Alongside phone jacks, cubbies, and phone books, another thing that used to sit next to the phone in the home was a little book that held favorite contacts: friends, family members, frequent take-out places, and plenty more.
With enough space in your phone to hold millions of names and numbers, a little black book is yet another thing the smartphone industry has done away with. You’d have to update the book every time someone changed their address or phone number, and cell phones have made updating so much easier no one is mourning this loss.
The Number of Industries Smartphones Have Outdated Continues to Grow
Once a piece of the home that any deep thinker or inquisitive child will reach for at a moment's notice, dictionaries have now joined the phone book as a large tome that sits in the corner and collects dust.
Some versions, bundled with a similar thesaurus, may hold sway above the other books on your shelf and look handsome, yet you probably aren't reaching for one of these if you don't know what a word means. With multiple definitions and uses one Google search away, if you're moving and don't want to haul another heavy book, this one is destined for the trash.
Most Cans Don't Even Need an Opener Anymore
If you have a can opener in your home, you probably have a rechargeable device you can stick right on top of the can and let run while you work on another part of the meal. But, as most cans add pull-tabs or other options to get them open easier and faster – and without potentially dangerous sharp edges – can openers as a whole are seeing less and less use.
Manual hand openers — once one of the home's most-used tools — are probably doing little more than collecting dust. Doomsday preppers might keep using them to keep their skills fresh, but the regular citizen doesn't mind.
You Could Crate Other Things
We already mentioned milkmen are still around in a few small areas, but odds are you aren't part of the population that still requires the service. While plenty of people needed it in the fifties and sixties, seeing a milkman these days is cause for confusion and alarm.
Along with the decline of milkmen comes the decline of milk crates. These crates were commonplace once upon a time, but unless you're using them to store other items – and we aren't saying they aren't still pretty useful there – there's no real reason to keep them around.
Tune Out
There's nothing like coming home from work to listen to some radio, or opening your algebra homework and puzzling out the tough problems along to your favorite songs. These days, though, doing so is much easier through a phone or computer than a portable radio.
While these symbols of a bygone era still have a few uses – such as relaxing in an area without cell access – tuning, power, and finding the right spot to grab the radio signal is usually more work than it's worth with Spotify, Pandora, Bandcamp, and lots of other options at your fingertips.