Ten Things That Will Disappear In Our Lifetime...

kaiser715

Doing hard time
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Ten Things That Will Disappear In Our Lifetime...

An interesting observation on the changes taking place in our country and elsewhere in the world!

1. The Post Office

Get ready to imagine a world without the post office. They are so deeply in financial trouble that there is probably no way to sustain it long term. Email, Fed Ex, and UPS have just about wiped out the minimum revenue needed to keep the post office alive. Most of your mail every day is junk mail and bills.


2. The Check

Britain is already laying the groundwork to do away with check by 2018. It costs the financial system billions of dollars a year to process checks. Plastic cards and online transactions will lead to the eventual demise of the check. This plays right into the death of the post office. If you never paid your bills by mail and never received them by mail, the post office would absolutely go out of business. Cash will also be eliminated. Since real math is no longer taught in our failing schools – we will just depend upon the electronic Gods of the internet to maintain, track and take our money.


3. The Newspaper

The younger generation simply doesn't read the newspaper. They certainly don't subscribe to a daily delivered print edition. That may go the way of the milkman and the laundry man. As for reading the paper online, get ready to pay for it. The rise in mobile Internet devices and e-readers has caused all the newspaper and magazine publishers to form an alliance. They have met with Apple, Amazon, and the major cell phone companies to develop a model for paid subscription services.


4. The Book

You say you will never give up the physical book that you hold in your hand and turn the literal pages I said the same thing about downloading music from iTunes. I wanted my hard copy CD. But I quickly changed my mind when I discovered that I could get albums for half the price without ever leaving home to get the latest music. The same thing will happen with books. You can browse a bookstore online and even read a preview chapter before you buy. And the price is less than half that of a real book. And think of the convenience! Once you start flicking your fingers on the screen instead of the book, you find that you are lost in the story, can't wait to see what happens next, and you forget that you're holding a gadget instead of a book. Remember the movie Fahrenheit 451 – no more libraries either.


5. The Land Line Telephone

Unless you have a large family and make a lot of local calls, you don't need it anymore. Most people keep it simply because they've always had it. But you are paying double charges for that extra service. All the cell phone companies will let you call customers using the same cell provider for no charge against your minutes.


6. Music

This is one of the saddest parts of the change story. The music industry is dying a slow death. Not just because of illegal downloading. It's the lack of innovative new music being given a chance to get to the people who would like to hear it. Greed and corruption is the problem. The record labels and the radio conglomerates are simply self-destructing. Over 40% of the music purchased today is "catalogue items," meaning traditional music that the public is familiar with. Older established artists. This is also true on the live concert circuit. To explore this fascinating and disturbing topic further, check out the book, "Appetite for Self-Destruction" by Steve Knopper, and the video documentary, "Before the Music Dies."


7. Television Revenues

To the networks are down dramatically. Not just because of the economy. People are watching TV and movies streamed from their computers. And they're playing games and doing lots of other things that take up the time that used to be spent watching TV. Prime time shows have degenerated down to lower than the lowest common denominator. Cable rates are skyrocketing and commercials run about every 4 minutes and 30 seconds. I say good riddance to most of it. It's time for the cable companies to be put out of our misery. Let the people choose what they want to watch, and what the providers want them to watch, online and through Netflix.


8. The "Things" That You Own

Many of the very possessions that we used to own are still in our lives, but we may not actually own them in the future. They may simply reside in "the cloud." Today your computer has a hard drive and you store your pictures, music, movies, and documents. Your software is on a CD or DVD, and you can always re-install it if need be. But all of that is changing. Apple, Microsoft, and Google are all finishing up their latest "cloud services." That means that when you turn on a computer, the Internet will be built into the operating system. So, Windows, Google, and the Mac OS will be tied straight into the Internet. If you click an icon, it will open something in the Internet cloud. If you save something, it will be saved to the cloud. And you may pay a monthly subscription fee to the cloud provider. In this virtual world, you can access your music or your books, or your whatever from any laptop or handheld device. That's the good news. But, will you actually own any of this "stuff" or will it all be able to disappear at any moment in a big "Poof?" Will most of the things in our lives be disposable and whimsical? It makes you want to run to the closet and pull out that photo album, grab a book from the shelf, or open up a CD case and pull out the insert.


9. Joined Handwriting (Cursive Writing)

Already gone in some schools who no longer teach "joined handwriting" because nearly everything is done now on computers or keyboards of some type (pun not intended), printing by hand will also disappear. No signatures for check will be needed because there will be no checks. Just use your password to confirm any purchases you make through the internet – everything is always secure in “the cloud”!


10. Privacy

If there ever was a concept that we can look back on nostalgically, it would be privacy. That's gone. It's been gone for a long time anyway.. There are cameras on the street, in most of the buildings, and even built into your computer and cell phone. But you can be sure that 24/7, "They" know who you are and where you are, right down to the GPS coordinates, and the Google Street View. If you buy something, your habit is put into a zillion profiles, and your ads will change to reflect those habits.. "They" will try to get you to buy something else. Again and again and again.

All we will have left that can't be changed.......is our "Memories".

Logic is dead.
Common sense no longer exists.
Excellence is punished.
Mediocrity is rewarded.
And dependency is to be revered.
This is present day America.
 
Number 5: We had a new house built two years ago and never had Ma Bell run a phone line to the house from the road.

Number 7: I haven't watched anything broadcast on TV in so long I cannot remember. I don't even know how to watch the regular TV channels, LOL. Cartoons streamed from Amazon or Hulu for my boy are the only thing played on our TV's.
 
No. 7 v2.0 - my house has one TV. No cable. Just a DVD player my retired dad watches when he's over. I don't even turn it on for my personal enjoyment.
 
Hulu is going to put itself out of business with the glut of commercials. I'd expect it from the free version, but we have HuluPlus and I swear I can't watch 5 minutes of a show without enduring 2 minutes of commercials.
 
The last six lines where more important to me. The rest is physical in nature. AS for Music, I believe it is a direct vision into the heart and inward spirit of a populace. Dig deeper and its roots are still burning just like its people. Good strong independent people will survive, its just going to take a natural reset. And a return to basic cultures, all of em and their differences. We have few independent life streams so now all we got is mud.
 
Well, I would be happy living in the middle of the woods with none of that stuff anyways.
Same here, just can't talk the wife into it. I've tried many times.
 
so who forwarded that email to you?

Actually, found it on (gasp) another forum....


#6...I think the music industry died about 10 years ago. They just don't know it yet. Churning out crap that gets worse every year. Look at country (aka corporate pop). I haven't been to a "mainstream" concert in 20 years. Music won't die, but the industry sure will.
 
^ yep. I wouldn't say music is dead or will ever be. It's been part of human culture since the dawn of time. There will always be those grass roots guitar pickers, singers and songwriters amongst us that will keep real music alive.
 
Music is too important to die. I can't think of one day in the last 15 years where I haven't listened to music. Although Nothing can compare to the music of the 50's -70's.
Wish I had been alive to hear it first hand.
 
The majority of main stream music today is pure shit and created with the same recipe over and over simply to make a dollar. I can rant on that cluster for hours, just add PBR


I think Waylon and Cash said the same thing in the early 70s.

Truth is good art is always out there if you choose to seek it out.
What is getting more frustrating is the "counter culture" unpopular country pop. I won name names, because some are legends around here...but its the same script the Doors played in '67...in 15 Country.

Its still recipe, check the box, formatic crap, it just changs the message to about how pop country is bad. Its "just add water outlaw"...pisses me off.

BTW I love the Doors, if that reads like I dont you are missing the point.
 
The Truckers are playing two shows in Carrboro in March... who wants to go?
 
One thing that won't disappear in our lifetime is bullshit, apparently. Posts like this keep it alive every day. One of these lists goes out every few years. They're generally wrong. People have been claiming the death of USPS for years. Hasn't happened yet, and probably wont anytime soon. If GM was allowed to live, the post office will. Books never went away and likely never will. E-readers gave publishers a little scare for a few years, but trends quickly shifted back to having a physical copy in your hand to read. Most people find the Kindle and its kin more uncomfortable and fatiguing to read, but very convenient for travel. They may not sell as many books, but there will always be printed word. And believe it or not, the younger generation is the one that's soldiering back into bookstores in droves! That's right, the same "damn kids" that we blame for all this are the ones helping keep it alive!

If you think back not too long ago, a lot of people thought we'd all be getting around in flying cars and eating all our food in pill or tube form.
 
The Truckers are playing two shows in Carrboro in March... who wants to go?
Isbell and Tucker playing with them or just Patterson and his band of misfit traveling liberals?
 
One thing that won't disappear in our lifetime is bullshit, apparently. Posts like this keep it alive every day. One of these lists goes out every few years. They're generally wrong. People have been claiming the death of USPS for years. Hasn't happened yet, and probably wont anytime soon. If GM was allowed to live, the post office will.

like Amtrak...
 
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