As I sit here on this chilly February morning sipping coffee and scrolling through my phone (ironically), I can’t help but think about how one single invention has reshaped pretty much everything about daily life.
If I had to pick the most important invention I’ve witnessed and used (from my childhood in the ’80s or ’90s through today) it’s hands down the smartphone.
Sure, there are tons of game changers I’ve seen emerge: the World Wide Web exploding in the ’90s, social media connecting the world (for better or worse), GPS turning paper maps obsolete, streaming killing cable TV, mRNA vaccines or even CRISPR gene editing promising to rewrite biology. All incredible. But nothing has woven itself so completely into every corner of existence like the smartphone.
Remember flip phones and texting with T9 predictive input? Smartphones turned messaging into instant, multimedia conversations. Video calls (FaceTime, Zoom) kept families connected during tough times—like when folks couldn’t travel. In rural spots like where I live, where distances matter, it’s a lifeline.
Google in your pocket means instant answers to any question. Apps for banking, shopping, learning (Duolingo, Khan Academy), job hunting, or even remote work exploded access. For someone in a small town, that’s huge—no more driving hours to a library or store for basic info.
Streaming music/movies, fitness trackers, health apps monitoring heart rate or sleep, ride-sharing (Uber), food delivery… the list goes on. During the pandemic, smartphones were our window to the world when everything shut down.
Over 7 billion people now have mobile phones, many smartphones in developing countries leapfrogging old tech entirely. It’s boosted economies, education, activism (think Arab Spring or local community organizing), and even small businesses here in the Southern United States via Facebook Marketplace or Etsy.
It’s not just an invention—it’s the platform that enabled the others to thrive in everyday hands.