Smoke Signals vs. Smartphones

Imagine hiking into the backcountry to “disconnect,” only to trip on a rock and dislocate your shoulder and break your leg. No signal. No reception. No help.

Smoke Signals vs. Smartphones

written by 

Jaron Summers (c) 2025

We live in a world where your phone can unlock your car, suggest a therapist, and spy on your dreams.

But what happens when the battery dies, the signal drops, or Siri decides you’re not worth saving?

Enter: the noble smoke signal. No screen. No apps. Just fire, sky, and hope. Cavemen may have had the edge on tech after all.

Remote? Smoke Has Full Bars

Lost in the woods with a twisted ankle and no signal? Your phone’s a fancy paperweight. But your Neanderthal cousin? He’s upwind on a hill, waving a smoky “HELP!” to anyone fluent in fire. Within minutes: rescue.

You? Still begging Siri to call Mom while squirrels measure you for a casket.

Battery Life: Eternal

Smartphones die faster than fruit flies. Smoke signals? Just add twigs. No charger. No panic. No “low battery” blinking at you like a smug little tombstone. When it comes to uptime, smoke blows tech away.

Can’t Hack a Campfire

While your phone leaks your secrets to seventeen strangers in Belarus, smoke signals keep it old-school. No cookies, no spyware—just some ash, a smoldering log, and privacy so strong it smells like pine.

No Autocorrect, No Problem

“See you soon” becomes “Sue you spoon” thanks to autocorrect. Smoke signals? One puff = something. Two puffs = something else. That’s it. No keyboard meltdowns. No lawsuits. Just sweet, smoky clarity.

In Crisis, Smoke Always Answers

During earthquakes, alien invasions, or your cousin’s wedding, phones fail. But fire? Fire always shows up. One flick of a Bic and you’re broadcasting “SOS” (or “Send snacks”) across the valley.

Final Puff

Sure, your phone can order sushi. But when the grid goes down, sushi won’t save you. Smoke will.

So pack a blanket, learn to wave, and remember: the original wireless plan was 100% fire-powered—and it never dropped a call. Three puffs of smoke is always a call for help.

 

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jaron

Jaron Summers wrote dozens of primetime television and radio programs, including those for HBO, CBS, ACCESS TV and CBC. He conceived the TV and Film Institute of Canada. Funded by the University of Alberta and ITV, Jaron ran the Institute for 12 years, donating his services for a decade.

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