A couple of events this month have really had me asking myself if we are at peak technology usefulness. Now before you start accusing me of being one step away from off grid living (which I do respect people for pursuing but for which I'm probably a little lazy), hair shirt weaving and/or tin foil hat wearing let me first clarify that I do think technology is incredibly useful and has certainly helped me get ahead. I'm just questioning if all the newer stuff provides any real benefit to the user.
Firstly, let me give a couple of examples of the good stuff. I've certainly benefited from the ability to achieve rapid price discovery. For one I don’t believe I’d be sitting on an investment portfolio, all tied up in wrappers, with total expenses of 0.27%, with all the benefits that brings, without the ability to trawl the offerings from many providers in a matter of minutes. Would I even know them all let alone know the cost to start with? The ability to talk to and see someone across the globe in real time for ‘free’ has also helped me hugely. The thing is that these possibilities are nothing new; the technology to provide them has been around for many years now and importantly is relatively unchanged. My rapid learning on how to be a successful investor has certainly been helped by fantastic sites like Monevator but here I would have also been more than ok with excellent books like Smarter Investing which requires no technology. I would have also been well educated on finance and investing with excellent books like When Money Dies: The Nightmare of the Weimar Hyperinflation and The Millionaire Next Door instead of the great internet.
Let me now jump forward to more recent times and see if new technology is helping me. This week our friends at Apple released some new products. Now I’m not an Apple fan boy/girl so if I have it wrong then please do correct me in the Comments below but all that I see is things that are bigger/smaller, slightly faster with more mega pixels. An iPad Air 2 with decent storage and Wi-Fi ‘only’ costs £559. Who knows what an iPad Pro is going to set one back but I’d bet it will be more expensive. Is this new bit of tech about to obsolete my Nexus 7 Tablet which today can be had for £141.11? In my case it certainly isn't as what I have today does everything (and more) than I currently need. What about a new ‘tasty’ iWatch which from what I can see tells the time unless you have it tethered to an expensive iPhone? Then as if by magic it does things that your phone can do... I think I’ll stick with my mechanical watch which I guarantee will still be running long after the latest iWatches are consigned to the scrap heap. I’d actually nearly bet that my watch will actually still be running and telling the time as well as any future iWatch technology long after I've popped my clogs.
Firstly, let me give a couple of examples of the good stuff. I've certainly benefited from the ability to achieve rapid price discovery. For one I don’t believe I’d be sitting on an investment portfolio, all tied up in wrappers, with total expenses of 0.27%, with all the benefits that brings, without the ability to trawl the offerings from many providers in a matter of minutes. Would I even know them all let alone know the cost to start with? The ability to talk to and see someone across the globe in real time for ‘free’ has also helped me hugely. The thing is that these possibilities are nothing new; the technology to provide them has been around for many years now and importantly is relatively unchanged. My rapid learning on how to be a successful investor has certainly been helped by fantastic sites like Monevator but here I would have also been more than ok with excellent books like Smarter Investing which requires no technology. I would have also been well educated on finance and investing with excellent books like When Money Dies: The Nightmare of the Weimar Hyperinflation and The Millionaire Next Door instead of the great internet.
Let me now jump forward to more recent times and see if new technology is helping me. This week our friends at Apple released some new products. Now I’m not an Apple fan boy/girl so if I have it wrong then please do correct me in the Comments below but all that I see is things that are bigger/smaller, slightly faster with more mega pixels. An iPad Air 2 with decent storage and Wi-Fi ‘only’ costs £559. Who knows what an iPad Pro is going to set one back but I’d bet it will be more expensive. Is this new bit of tech about to obsolete my Nexus 7 Tablet which today can be had for £141.11? In my case it certainly isn't as what I have today does everything (and more) than I currently need. What about a new ‘tasty’ iWatch which from what I can see tells the time unless you have it tethered to an expensive iPhone? Then as if by magic it does things that your phone can do... I think I’ll stick with my mechanical watch which I guarantee will still be running long after the latest iWatches are consigned to the scrap heap. I’d actually nearly bet that my watch will actually still be running and telling the time as well as any future iWatch technology long after I've popped my clogs.