6 familiar ways of doing things that are disappearing

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Like fax machines, pagers and cassette tapes, nothing lasts forever. Tastes change, products improve, technology advances, and what was once dear to us fades away. The biggest reason:


technological advances, namely smartphones. “Airline tickets, cameras, alarm clocks and so forth, it’s not that these things are becoming obsolete. It’s what’s replacing them and how they


are being incorporated into other items,” says Timothy de Waal Malefyt, a clinical professor at the Gabelli School of Business at Fordham University. “The smartphone is our new home. It


provides locations for all these things in one device.” Take alarm clocks. They still have their fans, but many people rely on their smartphone to wake them up. Here are six things that


technological advances are also threatening to kill off. 1. CASH  While cash is king for many consumers, carrying it is a hassle that more people are avoiding. We have debit cards, credit


cards and digital payments to thank for that. With a tap of your card or scan of your mobile device, you can be through checkout in seconds. The rise of e-commerce and contactless payments


during the pandemic forever changed the way we use cash and shop.  Forty-one percent of Americans told the Pew Research Center in October 2022 that they don’t use cash for any of their


purchases in a typical week. In 2018 that was 29 percent, and in 2015, 24 percent. Consumers younger than age 50 were more likely to eschew cash. 2. PAY PHONES At their peak in 1999, more


than 2.1 million pay phones were in service across the U.S. Fewer than 100,000 were in operation by 2016, according to the Federal Communications Commission.  And it’s only gotten worse.


The last public pay phone was removed from New York City in May 2022. Pay phones disappeared as mobile phone usage exploded.  “The steady and steep decline over more than a decade of the


number of pay phones in service demonstrates that they no longer play as critical a role in society’s communications as they once did, as would-be users rely instead on mobile


subscriptions,” the FCC said in a report analyzing pay phone usage.   So where can you find pay phones these days? Some hotels, gas stations, convenience stores and hospitals may have one,


but it’s a rarity. 3. DESKTOP COMPUTERS The market for clunky desktop computers has shrunk as slimmer and lighter options have emerged. This year the industry expects to ship more than 68


million desktops, down from 76 million in 2022.