Seems they're in the terminal stage of decline here too.
It hit me this year with Christmas cards.
My mom passed away last year (relatively young) and so did several elderly aunts in their 80s and 90s. They were all the type of people who'd have spent hours on the phone chatting away about just life in general and would make a point of calling each other. They were very much the nexuses of communication in my extended family and now they've all passed away and in relatively quick succession.
I decided I would make an effort to try and keep the connections alive, and I've been doing some of it through social media, but I thought I would write some Christmas cards. Every year, when I go home there's always a huge display of cards on the mantle piece on little fake washing lines. So, I decided to dig out the old cards and get the reply addresses. Seems most of them are just "Merry Xmas from Ann and Patrick" "Happy New Year, Love Mary." I have no idea who 80% of them are from and none of them have reply addresses.
I ran though some of the cards with my dad and brother and they recognised some of them but only had vague notions of where some of these people might live. Then I thought, hey I'll look them up in the phone book (online) and it seems that going ex-directory (unlisted) is the new fashion due to the death of landlines, the advent of a plague of telemarketers and general modern paranoia, so it's now impossible to find anyone either to call them or write to them. Whereas if you went back 25+ (maybe a little further) years ago most households had a landline and it was relatively unusual to be ex-directory (unlisted.)
I didn't grow up in the age of "Number Please!?" or even the days of electromechanical switching. I was born in the 80s and the digital age was well established, but I do have fond memories of a phone in the hall, even if they were modern and cordless they were physically there and you could reach a household, not just an individual.
I even remember having a proper tape-based answering machine and then some crazy network-based "Family Mailbox" on the phone where when you'd call our house you'd get "You've reached the Simpsons household -- if you want to leave a message for Marge press 1, for Homer press 2, for Bart press 3 or for Lisa press 4 and each of us had our own private mail box. You picked up the phone and got the worbelling dial tone and you could check a message in you.
I think though it's an era that we're never going to see again. The technology's moved on so rapidly in the past couple of decades and really landline services are probably going to end up as something that will really only be used in offices or similar environments or for niche uses where someone particularly wants one (and obviously all VoIP based). The rest of us are just using mobiles.
Coincidentally, I was reading an article about the decline of landline usage here in Ireland and while it has been happening it seems to be increasing exponentially in the last few years. A lot of broadband services here tended to come with a VoIP landline (the router will almost always have an analogue RJ11 port for phone jacks and sometimes even can host DECT cordless phones like a little mini PBX) but I know in my case I probably could count on my hand the number of times a year I have used that service. I'm not even sure I could recall the number without looking it up in my iPhone.
My landline provider / ISP also offers an iPhone / Android app to use your landline, but I mean why would you bother? I installed it and it was a gimmick fo ra few days and then I forgot I even had it.
They all initially had some notion that consumers would still want landline services and that they'd all just hop over to VoIP when older digital circuit switched (TDM) services shut down, but in reality many of those companies have scaled back their investments in fixed voice services as there's very little demand.
it's also increasingly difficult to even find mobile plans that don't have unlimited voice minutes, even on really cheap 9.99/month plans they're usually throwing in voice as almost an afterthought freebie and then you've free pan-EU roaming and all of that stuff to, so it's really pointless having a landline.
They seem to be going the same way as payphones, hotel phones, fax machines and teletype. An era has very much ended.
It looks like we'll have a world where offices will be connected with SIP trunks and the majority of the rest of us aren't going to use anything other than our smartphones.. sigh.
It hit me this year with Christmas cards.
My mom passed away last year (relatively young) and so did several elderly aunts in their 80s and 90s. They were all the type of people who'd have spent hours on the phone chatting away about just life in general and would make a point of calling each other. They were very much the nexuses of communication in my extended family and now they've all passed away and in relatively quick succession.
I decided I would make an effort to try and keep the connections alive, and I've been doing some of it through social media, but I thought I would write some Christmas cards. Every year, when I go home there's always a huge display of cards on the mantle piece on little fake washing lines. So, I decided to dig out the old cards and get the reply addresses. Seems most of them are just "Merry Xmas from Ann and Patrick" "Happy New Year, Love Mary." I have no idea who 80% of them are from and none of them have reply addresses.
I ran though some of the cards with my dad and brother and they recognised some of them but only had vague notions of where some of these people might live. Then I thought, hey I'll look them up in the phone book (online) and it seems that going ex-directory (unlisted) is the new fashion due to the death of landlines, the advent of a plague of telemarketers and general modern paranoia, so it's now impossible to find anyone either to call them or write to them. Whereas if you went back 25+ (maybe a little further) years ago most households had a landline and it was relatively unusual to be ex-directory (unlisted.)
I didn't grow up in the age of "Number Please!?" or even the days of electromechanical switching. I was born in the 80s and the digital age was well established, but I do have fond memories of a phone in the hall, even if they were modern and cordless they were physically there and you could reach a household, not just an individual.
I even remember having a proper tape-based answering machine and then some crazy network-based "Family Mailbox" on the phone where when you'd call our house you'd get "You've reached the Simpsons household -- if you want to leave a message for Marge press 1, for Homer press 2, for Bart press 3 or for Lisa press 4 and each of us had our own private mail box. You picked up the phone and got the worbelling dial tone and you could check a message in you.
I think though it's an era that we're never going to see again. The technology's moved on so rapidly in the past couple of decades and really landline services are probably going to end up as something that will really only be used in offices or similar environments or for niche uses where someone particularly wants one (and obviously all VoIP based). The rest of us are just using mobiles.
Coincidentally, I was reading an article about the decline of landline usage here in Ireland and while it has been happening it seems to be increasing exponentially in the last few years. A lot of broadband services here tended to come with a VoIP landline (the router will almost always have an analogue RJ11 port for phone jacks and sometimes even can host DECT cordless phones like a little mini PBX) but I know in my case I probably could count on my hand the number of times a year I have used that service. I'm not even sure I could recall the number without looking it up in my iPhone.
My landline provider / ISP also offers an iPhone / Android app to use your landline, but I mean why would you bother? I installed it and it was a gimmick fo ra few days and then I forgot I even had it.
They all initially had some notion that consumers would still want landline services and that they'd all just hop over to VoIP when older digital circuit switched (TDM) services shut down, but in reality many of those companies have scaled back their investments in fixed voice services as there's very little demand.
it's also increasingly difficult to even find mobile plans that don't have unlimited voice minutes, even on really cheap 9.99/month plans they're usually throwing in voice as almost an afterthought freebie and then you've free pan-EU roaming and all of that stuff to, so it's really pointless having a landline.
They seem to be going the same way as payphones, hotel phones, fax machines and teletype. An era has very much ended.
It looks like we'll have a world where offices will be connected with SIP trunks and the majority of the rest of us aren't going to use anything other than our smartphones.. sigh.