5/16/2026 at 2:48:44 PM
The challenge isn't buying it, the challenge is being able to do phone things with it.Nowadays, you can no longer exist in society without a phone. Most things will work but it takes one critical service that doesn't have a viable workaround, and you're forced to buy (and possibly carry) a "mainstream" phone just for that.
Banking, government, authentication, postal service and public transit apps are just some of the common categories that will, in the end, force you to use one of those systems, unless governments mandate viable alternatives. The QR-code based recaptcha that's being introduced will be another brick in the wall.
As an individual, it feels like my options are to either submit or try to live a hermit's life, bringing endless suffering and exclusion to myself.
by tgsovlerkhgsel
5/17/2026 at 8:11:51 AM
> Nowadays, you can no longer exist in society without a phone.Fight this, fight it hard. It is not acceptable to have to pay a monthly fee to a giant corporation to participate in unrelated things.
I do have a cell phone (grudgingly) but I go way out of my way to never use it. I tell every business I only have a landline phone (which I do have). I will not use anything that supposedly requires a phone, give me an alternative or you're not getting my business.
While I don't have the full ethical commitment of RMS, I can be very obstinate and will push this hard.
by jjav
5/16/2026 at 7:58:32 PM
> Nowadays, you can no longer exist in society without a phoneHyperbole doesn’t help. I’m a 44 year old former software engineer now with a modest social media following (100k per platform). I don’t have a phone.
I’ve never had a smart phone, last dumb phone gone in 2015.
I have to hassle my bank to let me use email instead of SMS for 2FA, and I hand jot notes for driving directions sometimes.
Otherwise, I’m immensely happy not to have one.
by dandandandan2
5/16/2026 at 8:43:12 PM
This is the way! I do not have a smartphone. I print maps, use email, print boarding cards, do my banking and shopping with a web browser, pay with cash or a debit card.I think people have been brain washed to believe they can no longer live life without being enslaved by a surveillance device.
Lost? Ask for directions. Need a map? Go to a hotel or a tourist center, or print one in advance.
by abc123abc123
5/17/2026 at 9:57:39 AM
The thing is, most people do want to have a smartphone. Either because living without requires an amount of effort they are not interested in or because they actually like using a smartphone for certain things. Personally, I like having the web and maps accessible from the palm of my hand everywhere I go.So, the solution is not to suggest that people should not use a smartphone. That ship has sailed. I agree that it should still be possible to do things without for people that do not want to use one. But you are not going to convince more than a small percentage of the population to abandon smartphones.
Instead we should focus on making alternative smartphone ecosystems (AOSP can be a starting point) and getting technology that is used to shut out competition (e.g. Google Play Strong Integrity) banned.
by microtonal
5/17/2026 at 3:13:34 PM
Yeah, this whole discussion thread is essentially irrelevant to the underlying topic because of exactly what you said.It’s just the typical HN humble brag thread about being present and owning no technology.
Awesome that these folks don’t own a phone and give their landline to businesses. I love that for them.
But I like my smartphone, GPS directions, digital wallets, streaming music, etc. I just don’t want it to be controlled by two companies. I want there to be a healthy market of multiple options including open source alternatives.
This for me has been achieved on my desktop and laptop but not yet on my smartphone.
by dangus
5/17/2026 at 5:12:50 AM
Walking into a hotel lobby to get a map printed seems like a much greater surveillance risk than looking up directions on my phone. The cameras, the printer, the hotel staff, the other hotel guests; they’re all third party to your private information. Is that really any better than Apple or Google telemetry?by nyanmatt
5/17/2026 at 8:39:36 PM
Sorry Pale but I doubt you are either James Bond or Edward Snowden. Chill out. I once visit Japan, and you get papers with full of information and maps where stuff line out the direction for you ALL the time... You see there are alternatives and in this special use case you even gain privacy by blending in with all the other crowd.by _bernd
5/16/2026 at 9:00:28 PM
When you go on holiday, do you have to find an Internet café to print off your boarding pass for the flight home? Or do you select destinations covered by airlines that allow you to get a boarding pass more than 48 hours in advance?by aembleton
5/16/2026 at 9:06:58 PM
They said they don't use a phone. You can do online check-in on any device with a browser. I'm sure you can point to a single airline that only offers it through a native mobile app but that'd be an extreme exception.by deaux
5/17/2026 at 8:19:16 AM
> Internet café to print off your boarding pass for the flight home?You can print the boarding pass at the airline kiosk at the airport, at least in any US airport I've been to. I always do this.
As noted in a peer post I try very hard to do everything without a phone. I do have a phone but don't want to depend on it.
Boarding passes in particular seem very unreliable on a phone. I always have the paper boarding pass printed at the airport but for curiosity I check the phone app boarding pass. More than 50% of the time the phone app boarding pass hangs from bad connectivity while standing at the gate and I can't retrieve it. Fortunately I always have the printed boarding pass so that always works. Paper does not rely on internet connectivity so it will always be infinitely more reliable.
by jjav
5/17/2026 at 8:44:04 PM
Pardon me but you could have in many cases have cached the data. I honor your strong commitment. I most often use digital because "it's easier" for them. But not for me. Sometimes I make fun and use printouts of their digital system just for the lulz. But back to cached data. Most often the mobil application catches data upfront and still be valid later even offline. Just as a reminder. Peace.by _bernd
5/16/2026 at 9:14:51 PM
Most hotels would be happy to print your boarding pass for free.by medvidek
5/16/2026 at 11:04:44 PM
This is actually exactly what I it when I was in this kind of situation.I really have the impression that using a smartphone makes a lot people much more dumb with respect to seeing obvious solutions for their problems.
by aleph_minus_one
5/17/2026 at 5:22:38 AM
Which airline requires you to print your own boarding pass and won't let you on the plane without a phone? Now I haven't flown in years but last time I did, the normal procedure was to show up at the airport either with your printed ticket or just your reference code and ID, and either use a kiosk or talk to a person to get your boarding pass, and also to check in your bags.by tardedmeme
5/17/2026 at 11:47:25 AM
Ryanair or Wizz air. You can have them print it for you in the airport but they charge 55 euros for it.by victorbjorklund
5/17/2026 at 6:46:32 PM
Ryanair don’t charge you 55 euros, at least not from what I’m reading [1]. It’s completely free, at the airport, provided you’ve checked in already, which from my experience can be done up to 24 hours prior to your flight. Plenty of time to use a hotel computer, someone else’s device or find an internet cafe if you aren’t completely disorganised.I’m not sure about Wizz Air, I’ve never flown with them and their website isn’t quite as clear as Ryanairs.
[1] https://www.ryanair.com/ie/en/lp/explore/digital-boarding-pa...
by jpsouth
5/16/2026 at 11:52:51 PM
Most airports have kiosks to print boarding passes. It isn't the end of the world.Also luggage check-in counters will print a boarding pass.
by com2kid
5/16/2026 at 8:30:20 PM
How could it be hyperbole when you give two examples of the increasing pain?by slumberlust
5/16/2026 at 8:36:59 PM
GP said “can no longer exist”.Listing a few challenges of a phoneless life doesn’t negate the point that one can still exist without a phone, even in 2026.
by j_bum
5/16/2026 at 8:49:49 PM
[dead]by manincharge
5/17/2026 at 8:52:51 PM
Undoubtedly having a phone would increase convenience in my life. I’d also have to go to work more to pay for it which would seriously inconvenience my snowboarding time.I’d also spend more of my life staring at a small device instead of talking to people or just enjoying the trees, mountains and rivers.
On the whole, I much prefer it this way.
by dandandandan2
5/16/2026 at 8:41:35 PM
Because these two examples are tiny in comparison with the decrease in surveillance you will get, and the example you set for your fellow men, and just spreading the norm in society that ubiquitous surveillance is wrong and that we can live ethical lives without being slaves and chained to the government and corporations.by abc123abc123
5/16/2026 at 10:01:27 PM
You still use the internet. Just avoiding a mobile phone is not a magic pill against surveillance.by cromka
5/16/2026 at 11:05:37 PM
> You still use the internet. Just avoiding a mobile phone is not a magic pill against surveillance.Very true. But it is a huge first step.
by aleph_minus_one
5/17/2026 at 7:56:10 AM
Here in France, my bank won't let me 2FA into my account (i have to physically go to the bank every single time i need something), and i can't get car ownership papers for a car i legally bought from the registered owner 2 years ago due to the administration closing down 100% of their offices in favor of online forms (tried the online forms many times, as well as registered letter to the headquarters).This anecdata probably says more about french techno-fascism and politics of destroying public services than about how phones have somehow become mandatory because of society evolving in general. I'm still very happy not to have a phone.
by selfhoster1312
5/17/2026 at 1:33:50 AM
A big issue for me was events that require digital only tickets. I haven't been able to work around that yet.by tabiv
5/17/2026 at 2:22:59 PM
If I have an issue with my phone when travelling I usually tell them beforehand and luckily all of them have figured out a workaround thus far.by sillyfluke
5/16/2026 at 10:16:55 PM
I mean, I cant rent city bicycles without a phone in a lot of cities or use uber or lyft but okay.by nerdsniper
5/17/2026 at 7:22:13 AM
Or pay for parking in many european cities. So I guess you are not forced into a hermit life as long as... you are already happy with your hermit life.by rixed
5/17/2026 at 8:50:52 PM
I live in a small town. There is no uber or Lyft, or QR code parking. I ride my bike a lot. Snowboard nearly everyday in the winter and there is cell service in the mountains.I lived in mega cities for 10 years, I’ll never do it again.
Call in hermit life if you want, I call it the simple life where enjoyment and happiness are the priority
by dandandandan2
5/17/2026 at 8:28:29 AM
US cities as well, now that you mention it. Open lots often require scanning a QR code to pay. They watch cameras and tow your car very quickly if you don't.Maybe the reason this guy gets away with not having a smartphone is that his friends use their smartphones for him whenever things like this pop up?
by nerdsniper
5/16/2026 at 4:41:16 PM
> Nowadays, you can no longer exist in society without a phone.Is it the phone or just the mobile operating system? I do most of my phone stuff on a tablet that I keep at home - where it's safer. I am currently using an Android phone (without an account) for GPS, phone calls (contacts), internet, games, email (alternatives to google), etc...
But for those critical and sensitive apps (banking, etc)... I consider those to be too dangerous to be walking around with.
So any phone will serve (I can wait to get home to check email for example).
by O1111OOO
5/16/2026 at 5:06:26 PM
That doesn't solve for services that by definition need to be accessed on the go, e.g. public transit, parcel pickup, luggage lockers, rental bikes, restaurant menus, paying for parking, etc. (some of these may not mandate phones in your area yet or may allow mobile web alternatives, these are just examples where I've seen strong pushes towards apps or at leas in many places).by tgsovlerkhgsel
5/16/2026 at 5:46:16 PM
> restaurant menus
Well, that's easy to deal with - don't go the restaurants that openly disrespect you.Out of all the examples you have presented everything had worked somehow without phones not so long ago.
Maybe, with the exception of online public transit status streaming. And public transit still works without it.
by Insimwytim
5/16/2026 at 8:46:49 PM
This is the way. Don't go, or if you don't know, ask for a menu, if that does not exist, ask for a phone from the staff. Have used all of these methods with excellent results. The restaurants wants to sell, they will find you a menu or a phone.by abc123abc123
5/17/2026 at 8:23:34 AM
Yes, absolutely!On the occasions where I've been to a restaurant that tries to pull off the QR nonsense, I just ask for a menu, I tell them I don't have a phone.
I've yet to see one where they can't find me an actual menu. If it ever happens, I'll walk out and be very annoyingly loud at letting them know why they lost my business.
Pushing for your rights isn't always pleasant, but it's important.
by jjav
5/17/2026 at 11:58:51 AM
> everything had worked somehow without phones not so long agoThis is called change :-) Slowly boiling the frogs.
by azangru
5/16/2026 at 7:44:11 PM
I hate when people respond like this, I recently did three months with a dumb phone to attempt to get away from iOS/Android in a major US city and it was impossible. All of the things that made it impossible used to be possible without a smart phone, but they aren’t anymore and they’re not magically back when you try and navigate life without one.Things like paid surface parking lots. Used to you could pay at a machine or a lot attendant, well there aren’t attendants anymore and few people use the machines so there isn’t enough incentive to fix them when they’re vandalized.
Some restaurants have printed backup menus but some straight up don’t. Printing menus costs money, why spend it if they don’t have to?
Digital signage that tells you how far away transit is, whether there are currently adjusted times, etc. is a lower priority now that everyone has maps in their pocket that track the transit in real time.
Showing up to a concert early to convince the ticket window to give you a physical ticket for a digital only event, and then they want email proof or to visibly see an app on the smartphone that is glitching is ridiculous.
The list of tiny cuts goes on and on. All of them worked without smartphones but the incentives flipped and now you can’t escape and you don’t realize the backups are gone until you try it for a while. It sucks.
by eightysixfour
5/16/2026 at 9:15:34 PM
Maybe living in the “big city” sucks harder than I thought.I can and have gone days without a phone in “semirural” areas (not even Amish) and have been fine.
Restaurants without printed menus are just not places I’ll go.
by bombcar
5/16/2026 at 5:40:49 PM
We'd need regulation for that. Either a mandate that the digital option is optional, and services must have an alternative means, or a mandate that any app based service also has an equally viable mobile web option, making the app optional.Tbh I see no reason why all of that couldn't just be a website instead of a native app. Menus should just be a website, transit should still be offering physical metro cards, the lockers & bikes could just as easily be a website.
Folks on HN won't like this ida but quite frankly I'd go a step further and have a mandate that services like these must offer an API for the public to use in order to bring their own app/solution. It'd be nice to not be limited to exclusively first party options. How ridiculous is it that there are so many different pay for parking apps, when if all of them just offered an API I could roll my one all in one parking web app, etc.
I'd even pay a subscription, like many of these services offer already, for API access instead.
by thewebguyd
5/16/2026 at 4:27:54 PM
There was a time back in covid days where you had to have an app on your phone to go through customs clearance in Canada.by stdatomic
5/16/2026 at 8:44:24 PM
I flew all over europe, no smart phone, no mask. I printed my own doctors notes and corona passports and they worked flawlessly everywhere.Towards the end, I copied other peoples QR-codes and printed them out, and that worked nicely as well.
by abc123abc123
5/16/2026 at 7:55:18 PM
I flew from Canada to Australia during deep Covid ($15k flight, mandatory locked in hotel for 10 days for $3k, etc)I don’t have a phone.
by dandandandan2
5/16/2026 at 9:09:15 PM
I refuse to believe that's true. That they were denying Dorothy (92) from going through customs because she couldn't use an app. That's an extraordinary claim.If they weren't denying Dorothy, that means you did not need an app.
by deaux
5/16/2026 at 9:16:53 PM
It was compulsory during COVID and it became optional laterby vivekd
5/16/2026 at 9:32:24 PM
From what I'm reading, non-users weren't and couldn't have actually been denied entry. It wouldn't have held up in court either. They could be made to quarantine.by deaux
5/17/2026 at 6:22:45 PM
>you can no longer exist in society without a phone.I do just fine without.
But certainly there are additional challenges. In my city, for example, there has been a massive shift towards phone-pay parking... which excludes my paying for it — still waiting for my citation (to challenge in court).
Carrying my pager with me is the only reason people will pretend-believe I'm actually phoneless. Many have never seen beeper technology, its one-way advancedness.
by ProllyInfamous
5/16/2026 at 3:26:26 PM
You can exist, but life will be as inconvenient as it was in the 1990s (though importantly, it didn't seem inconvenient at the time, it was just the way things were).by SoftTalker
5/16/2026 at 4:58:59 PM
> as inconvenient as it was in the 1990sThat's not true, because in the 1990s there was no presumption that everyone has a major-vendor smartphone. Now, the ways to do things without a smartphone are often disappearing, so things are more inconvenient. For example, ticket machines and printed schedules for public transit are going away in many places.
by tgsovlerkhgsel
5/16/2026 at 5:29:17 PM
I don't have any usable public transit where I live but the place where I'm familiar with it is Chicago and all the train stations have ticket machines. Bus stops no, but you can pay on the bus with a payment card, transit card, or an app. Cash fares are no longer accepted for some time.I miss the old tokens they used to use. So simple, anonymous, easy to share with traveling companions, though could be annoying when you ran out.
by SoftTalker
5/16/2026 at 3:41:25 PM
I disagree. You cannot even book appointments in a lot of banks today, a thing you could do in the 90s. Like that, a lot of services are unavailable without a smartphone and its non-smartphone equivalent is not available anymore.by amunozo
5/16/2026 at 5:00:45 PM
This might be country specific? Specifically dependent on laws in the fields of consumer-protection and keeping things universally accessible.I don't own a smartphone. I have never owned a smartphone. There are inconveniences, and big organizations definitely try to push you toward the way of doing things which has the lowest costs for them - but there are no actual blockers. There is always a path involving actual humans, and regular phone calls (or emails or paper forms).
Reactions tend to be wistful variations of "I wish I could" or "but how do you?" - and it's really always about the most trivial inconveniences.
by svl
5/16/2026 at 6:38:47 PM
To be honest, I never tried, but I see for example the removal of more and more procedures in person. In Spain where I'm from or Switzerland where I live it can be still manageable, but in the Nordic countries for example everything is digital and even cash is barely existent. A lot of payments are made by phone apps only.by amunozo
5/16/2026 at 8:37:56 PM
I am from Nordic country. I did not use any cash, had no wallet for several years. It's not needed. After the US government acting like it does I mostly stopped using cards. Like with phone OSes a US-controlled duopoly.Cash does not to need to be used anywere, but cards can be avoided for weeks until I need to use it again. Most can be handled by cash or bank transfer without problems.
For phones I have not any Google Android or iOS until a year ago. Nowdays I have a Google work phone, but it's always in flight mode except when a pay my lunch subsidized by employer. I type this comment on my Sailfish device and I use a degoogled Android. Can cause minor inconvenienance occasionally, but rarely enough to turn on my work phone.
by usr1106
5/16/2026 at 9:14:55 PM
> Cash does not to need to be used anywere, but cards can be avoided for weeks until I need to use it again.Your experience sounds interesting but I can't infer what this sentence means.
by deaux
5/17/2026 at 12:11:19 AM
Sorry, I should proof-read my comments... Can't edit it anymoreIt is not necessary to use cash anywhere because cards can be used really everywhere.
But if you don't want to use cards, it's still possible to avoid it for weeks in row. You can pay cash at most brick and mortar places and by bank transfer at most online sites.
by usr1106
5/17/2026 at 9:37:38 AM
"oh, so sorry, we do not have change". (The note was £20, not 100, not even 50.) Good luck ...by pbgcp2026
5/16/2026 at 3:45:31 PM
Not my experience. I'm in the USA, and there are still bank branches everywhere, I'd say as many as ever and new ones are being built. In fact within a mile of my house the finishing touches on the latest new one (full remodel of a former restaurant building) are just about done.by SoftTalker
5/16/2026 at 9:03:45 PM
> I'd say as many as ever and new ones are being built.That's an amazing difference compared to the UK. My local town had 5 bank branches ten years ago, now there are none. Until 2 weeks ago we didn't even have a cash machine; fortunately there is one now. It is something that has rapidly changed in the last 15 years.
by aembleton
5/17/2026 at 6:14:45 AM
You should be able to do all that from a computer at home right? The times I needed to do serious banking on the go are limited. Yes convenient, but replaceable with a 10 minute session at home using my Firefox or similar on Linux.by seb1204
5/16/2026 at 4:17:54 PM
This.1. My bank doesn't allow to go in person without an in-app taken appointment.
2. My nephew can't play football in his team, because the team has an app to book/signal your availability. No other way.
3. Half of restaurants in my area do not have non-QR code menus, they just don't.
4. McDonald's will make me pay the scam pricing you get without the app.
5. My doctor gives documentation only and exclusively in digital form, on a special application that doesn't even have a desktop equivalent.
6. My fiance's office badges are smartphone-based. You cannot enter otherwise.
7. All the software she uses at work requires frequent Google/Apple/third party authentication.
8. Increasingly more European airlines exclusively accept in-app check in and documentation. You cannot print it. Ryanair's one of them.
I could go on for longer.
by epolanski
5/16/2026 at 9:05:15 PM
1. I don't know any bank that does, but in any case voting with your wallet is always an option.2., 3., 4. Voting with your wallet once again.
5. That would be illegal in many jurisdictions, some countries even have a centralized systems for doctors to upload documentation (that you access using your ID as an authentication token).
6., 7. Unless the employer provides said smartphone, that would be illegal to require in most countries.
8. Vote with your wallet, also all such airlines can print a boarding pass for free if you do the checkin on the website.
by medvidek
5/16/2026 at 9:32:22 PM
Half of the voting with your wallet are blind to the fact that you can't vote anything else.My village has one football team, not N. There's one burger place, not two.
For the rest, appealing to legality is pointless, I ain't bringing my family doctor to a tribunal over this, this is real life and me being petty for not wanting to use a phone. Being right years from now is beyond pointless.
by epolanski
5/17/2026 at 1:51:54 AM
Sounds like you have given up without a fight and deserve whatever you get.by iamnothere
5/17/2026 at 9:44:07 AM
epolanski@ is, unfortunately, right. You may try to "walk away" if you are not interested in the end result. If the fact of walking away for you is more important / feels better than actually doing what you came for. (And don't get me started on how girls look at you when you start fishing for petty change in your pockets - that seriously limits your dating pool LOL)by pbgcp2026
5/17/2026 at 11:52:46 AM
As someone with a long term partner who shares my use of cash, at least for some things, you don’t want to date people who look down on you for your choice of payment. Red flag. Waste of time.Have some self respect. Don’t date people who aren’t mostly aligned with your values.
by iamnothere
5/17/2026 at 9:42:36 PM
"Have some self respect". Sure. Which hand respects you more: right or left one? ;-)by pbgcp2026
5/17/2026 at 10:11:41 PM
I know this was a joke, but if you’re having trouble meeting someone who shares your values, maybe try looking in different places than you would expect (they don’t have to share your interests, that’s less important than you would think as long as you can bend to each other) or reevaluating what you think your “type” is. Many people chase a certain type of person, and only after they end up with someone totally different do they realize that their attraction to that type was some kind of pathology, perhaps replaying trauma from childhood.by iamnothere
5/17/2026 at 9:13:37 AM
Ain't life simple as you make it?by epolanski
5/16/2026 at 4:41:32 PM
I recently skipped a concert at the YouTube theater in LA because my phone is too old for Ticketmaster or Hollywood Park apps. Even though you can go and buy a ticket at the box office they have to send you the ticket to the app. No option to print it or any non-app way.by ssttoo
5/16/2026 at 5:15:25 PM
Oh that true!I've been in multiple clubs/events that you can enter exclusively after having downloaded the app.
by epolanski
5/16/2026 at 5:25:06 PM
(Depending on whether you mean "can't exist without a phone" or "can't exist without an Apple/Google monopoly ecosystem")3. you don't need an Apple or Google account to scan a QR code and open a web page.
4. Why is it "scam" pricing? You're getting a discount from giving them your information with an app. Like Kindle charging more to remove adverts. Dislikable, scummy not scammy. (i.e. they aren't taking your money and providing nothing and then disappearing).
6. I think in the UK / Europe the employer would have to provide your fiancee with a company phone so she could access her workplace, and could not legally require her to have a personal phone with an employer managed/controlled app on it.
7. Does Google/Apple authentication require a Google/Apple app? I see "sign in with Google" on web pages on my Windows desktop. Google Authenticator app is a fairly standard OTP passcode app which can be done in many other programs, password vaults and browser plugins.
8. Ryanair says you can check-in on their website: https://help.ryanair.com/hc/en-us/articles/12888891271953-Ho...
by jodrellblank
5/16/2026 at 9:06:51 PM
> 8. Ryanair says you can check-in on their website: https://help.ryanair.com/hc/en-us/articles/12888891271953-Ho...Last year I could check in on their website, but needed the app for the boarding card. They might have changed that, but that article doesn't make it clear.
by aembleton
5/16/2026 at 9:33:24 PM
But the boarding pass you need in app.Or you're free to queue at 5 am for your 8.30 am free for an hour+at their counter.
by epolanski
5/16/2026 at 7:39:48 PM
First and foremost: I'm sorry for you. Living in a participation-dictated-by-app hellscape sucks. But most people only realize this when the magical one or two steps happen that force them to "touch grass".With regards to specific points that match with my reality:
> "My fiance's office badges are smartphone-based. You cannot enter otherwise."
I worked for a company where that was a thing. Easy fix: They issued me (and others) a smartphone for that. And that slab never left the workplace either; I fetched/returned it before/after my day by notifying the security desk.
Everything else on your list is either irrelevant or unnacceptable to me, or simply illegal where I live.
by spankibalt
5/17/2026 at 9:49:11 AM
You would be PIP'd next week today. Nobody is dealing with that anymore. Is it suppressing our rights? Yes. Absolutely. And it will get worse. And no, people will not revolt. And you will be left behind, on the other side of the gates, after all your team has gone through. Happy to do it? Rich enough to do it? I'm not ...by pbgcp2026
5/16/2026 at 4:52:30 PM
> 3. Half of restaurants in my area do not have non-QR code menus, they just don't.Not knocking this list, the shit is real. But I just had a lovely imaginary conversation with a server asking them what they would recommend and then trying something brand new.
by troyvit
5/16/2026 at 5:10:46 PM
When I go to a restaurant that has QR-only menus, I won't make a scene about it, but it lowers the mental rating I give the place and I'm less likely to return.by SoftTalker
5/17/2026 at 8:27:52 AM
I suggest making a scene about it.I've never encountered such a restaurant but will definitely make a scene about it if it happens.
by jjav
5/17/2026 at 9:50:55 AM
If you do make a scene - please do not order soup. LOLby pbgcp2026
5/16/2026 at 4:58:26 PM
I've had this conversation for real. The server's recommendation was that I scan the QR code.That was my last time going to that restaurant.
by chias
5/16/2026 at 8:00:33 PM
That's happened to me a lot, to get a 503 service unavailable from a restaurant server.by stavros
5/16/2026 at 5:21:08 PM
Joke's on the server. The robot that will replace their job soon will be more than happy to regale you with any hallucinated information you would like about the subtleties of the menu.by zephen
5/16/2026 at 5:17:07 PM
> 1. My bank doesn't allow to go in person without an in-app taken appointment.What about other banks?
> 3. Half of restaurants in my area do not have non-QR code menus, they just don't.
That's crazy. I don't think I even saw 50% during COVID. Must be barely 5% of places that are QR only in the UK.
> 4. McDonald's will make me pay the scam pricing you get without the app.
Isn't it a scam even with the app pricing? The quality is so so bad these days I feel scammed even paying £1.50 for a burger.
> 5. My doctor gives documentation only and exclusively in digital form, on a special application that doesn't even have a desktop equivalent.
> 6. My fiance's office badges are smartphone-based. You cannot enter otherwise.
Are those compatible with disability laws?
> 8. Increasingly more European airlines exclusively accept in-app check in and documentation. You cannot print it. Ryanair's one of them.
That is not true for Ryanair.
https://help.ryanair.com/hc/en-gb/articles/12889016882065-Ca... :
"You can check in on the Ryanair.com website or on the mobile App"
"If you checked in but cannot present your boarding pass on the app when you arrive at the airport, you will receive a free of charge boarding pass."
(This it is more difficult as their appears to be even fewer staff around than before)
Also:
"You can check in for your flight at the airport, but you will have to pay an airport check-in fee per passenger to cover the extra cost of the airport check-in service. Please see our Table of Fees."
(Admittedly very very expensive)
by gib444
5/16/2026 at 8:05:38 PM
I flew with RyanAir several times after they introduced a "mandatory" app boarding pass, never had problems with check-in agents just printing the boarding pass for free (after doing the web check-in). Had to pretend my phone died once, in all other cases they just printed the pass no questions asked.by medvidek
5/16/2026 at 4:05:22 PM
I walked into my bank the other day and sorted out something, without an appointment.Just joined an informal queue (no digital queueing system! The humans used their eyes and brain to remember who next )
Handed over my physical debit card so they could locate my account.
What digital hellscape do you live in? UK here
by gib444
5/16/2026 at 3:53:57 PM
Why does this permeate the HN all the time. You can 100% function without a fucking smartphone. My Dad doesn’t have one, he has zero-to-no trouble going to the bank and paying his bills and just about every other imaginable thing. If there was something he could not do and there were repercussions for it he’d be calling an attorney to rectify the situation. It is crazy to keep reading this over and over on HN, so weirdby bdangubic
5/16/2026 at 4:19:54 PM
> "Why does this permeate the HN all the time."It's a bias, an in-bubble illiteracy effect, concerning the perception and analysis of realities (e. g. experiences) outside that bubble, mirroring an in-group's projections about an out-group. It is, in my decades of experience, a very common phenomenon in the IT sector.
> "My Dad doesn’t have one, he has zero-to-no trouble going to the bank and paying his bills and just about every other imaginable thing."
So far, that holds true for me as well (Germany).
> "If there was something he could not do and there were repercussions for it he’d be calling an attorney to rectify the situation."
The crux: the increasing friction brought on by rising technological entry barriers. In Germany you have at least the non-exclusion principle of Teilhabe (lit.: participation) which gives certain guarantees. But such achievements of democracy are continually under fire.
by spankibalt
5/16/2026 at 11:12:17 PM
> It's a bias, an in-bubble illiteracy effect, concerning the perception and analysis of realities (e. g. experiences) outside that bubble, mirroring an in-group's projections about an out-group. It is, in my decades of experience, a very common phenomenon in the IT sector.I (also German) have the impression that people who work in the IT sector are often much more critical of surveillance methods (including smartphones) than the average citizen.
by aleph_minus_one
5/16/2026 at 6:39:26 PM
Well, no surprise that it works in Germany, but I am not so sure it will in the Nordic countries for example.by amunozo
5/16/2026 at 7:49:06 PM
And hopefully it stays that way in Germany. A state and its essential-to-life institutions and businesses (which includes cultural participation) need to be accessible to everyone. That includes people who don't own a smartphone, for whatever reason.by spankibalt
5/17/2026 at 8:33:15 AM
It is vital that government services must not depend on anything that is not government provided.No government service can depend on having a product from a private corporation.
by jjav
5/17/2026 at 8:27:07 AM
Nordic, works just fine, i only have an HMD 'Nokia' non-smartphone (i detest capacitive touchscreens, and my previous ungoogled qwerty android phone broke, waiting for my next one to arrive in 2026-12 or thereabouts).No QR-code-only restaurants that i have seen, and i would walk out without a word if that happened (even if i had a device that can do that). Bank does 2FAs second part with an SMS, first part is username, password and an otp code from a paper. Bank login is also a very common way of logging into governmental systems, but those only use the username, password and otp code, skipping the SMS, alternatively i could use an id card with a reader, state provides even Linux software for that.
The housing companys winter car engine heating sockets operate with an app, or alternatively just opening the lid and setting the timer yourself.
Additional data point: my dad, when he was still alive (-2025), had a smartphone but wouldn't use apps beyond facebook, did his banking by mailing in signed bills or at the bank in person, without an appointment.
by nonamesleft
5/16/2026 at 4:28:59 PM
Technically, sure you probably can spend a large amount of time, energy, and money to find alternative non-smartphone ways of navigating through modern life.Practically, you need a smartphone. Engaging an attorney != practical
by rjrjrjrj
5/16/2026 at 4:46:24 PM
That's the thing. The larger amount of time, energy, and money we spent on doing banking in the 1990s was real. The web, and then mobile apps, made a lot of that more convenient. But it's not impossible to live the old way. You can still write paper checks, go to the bank to make a deposit and get cash, etc. It used to be normal, everyone did it, now it seems extremely inconvenient for most people.by SoftTalker
5/17/2026 at 9:59:05 AM
"You can still write paper checks" – greetings to our US brethren! :-) In EU you will meet a girl at the counter who can operate only bank "tap on" terminal and have no idea how to print anything or where the website is. Why? She doesn't care. She is paid same money if she does or doesn't. Wnant to complain? Here is the feedback form (QR code) ... Manager? She is ...by pbgcp2026
5/16/2026 at 5:02:30 PM
It is extremely inconvenient.Both because a dwindling minority of people do old things the old way; and because new things (eg Netflix and Uber) are designed for the new way, even if they don't absolutely require it.
by rjrjrjrj
5/16/2026 at 11:14:30 PM
> The larger amount of time, energy, and money we spent on doing banking in the 1990s was real. The web, and then mobile apps, made a lot of that more convenient.I wouldn't say so: when I go to the bank, I often combine it with grocery shopping, which I have to do anyway. So doing banking the old way is hardly an inconvenience.
by aleph_minus_one
5/16/2026 at 4:17:08 PM
In Portugal you have to do that at the bank terminals, otherwise going to the counter implies paying a services tax, depending on the kind of customer one happens to be.by pjmlp
5/16/2026 at 4:27:15 PM
Yeah, and lot of people assume that something doesn't exist because they aren't personally aware of it. Quite often there are people who are willing to serve those who don't make mainstream choices. Other times, it means that you simply have a different lifestyle from the mainstream. There's nothing wrong with that.by II2II
5/16/2026 at 9:21:01 PM
It's crazy that you're so insulated inside your own bubble and close-minded not to realize that the degree to which smartphones are required in daily life differ massively across countries, and HN is a global place. The places where your dad would have trouble going to the bank and doing "every other imaginable thing" are real and exist. You're just not in one.by deaux
5/16/2026 at 11:18:03 PM
> the degree to which smartphones are required in daily life differ massively across countries, and HN is a global place.In some countries people are willing to fight much harder against being coerced to have to use a smartphone. The message should thus rather be: follow their example.
by aleph_minus_one
5/17/2026 at 8:08:18 AM
It's easier to fight for additional rights when you start at a reasonably high baseline.by brandonr49
5/16/2026 at 4:10:42 PM
Yep, many older people right now don’t have a smart phone and never will.As long as some younger people stay that course we should be fine. Hopefully we’ll see an increase of dumb phone adoption in a growing cohort younger adults. But the FUD spread in threads like this actually spreads misinformation and makes that less likely to happen
by willio58
5/17/2026 at 2:24:12 AM
And those older people frequently have to ask someone in their life who has a smartphone to assist them. They still need a smartphone to manage modern life they just don’t happen to own the phone they need.by brewdad
5/16/2026 at 4:50:12 PM
Because the real complaint isn’t “it's impossible to live without a smartphone”, it is “I want all of the conveniences of a smartphone without having one, and I want every business to cater to the small minority who don’t want to use a smartphone”.It’s like complaining that it’s difficult to travel to another continent if you don’t want to fly. I want to go from LA to Paris in 12 hours without getting on a plane!
by brookst
5/16/2026 at 4:55:29 PM
I dont have a personal smartphone (I do have a pile of them in my office for testing software I make) but I dont use one myself. Its fine, I can do my banking and whatever. I live in Ireland.by everyone
5/16/2026 at 8:49:17 PM
Inconvenient? My life is super convenient. No stress, deep thinking and deep work, super focus and concentration.What I would find inconvenient is to be like the smartphone zombies around me, adicted to their phones, restlessly doomscrolling with dead eyes, feeling empty inside.
Print some stuff from time to time or arguing my way through tickets offices is a small price to pay for not being enslaved to the IT-machine.
by abc123abc123
5/16/2026 at 7:37:39 PM
It's mind blowing that we've allowed the development of a de-factor personal ID device absolutely controlled by an oligopoly of two private corporations.Do people realize that this means either of these companies, since they can remotely turn off your account or device, can deplatform you from society including from many government services?
It's an astounding amount of power we have simply ceded to these two companies.
by api
5/17/2026 at 10:10:13 AM
I know you are not going to like it, but it started when they took our guns. Now they took our jobs. Next is unified minimal global personal tax (seems to be decided at 30%). On unrealised capital gains. And phones? That's a smoke screen for you to look other way. (And to watch you all the time too)by pbgcp2026
5/17/2026 at 3:48:37 AM
> It's an astounding amount of power we have simply ceded to these two companies.We didn't do it, our representatives did it for us, mostly unaware of what they were doing and still without a clue about what to do with whatever they've created. No they can't, and they won't, academia BS isn't helping anyone either.
by bigbadfeline
5/16/2026 at 4:46:04 PM
It’s always been the case. In previous eras people were “forced” to use mastercard / visa, Windows, AT&T, Western Union, East India Company, Templar bnking, etc.I am not remotely defending the situation, past or present, just saying it’s a recurring theme.
by brookst
5/16/2026 at 7:54:02 PM
> Nowadays, you can no longer exist in society without a phoneHyperbole much.
I’m a 44 year old software engin, I don’t have a phone. Have never had a smart phone, haven’t had a dumb phone since 2015.
Some things are annoying, for example, I have to keep pushing my bank to let me use email not SMS. Going somewhere new I’ll look online on my laptop and jot down a few directions on paper.
That’s about it.
I snowboard and hike and hunt and camp and fish, no coverage doing all those anyway, so much of my life when not in a house with a laptop I simply don’t need or want one.
by dandandandan2
5/16/2026 at 4:09:21 PM
> Nowadays, you can no longer exist in society without a phoneIf my phone breaks, I will die? :)
Perhaps it's this spreading of this lie that it's impossible to live without a phone that is contributing to the problem
by gib444
5/16/2026 at 5:01:32 PM
No, but you will likely be inconvenienced to a similar level as losing your house keys, and lose access to important services. You won't immediately die, because most people can survive for quite some time on nothing but questionable river water and a piece of cardboard under a bridge, but there is a difference between survival and existing in society.by tgsovlerkhgsel
5/16/2026 at 11:19:25 PM
> No, but you will likely be inconvenienced to a similar level as losing your house keys, and lose access to important services.Because you made yourself dependent on these smartphone-only services beforehand. Don't do that.
by aleph_minus_one
5/17/2026 at 8:13:24 AM
More likely the services transformed into smartphone only when the user wasn't looking. Switching costs are not zero.by brandonr49
5/16/2026 at 7:40:38 PM
"As an individual, it feels like my options are to either submit or try to live a hermit's life, bringing endless suffering and exclusion to myself."Classic "all-or-nothing", "black and white" HN comment
No middle ground. Two extremes and nothing in between
In the real world, few people think this way
Not only that, but it's common today to have more than one computer
There is no shortage of HN comments that keep claiming "banking apps" as an argument against any alternatives to using a single phone running a corporate mobile OS _for everything they do with a computer_, not just banking. Feels like a meme
These people must do a lot of banking on the go in places where laptops, for instance, cannot travel. If so, one wonders why not just have a phone dedicated to mobile banking
by 1vuio0pswjnm7
5/17/2026 at 9:25:19 PM
The are people who dislike using Apple and Google smartphonesHN replies often try to reframe this problem from
(a) "How do I avoid using an Apple or Google smartphone" for whatever reason^[FN1]
to
(b) "Banking apps do not work on non-Apple, non-Google" smartphones
or
(c) Apple and Google smartphones need to become likeable, e.g., by pleading with the companies, petitioning the government for regulation, etc.
FN1. I have not seen any HN comments that suggest anyone is concerned about _using a banking app_ on an Apple or Google smartphone. What I have seen are comments that suggest Apple and Google smartphones are unsatisfactory for _other reasons_, such as being "locked down", "not an open platform", "privacy" risks, "security" flaws, etc. The non-banking uses of these smartphones are what cause concern
The problem (a) can be solved by choosing a non-Apple, non-Google smartphone, `i.e., a smartphone running a non-Apple, non-Google OS, or, better yet, by choosing a different form factor running a non-Apple, non-Google OS, _for non-banking uses_
There are some commenters who obviously have no intention of avoiding Apple and Google smarthones _where possible_. They will keep using these smartphones for _everything_, not just online banking
by 1vuio0pswjnm7
5/16/2026 at 8:21:14 PM
This probably depends on location, but generally, you cannot log in to your bank account on your laptop/computer without using your phone's banking app for 2FA. That's the status quo among banks.Whether it may be possible to convince a bank to give you a hardware token instead if they even still make them is not an assured thing.
by jolmg
5/17/2026 at 8:42:20 AM
> you cannot log in to your bank account on your laptop/computer without using your phone's banking appWhere is this?
I have lots of bank accounts, probably more than most people. Three local credit unions, Fidelity, Schwab, Chase, BofA, Citibank, Barclays, two local area banks, and two international banks. Plus a few lesser known ones for 401k/IRA accounts.
I have never installed any bank phone app. I do all my bank interactions from my desktop via Firefox.
by jjav
5/17/2026 at 9:32:48 AM
MFA is a requirement of the revised Payment Services Directive (PSD2) in the EU and many banks use their apps for authorising online card payments. Its also common to use apps as 2FA for logging in to online banking or making bank transfers.There can be alternatives in some cases (some banks offer code generating card readers, for example) but for personal accounts in particular, it would probably be difficult to operate without banking apps.
by galvin
5/17/2026 at 10:28:57 AM
galvin@ is right. I +1'd that. Regarding banks ... try HSBC. (I know, "I can always use another bank". Thanks. I happen to be Premier only at HSBC ...)by pbgcp2026
5/16/2026 at 9:17:56 PM
I have several accounts in different banks (across two different countries) and never had problems with using SMS as a second factor for internet banking. Definitely not status quo, at least in Europe.by medvidek
5/17/2026 at 10:14:56 AM
I'm in Europe and my bank (and most other banks in the country) only still allow existing TAN authenticators until they break or run out of battery, but only support 2FA with their app going forward.by microtonal
5/17/2026 at 5:01:00 AM
Interesting that you mention Europe, because if I remember correctly, at least in Germany, all banks that I'm aware of dropped SMS support when PSD2 was introduced.by tgsovlerkhgsel
5/17/2026 at 10:22:51 AM
On that "lot of banking on the go" ... here is the story. I witnessed nice and very well mannered US woman at Hilton in Rome. She was red and her hands were trembling. She tried all her 5 US-issued CCs – none worked. I felt bad for her, so we sat on the sofa. We installed one of the online FinApps (W...e) on her phone. She used her bank's app to transfer money to W...e account. Generated online Mastercard. Added to apple wallet. Beeep. Room paid. Good luck without those apps and mobile phone.by pbgcp2026
5/16/2026 at 7:53:59 PM
[dead]by cindyllm
5/16/2026 at 2:55:52 PM
Bingo.. we will all need to pick which prison we walk ourselves in to: Google or Appleby t1234s
5/16/2026 at 4:13:23 PM
How about a second phone for the things you list?by epolanski
5/16/2026 at 4:14:46 PM
I'd wager the majority of people on this site could afford $100-$200 for a separate phone that's solely used for apps that mandate Google/Apple services. As a bonus, using the "mainstream" phone with only those apps increases security, compared to having your banking apps on the same phone as other random apps.by logicchains
5/16/2026 at 3:58:20 PM
> Nowadays, you can no longer exist in society without a phone.millions of people would like a word…
> Most things will work but it takes one critical service that doesn't have a viable workaround, and you're forced to buy (and possibly carry) a "mainstream" phone just for that.
Absolutely not, if there is “critical service” that requires an iPhone or Android you call an attorney.
> Banking, government, authentication, postal service and public transit apps are just some of the common categories that will, in the end, force you to use one of those systems, unless governments mandate viable alternatives.
There are now and there always will be alternatives
> As an individual, it feels like my options are to either submit or try to live a hermit's life, bringing endless suffering and exclusion to myself.
As an individual you can and should fight any system that forces you into buying a smartphone. Alternatives must exist even if they might be “incovenient” (e.g. have to do it browser vs. via some “App”)
by bdangubic
5/16/2026 at 5:03:29 PM
> can and should fightI disagree, because the impact on my quality of life from fighting the fight is just not a level of sacrifice that is sensible.
> There are now and there always will be alternatives
The problem is that those "alternatives" often come with serious downsides, from higher cost, to massive inconvenience, to having to work around simply not having a service. And while most of the time it's possible to work around it, most people quickly hit the limit where the cost isn't bearable.
by tgsovlerkhgsel
5/16/2026 at 5:11:15 PM
> I disagree, because the impact on my quality of life from fighting the fight is just not a level of sacrifice that is sensibleInteresting. I feel then that if this is the case we cannot complain then, no? If the fight is not worth fighting (I think that it is) than complaints about it are pointless (for the lack of a softer word…)
by bdangubic
5/17/2026 at 5:02:11 AM
You're essentially blaming the robbery victim for handing over their wallet rather than fighting the knife-wielding robber.by tgsovlerkhgsel
5/16/2026 at 4:53:17 PM
Browser is great until it tells you that you need to use a mobile device.This happens all the time on multiple KYC platforms in the US.
My laptop is an equally mobile device, they just don't recognize that.
by dheera
5/16/2026 at 5:25:22 PM
So far, I have only found this with T-Mobile's app.The good news is that I can go into the nearby T-Mobile store and have them deal with it.
by zephen
5/16/2026 at 8:56:26 PM
I would immediately change my mobile service provider, this is an easy one and choices are plenty. financially as well, you can save yourself a lot of money if you have a cadence for switching providersby bdangubic
5/16/2026 at 10:54:27 PM
Maybe.I have 7 lines with unlimited data for under $150.
by zephen
5/16/2026 at 6:54:00 PM
you have an example where you are forced to use a mobile device? genuinely interested cause while I have a smartphone I don’t have hardly any “apps” on it (on my iphone all the “apps” are on the first “page” (without grouping). I do not like the idea of losing a phone and potentially someone getting access to my entire digital life (my phone password is 6 zeros) and I genuinely do not use phone for anything importantby bdangubic
5/17/2026 at 10:35:51 AM
HMRC in the UK / multiple Government Portals. Have you been to India (Air tickets)? Or China (Wechat/Alipay QR codes or you go hungry)? And see my example above regarding US woman at Hilton in Rome.by pbgcp2026
5/17/2026 at 9:38:54 AM
My employer's background check app required it. Multiple financial institutions' KYC required it.by dheera