Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 53 total)
  • Technology that makes a surprising difference
  • stilltortoise
    Free Member

    Bike stuff aside, what tech genuinely makes your life just that little bit better? Loads of examples for me, but Scanbot is a recent favourite. It’s a very simple document scanning app that just uses the phone camera. It does a simple job really effectively and is so much easier than using a flatbed scanner. My office is also tidier as a result 🙂

    I am not on commission from Scanbot 😆

    P-Jay
    Free Member

    A bit frivolous perhaps, but I love Shazam, it’s still witchcraft in my book, but it makes finding new music a lot easier – quick Shazam, single click to add it to Apple music – Done.

    thehustler
    Free Member

    Electricity……its applications have been endless, and has helped me achieve some amazing things….

    Drac
    Full Member

    Microchip.

    lunge
    Full Member

    Evernote (and therefore I guess other note taking apps). I can go into a meeting and take notes on my iPad then edit them on my desktop. Then I check them on my phone again on the way home. It’s genuinely brilliant.

    finbar
    Free Member

    Microchips here too. Also those burgers you can microwave.

    Stoner
    Free Member

    Google maps and satellite imagery.

    I can visit the potential site, walk around it, get a feel for its location and all from my comfy office chair rather than lose a day to a fruitless site visit.

    jimoiseau
    Free Member

    Uber. Can’t be bothered talking to someone one the phone, trying to describe where I am and then waiting 20 minutes for a taxi, Uber does all that in a couple of clicks and I don’t even have to get my wallet out to pay at the end. Even more useful abroad when you don’t speak the language.

    andyg1966
    Full Member

    The internet. End Of! and not for p0rn!

    fasthaggis
    Full Member

    Blood Glucose Meter

    Nobeerinthefridge
    Free Member

    Google maps and satellite imagery.

    This*. I can check whether that dotted line on the map actually exists, before I then have to go and discover it’s pretty much unrideable anyway…. :mrgreen:

    Although I find Bing maps are generally better.

    Ro5ey
    Free Member

    Dishwasher.

    toby1
    Full Member

    Blue tooth headphones*, I use them for about 2 hours a day and not getting caught up or having to untangle wires is great.

    * on the move though I can’t have my phone in my left pocket as the receiver is on the right and I seem to be too dense for the signal to pass through, all puns allowed.

    Chromecast audio** – ours gets lots of use at the weekend when the radio is even more terrible than usual. Playing back old shows and using spotify.

    ** Except for that time when the firmware was updated and it destroyed the BT router!

    So overall good but not great tech.

    hols2
    Free Member

    Pens. Incredibly useful. Scissors too. And knives, now that I think about it.

    jekkyl
    Full Member

    Contraception! imagine how many abortions would have been needed or unwanted people there would be in the world without it.

    Pook
    Full Member

    There’s this great timekeeping/project management bit of software I used once. Asana. Never took off in our group though so it’s sadly fallen by the way side.

    tomhoward
    Full Member

    Blood glucose meter

    …that doesn’t require a finger prick, a’la freestyle libre.

    The sooner that can be linked to insulin pumps, the better.

    …and added to NHS prescriptions, obvs…

    Ferris-Beuller
    Free Member

    Mine has to be pretty much anything by Tesla! I never thought i’d ever fall in love with driving or more accurately the experience of driving a car. It is just fabulous!! Big smiles all round.

    stilltortoise
    Free Member

    😛 @Pook

    AlexSimon
    Full Member

    GPS navigation has saved my marriage

    joshvegas
    Free Member

    Google maps and satellite imagery.

    I can visit the potential site, walk around it, get a feel for its location and all from my comfy office chair rather than lose a day to a fruitless site visit.

    On top of this I can build engineering models and view them in context.

    slowoldman
    Full Member

    In recent years varifocals.

    n0b0dy0ftheg0at
    Free Member

    Internet shopping!

    I used to hate/dread having to go into town and trek through West Quay Shopping Centre, so claustrophobic. Being able to order almost anything online is bliss.

    vongassit
    Free Member

    Smart phones! Being able to take Hi res photos of broken machinery & email them to parts suppliers, while located in the middle of Scottish sea lochs never fails to impress me. Genuinely makes my job easier.

    Apart from when I’m trying to figure out how to use it & swearing at it cause Im a thicko 😆

    CrispyCSW
    Full Member

    Blue tooth headphones

    +1 I spend a lot of time on trains and a good pair of over ear, noise cancelling, bluetooth headphones are a godsend.

    maccruiskeen
    Full Member

    Text messages. Apparently us brits were massive early adopters and perhaps it fits the national character. Phoning someone is very demanding of their attention – RING RING SPEAK TO ME NOW!. A text is only as direct and demanding a conversation as the recipient wants it to be, you can reach someone no matter where they are or what they’re doing without disturbing them as the only have to look and reply when they’re ready.

    maccruiskeen
    Full Member

    Ferris-Beuller – Member
    Mine has to be pretty much anything by Tesla! I never thought i’d ever fall in love with driving or more accurately the experience of driving a car. It is just fabulous!! Big smiles all round.

    And you can charge it back up by jacking up the back wheels and leaving it running in reverse 🙂

    graemecsl
    Free Member

    Wheels.. even better with pneumatic tyres.

    Gunz
    Free Member

    Audiobooks. I drive quite a lot and these preserve my sanity when the radio doesn’t have anything on.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    Evernote (and therefore I guess other note taking apps).

    OneNote has quite literally changed my life. It’s one of the best things Microsoft has ever created (so presumably they bought a startup who created it in the first place), it’s like carrying a backup brain.

    In a similar vein, shared calendar apps (specifically Google Calendar in my case). If it’s not in the calendar it doesn’t exist, it’s an utter godsend if you’ve got to schedule your life when there’s more than one person in it.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    Wheels.. even better with pneumatic tyres.

    I do worry about someone in a world in which wheels make a “surprising” difference. You’re gonna shit when you discover fire.

    (-:

    milky1980
    Free Member

    First choice was going to be Google Earth but as that has been taken I’ll go for on-demand catch up TV. I can get so much more done by not having to be at home at a certain time to watch a show or remember to set the DVR. Get on with life then watch when I’m ready at a few clicks of a remote 8)

    dannybgoode
    Full Member

    Music streaming. Just brilliant…

    maccruiskeen
    Full Member

    I’ll go for on-demand catch up TV.

    Rewinding live TV surprised me at how instantly natural to use it was. Within a day or two of buying a PVR I found my hand reaching out intuitively to try and rewind the radio when I was driving.

    I know that we consciously live about 0.5 of a second behind the moment. But it would be really nice if reality had a 10 to 15 second buffer that we could just jog back through if we’ve not been paying attention – for those moments when someone gets to the end of a sentence and you realise that now your interested in how it started.

    bencooper
    Free Member

    Lots of technology is amazing, but if we’re specifically talking about “surprising” then I’d say my iWatch. Got it on a whim really, but it’s surprising how useful it is to have little snippets of info on your wrist, plus voice control of stuff.

    esselgruntfuttock
    Free Member

    Medical stuff used in ITU.

    Mrs EGF has got through some bad times with the help of that lately.

    antigee
    Full Member

    having tweets embedded in news articles a good way to get garbage opinions without spending time on public transport or listening to phone in radio

    mefty
    Free Member

    having tweets embedded in news articles a good way to get garbage opinions without spending time on public transport or listening to phone in radio

    Excellent

    Northwind
    Full Member

    An extra .8 inches of Jumbo Jim. 4.0s were kind of pish for me, the 4.8s are awesome.

    tomhoward – Member

    The sooner that can be linked to insulin pumps, the better.

    Aye, can’t be far off. I hated the pump, it’s just a permanent syringe at the end of the day but a smart pump’ll be another thing entirely.

    mikewsmith
    Free Member

    The cloud & connectivity
    I can work between a desktop, 2 laptops, tablet and a phone with very little delay or hassle. Replying to an email when on the bus or out, picking it up when I get to the office or get home. I can leave the office early or start late as I have all the info at my finger tips at home or on the move. I’ve had meetings from campsites etc. Work can bend around my life much more.

Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 53 total)

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