Erik wrote:More miserable consumerism news
:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/6191841.stm
UK'S GADGET SHOPPING LIST - THE TOP 10
Over the next six months, Britons intend to buy:
digital cameras - 2.5 million
mobile phones - 2.5 million
televisions - 2.25 million
computers - 1.75 million
cordless phones - 1.25 million
DVD players/recorders - 1.25 million
microwave ovens - 1.25 million
mp3 players - 1.25 million
electric kettles - 1.25 million
hairdryers/stylers - 1 million
Digital cameras: I use one for work (and a video recorder too). It's around six years old. But I still have the old manual SLR as a backup.
Mobile phone: essential for work (email is what my clients use). My 3-yr-old Blackberry has had a heart attack (the 'pearl' barely works so I can't scroll though texts emails or missed calls) so will probably have to get a second-hand replacement (again) off ebay.
TV: got mine free from some peeps emigrating to Oz in 2003. It maybe gets watched once or twice a month.
Computer: essential for work. My 3-yr-old Mac is about to hit the dust. (Just had to send it back to Apple for some very expensive out-of-warranty work and it's still not right.)
Cordless phone: bought one of these back in 2002. Serves some purpose (good to be able to attend to parcel deliveries at the front door while still taking part in a scheduled online meeting) but for work it's much better to have a loud speaker-phone (which I bought last year when I had to make and record dozens of phone interviews with people in 3rd-world countries).
DVD player: I had a free DVD player from a neighbour. It's given up the ghost. I use (used) it mostly for seeing documentaries I'd bought from far-flung countries. More often I'm creating DVDs for clients.
Microwave ovens: I acquired a free one back in the early noughties from a Japanese man going back to Japan. Useful for defrosting quickly; barely use it otherwise. After 2 years without, I got another free one from someone in the neighbourhood. Fingers crossed.
mp3 player: can be useful for listening to recordings, but I have a broadcast quality voice recorder which I tend to use for everything recording/listening. I have to supply audio and video recordings as part of work contracts.
Electric kettle: the only thing on the list I don't have. Gas is cheaper.
Hairdryer: I have one dating from 1985 or so. Useful when you have to be at a big-shot client meeting at 7am in the middle of an icy winter and you have long hair. There's no other way of drying your hair at 5am, and not much fun going into the freezing street (where your hair will not dry) with wet hair. The rest of the time I tend to dry my hair naturally (my friends say I always seem to have wet hair) and/or wear a hat over it.
So, while they may be just gadgets for some, quite a number of these are pretty much essential for the work I do. The only one I intend to buy in the foreseeable future is another second-hand Blackberry off ebay.