claims it has never glitched on her. Mine has yet to do so as well. Through the years smartphones are constantly changing, causing you to need the next model, but the flip phone has remained simple.

4. Social Media Surrender
No one needs to see a snap of what coffee you purchased or a boomerang of you and your friends on the metro. Constantly documenting your life through social media is excessive, unnecessary, and studies show it restricts our memories of particular events because we view them through a screen and rest our knowledge on the image we took.

5. Living Life and Enjoying Others
When we keep our bodies hunched over our phones as we travel from place to place, we become disconnected with our surroundings and less acquainted with the outside world which, let’s face it, is most important. The first week of having a flip phone, I noticed when I walked past someone, I would take out my phone to avoid greeting them. Since I didn’t have anything to do on my flip phone, I realized I wasn’t looking at anything, but was giving into a reflex I developed with my smartphone. This was a  reflex I also gave into when I was at the dinner table with others. Instead of interacting with them, I would check my phone to avoid uncomfortable silence. With a flip phone, I have trained myself to put effort into conversation and enjoy others.

6. Comparatively Compact
Let’s be honest, some of the smartphones are cumbersome, mini-tablets. This is especially problematic for women whose front pockets are for fashion more than function. Small front pockets mean most have to move their Iphone 6+ phones to their back pocket where it can bend when one sits, increasing risks of cracks.

7. Distractions
The only notifications you receive on your flip phones are texts and calls. You will not be distracted by social media notifications or apps luring you in to play a game and keep you from focusing on the task at hand.

8. Durability
The screens will not crack as easily as smartphones’. I have cracked at least three of my previous smartphones. Flip phones can drop dozens of times without causing any issues. The ground might even break before the phone does.

9. Strengthen Your Sense of Direction
Many people I have talked to say the biggest reason they cannot make the switch is because they use their phones as a GPS. Mapping out your journey before you drive is a solution. Instead of completely relying on a GPS, get to know the area better and strengthen your geographical brain muscles. If you are desperate, call someone who might have access to news or maps. OR go the old-fashioned route by pulling over and asking for directions.


10. Others Are Too
When  a friend calls you a Luddite, take it as a compliment. You’re not alone. CEOs and celebrities such as Anna Wintour and Rihanna have been seen recently using flip phones. But don’t let this be the primary reason you make the switch… or should I say “the flip.”
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Shed the smartphone from your fingers and you will feel the weight has been lifted. Switching to a flip phone will be one of the best decisions you make. You don’t have to take it from me though. I’m just a millennial.

Thursday, January 26, 2017

Being Millennials

Let’s be honest. Millennials have received a lot of flack for being an entitled, lazy, narcissistic, and tech-absorbed generation. While this may apply to some of us born in the 80's and 90's, one shouldn't be so quick to pass judgement on an entire generation. Okay, we admit we may have some of these traits, but not all. In an attempt to give millennials a better name and learn more about ourselves, we are embarking to put these stereotypes to rest. . . or perhaps reveal their validity.

We will review and examine our technology-drenched lives by hearkening back to our younger days, trying simpler (dare I say archaic) technologies and evaluating ourselves in the process. In addition to this, we'll write our outlook on topics such as politics, social media, entitlement, etc. Because this is a blog all about us. Narcissistic? Perhaps. But we're okay with that.