Thanks, kids.

I, phone?

The 13 million moments that mattered…or didn’t.

Michael Winnick
People Nerds
Published in
3 min readJun 21, 2016

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dscout recently published research findings that document the amazing extent to which people interact with their phones throughout the day. We highlighted super users: people who exceed 200 sessions and 5,000 discrete interactions each day.

I’ve had an iPhone since Gen 1, seven years ago. Since then, I really haven’t been without it… for a single day. And I am undoubtedly a super user: I use my phone so much that, my preschooler and first grader suggested an iphone as cake decoration for my 37th birthday.

How many times have I touched my iPhone since i’ve owned it? That’s 5,000 touches a day, 365 days a year, for 7 years. Using my iPhone calculator (14 touches, btw), that’s 12,755,000.

Aside from breathing, blinking and other autonomic functions, it’s arguable that touching my iphone is the thing I’ve done the most…ever.

I just cried a little when I wrote that.

Some truly momentous things have happened during those nearly 13 million touches. My son’s first steps were documented. A business was founded. Friendships blossomed. Others not so much. I’ve read some of my favorite books. But, most of those touches were… inconsequential. Daily chaff. Distraction by a thousand digital cuts. A way to pass toilet time.

I am like most people I’ve researched: I love technology, but I am ambivalent about how much I interact with devices. I’m pretty sure it’s not good for me, and I’m not just talking about my chronic case of “text claw.” But I’m also not really interested in changing my behavior.

Nor is the tech industry going to serve as my digital 12-step program. Entrepreneurs read books about addiction, not to prevent unhealthy behavior but to create it. We even have an industry mantra: create painkillers, not vitamins. (Interestingly, even the people that write these things aren’t sure it’s a good idea. See Nir Eyal’s post.)

As product teams go about solving our problems and working really hard to engage us, they become masters at hijacking our time and our touches. But by squandering our two most precious personal resources — presence and attentiveness — have designers inadvertently created the tech version of Oxycotin?

Perhaps these challenges will be solved by technology itself. Virtual reality promises full immersion. Chatbots and virtual assistants might learn so much about us that they can manage the digital flotsam and jetsam on our behalf.

More likely, however, is that new devices will compound the challenge. More things and more services will be vying for beachfront property in our pockets, our homes, and most of all, our cerebellums. After all, more than half of Americans have at least five devices in their home already. That number is going to jump… a lot. Will our interactions increase in tandem? I hope not.

This is something that we at dscout are want to dig into. As people that nerd out on people and technology, it’s hard to resist big questions about our relationships with tech: Is this time well spent? Can we spend it better? Are all of these interactions a good thing, a bad thing, or just a thing? Can we make interfaces and interactions that aren’t so needy? Does it matter? I don’t really know the answer to these questions, but I’d sure like to find out.

Michael Winnick is founder and CEO of dscout, a web-based research platform and mobile ethnography app that provides real-time insights to researchers, designers and marketers.

Originally published at blog.dscout.com.

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