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4 min read

Thanksgiving 2025

Nov 30, 2015

Technology through the years

This might be a controversial blog.

My Thanksgiving was one filled with texting, Snapchat, Skyping, Facetime, Beam robots and ringing phones.

Some people HATE the way technology impacts their family at gatherings – people on digital devices rather than having conversations – 'making us more alone, even when we're together.' But is that really true?

This blog is about perspective on the impact of digital devices, and the bigger picture on what's going on: an accelerating trend where our connection with people is independent of our physical location.

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We've ALWAYS said that new technology isolates us

Technology through the years
Source: xkcd.com/1601

"Back in my day, we didn't have all these distractions"
– Millions of disgruntled grandparents around the world.

"Yeah, in your day, life was pretty boring and disconnected."
– Millions of millennials today.

We've always preferred to get what we want, when we want. Every new communication technology has moved us closer to "immediate," "faster," "cheaper," "higher quality" and "instant" communications with whomever we want, whenever we want.

And that trend is accelerating.

The fact is we tend to romanticize the past. And we like to complain about the present. And we are resistant to change. Check out the two photos below that clearly tell that story.

People on their phones on a train

People reading a newspaper on a train

The Upside of Technology

This Thanksgiving I was in constant contact with relatives scattered around the world: one niece in London by Facetime, another niece in Hungary by BEAM robot, and friends around the world by Skype, Facetime and Beam.

100 Years Ago… holiday contact with distant relatives either didn't happen, happened through infrequent snail mail, or rarely through a long trek by horse and buggy. Ultimately you were stuck with the locals – which is fine – unless the people you love were a world apart…

50 Years Ago… a long-distance phone call served as the high-tech mode of 'connectedness.' The telephone offered reasonably immediate communications, except on holidays (for those of you who remember) when you couldn't actually get a line out ("All lines to that country are currently busy, please hang up and try later"). And, oh, by the way, it was really expensive.

Today… we've got instant, global, free, wireless communication capabilities in full-color, high-definition video and even telepresence robots.

The bottom line is that technology allows us to more intimately connect with friends and family who are geographically distant and this, from my opinion is a really good thing.

So, what's the problem? Why concerns over "distraction and the isolation"?

It's Not Only the Technology, it's Also Your Boring Uncle and Brainless Conversation

We (humans) tend to prioritize spending time with those people who bring us the most enjoyment or satisfaction.

We can blame the technology all we want - BUT this means messaging our best friends rather than having conversations at a dinner table with distant relatives with whom we have little in common seems like a better way to spend our time.

We can force it and try really hard -- be polite, do the right thing. But when the barrier to connection drops so low that we can ditch the uncle and chat with our buddy, it's a tough thing to avoid.

The point here is that the quality of the connection is skyrocketing, and the barrier to connection is plummeting.

Thanksgiving – November 2025

What does Thanksgiving look like in November 2025, just 10 years from now?

I imagine much of it will look a lot like it does today.

Except that Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality will account for half of the people around the dinner table.

On the augmented reality front, technologies like Magic Leap and Hololens will allow distant family members and friends to join in the conversation in a multitude of different fashions. Some may beam in from the other side of the planet, showing up as full-size participants virtually sitting in chair across the table, while others may be one-tenth-size figures standing on the table top.

Or… in the case of virtual reality, we could imagine an hour-long pre-dinner reunion taking place in a completely virtual world with 100 distant family members joining from a dozen corners of the globe to exchange stories and catch up.

We are entering a period of rapid societal transformation. Where traditions will morph, and limitations of decades past will lift allowing us to recreate our social networks and celebrations.

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Peter H. Diamandis

Written by Peter H. Diamandis

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