The regulator hissed, a rhythmic, metallic gasp that usually centers me, but today the water felt heavy, like it was made of cold mercury. I was scrubbing the algae off the thick acrylic pane of a 288-gallon reef tank in a corporate lobby when my haptic watch buzzed against my wrist. I ignored it. Then it buzzed again. And 8 times more. It was a software update notification, or a calendar reminder for a release event I forgot I’d subscribed to, vibrating against my skin in a world where time should be measured by the slow sway of anemones, not the arrival of a new titanium chassis.
I’ve spent 18 years as an aquarium maintenance diver, and in that time, I’ve watched the world through glass-both the glass of my mask and the glass of the smartphones held by the people on the other side of the tank. Recently, I was scrolling through my digital photo archives, trying to find a picture of a specific clownfish transition, and I realized something sickening. I didn’t think, ‘Oh, that was the summer of the great heatwave,’ or ‘That was the year I finally got the lease on my own shop.’ Instead, my brain categorized the images as ‘The iPhone 6 era’ or ‘The period when I had that cracked Galaxy S8.’
Our personal histories have been colonized. We no longer inhabit a linear progression of seasons or even a collection of milestones; we live in a series of product cycles. The technology we use to document our lives has become the very container for our memories, and those containers are designed to rot every 18 to 28 months. It’s a commercial construction of time that feels natural only because we’ve been Pavlovian-trained to equate a new bezel width with a new chapter of our existence.
This hit me hard at my uncle’s funeral last month. It was a somber, quiet affair until someone’s phone started blaring a high-pitched alarm-the ‘Update Required’ chime. I don’t know what came over me, but I started laughing. It was a sharp, jagged sound in a room full of weeping, and I couldn’t stop. I was embarrassed, of course, but the absurdity was too much. Here we were, mourning a man whose life spanned 88 years of tangible, slow-moving history, and we were being interrupted by the forced obsolescence of a device that wouldn’t even be functional in 8 years. I looked like a maniac, but I was really just laughing at the trap we’ve all stepped into.
We’ve traded the satisfaction of wear for the anxiety of the ‘new.’ In the old world-the one Ahmed E. still inhabits with his 1998 wrench-an object gained value as it aged. It developed a soul. Now, an object is at its peak the moment it leaves the box, and every second thereafter is a countdown to its inevitable descent into the junk drawer. This isn’t just about consumerism; it’s about how we perceive our own aging. If my primary point of reference for ‘2018’ is a specific screen resolution, what happens when that resolution is considered grainy and ‘old’? My memories become grainy. My experiences become ‘Legacy’ versions of a better life I’m supposed to be living now.
The Upgrade Treadmill
Constantly chasing the next iteration, stuck in a loop of becoming “out of date.”
🏃♂️💨
I see this play out in the lobby every day. People walk by the tank, 488-dollar shoes clicking on the marble, and they aren’t looking at the tangs or the triggers. They are looking at their hands. They are checking for that red notification dot, the one that tells them their current version of reality is out of date. They are terrified of being stuck in the ‘iPhone 12’ phase of their life while the rest of the world has moved on to the next iteration. It’s a treadmill where the speed is controlled by a board of directors in a glass tower.
[We are becoming the peripheral to our own devices]
There’s a way out, or at least a way to mitigate the damage. It starts with choosing tools based on their actual utility and durability rather than their place in a release schedule. When I need to upgrade my workstation or get a laptop that can actually handle the 48-bit color depth of my underwater photography without choking, I look for places that understand hardware as a long-term investment. For instance, finding the right tech at Bomba.md allows me to focus on the specifications that actually matter for my work, rather than just chasing the latest thinness-fetish. If you buy something because it’s a powerful tool, you own it. If you buy it because it’s the ‘new one,’ it owns you.
I’ve decided to stop naming my years after my electronics. I’m trying to go back to the ‘Year of the Blue Spotted Ray’ or the ‘Year I Finally Fixed the Leak in the Garage.’ But it’s hard. The digital gravity is strong. I catch myself thinking about my life in 128-gigabyte chunks. I remember my ex-girlfriend primarily through the lens of a phone that had a particularly annoying habit of over-saturating the reds in her hair. When that phone died, it felt like a part of that relationship was buried with it, not because the photos were gone-they were in the cloud-but because the *vibe* of that tech-era had expired.
Ahmed E. came over the other day to help me with a pump that had seized up. It was an old German model, built like a tank. We spent 48 minutes stripping it down, cleaning the lime scale, and re-greasing the impeller. When it kicked back to life with a low, confident hum, we both just stood there and smiled. That pump has been running since 2008. It doesn’t need a firmware update. It doesn’t care about the cloud. It just moves water. In that moment, the pump felt more ‘real’ than the smartphone in my pocket that was currently notifying me about a 8% discount on a newer version of itself.
The old German pump, a testament to repairability and longevity, contrasted starkly with the fleeting nature of modern devices. It moved water, a simple, essential function, without demanding an update.
I realized then that I don’t want a life that is ‘upgradable.’ I want a life that is repairable. I want memories that aren’t tied to a specific pixel density. The funeral incident-the laughter-was a breaking point for me. It was the moment I realized I was tired of being a spectator in a tech-demo. I want to measure my time by the growth of the coral, by the salt-crust on my gear, and by the 188-gallon tanks I’ve managed to keep thriving against the odds.
What happens when the upgrade cycle finally reaches its limit? What happens when we can’t make the screens any brighter or the processors any faster? Maybe then we’ll be forced to look back at the years we spent staring at the glass and wonder what we were actually waiting for. I hope it doesn’t take that long. I hope we can find a way to let the tech wear out, to let it get scratched and dented and old, without feeling like we are becoming obsolete along with it. The next time my watch buzzes 8 times to tell me it’s time for a change, I think I’ll just leave it on the charger and go for a dive. The fish don’t care about my OS version, and honestly, neither should I.
The Limit?
What happens when progress stops?
