I didn’t think you really were going to rely on finding a working phone booth when you want to call home or call ahead about a restaurant reservation. I just threw in that photo I took in London for your enjoyment.
This page introduces our topic of technology on your trip, and inevitably that bleeds over into how you are going to take, transmit, and preserve photographs.
You will have to base your decisions about which devices to take with you on your usage patterns at home, your needs for staying in touch with family or workplace while you are gone, and how you like to entertain yourself.
Deciding Which Devices to Take On Your First European Adventure
Let’s talk about the devices themselves first. I have taken a tablet on all three trips. I use a laptop here at home all the time, but I wouldn’t want to lug that around Europe. That’s because both of the weight and the potential to somehow damage or even lose it.
I have met many people in hostels who do not take a tablet or any such device, especially now that the smartphones are so powerful for computing. I have decided to continue to take my tablet simply because at the end of the day when my body is too tired to do anything else, I enjoy browsing the internet to read some of my usual news and commentary sites, and occasionally because I am curious about something at home. I own a few ebooks too, and if nothing else, I can always browse for youtube videos or look at photographs. I also like to write (you wouldn’t know that, would you?), so that goes much faster with a tablet than on a phone.
For this third trip though, I am leaving the detachable keyboard for my tablet at home. It adds weight and I have become good enough with the pop-up “keyboard” on the business end of the tablet that I’m deciding to leave the keyboard at home. If I wanted my writing to be somewhat more polished, I would take the physical keyboard along, since I certainly make fewer mistakes on it.
If none of these sound important to you, or if you have mastered the art of accomplishing all these things on a phone, you won’t need the tablet.
A variation on the tablet, of course, is the Kindle or other e-reader. You are the only one who will know if that’s an essential for you and worth its weight in entertainment or information.
If you are trying to work on the sly in Europe, or at least stay in touch with your employer or employees, then the laptop may be a necessity.
Then of course let’s talk about the phone. It’s very rare now to see a forum post from someone who says they aren’t taking their smartphone because they really don’t need to stay in touch with anyone at home. So the chances are great that you are taking it.
In the detail pages that will be built out in this section of the website, I will get into some of the choices I’ve made about my phone and the reasoning behind them.
What I would like to say here is that with each trip, the phone assumes more and more functions. Let’s think of it; you can call home freely, send and receive texts all over the world, use mapping apps to give you detailed directions and find nearby restaurants and hotels, find out what time it is and set alarms, replace a flashlight, calculate, translate languages, find out how long it will be before the bus arrives, visit the website of the next sight you plan to see, and much more.
In the category of “more,” of course, the leader is taking photos and videos. You may or may not choose to use your phone as your only camera, but I notice among friends and buddies interested in travel, that is becoming more and more common. On my first trip, I took my point and shoot camera and shot lots of photos. For the second trip I left the camera at home and used the phone.
I tested how satisfied I would be with that choice by walking around my neighborhood and taking photos of the same thing with both. I couldn’t tell any meaningful difference, so I went with the phone alone. If you are a more serious photographer or if you plan to enlarge and frame some of your photos, you will probably want to make a different choice.
I do not have a smartwatch, but if you use one at home, I would guess you would want to take it along.
Getting into the Technology and Photography Details
As I write more about how I make technology choices and why, the name of each article and link to it will appear here. I will reveal my many mistakes and a few victories.
