Mobile Apps
What apps do you usually use? Do you use your smartphone more now than in the past? What kind of smartphone will you use in the future?
Vocabulary
  • Utility (noun) - the usefulness of something, especially in a practical way.
  • To inflict (verb) - to force someone to experience something very unpleasant.
  • In a nutshell (idiom) - very briefly, giving only the main points.
  • To get hold of someone (idiom) - to communicate with someone, esp. by telephone.
  • Queue up (phrasal verb) - put something in order, in a line.
  • To come in handy (idiom) - to be useful.
Get exclusive episodes on IELTS Speaking parts 1, 2, and 3
Get exclusive episodes on IELTS Speaking parts 1, 2, and 3
Questions and answers
M: Rory, do you like using apps?

R: Um, it's not so much a question of liking it or no, I have to use them to live in the world these days, whether it's staying in touch with family or, well, using messaging apps to communicating with fans on social media. I like the utility but I resent the distractions they inflict.

M: What apps do you usually use?

R: Well, usually ones for messaging and social media. I'm sort of led by my friends and colleagues in this respect. And take my cues from them on what's the best thing to use. I think the ones I've picked for myself were banking apps, and I have a transport app for the metro and for finding my way around. And I have one language learning app that I use because I need to, well, for all of these, like for the banking app I need to organize my finances. And for the map, when I need to get from A to B. And for the language learning app, I need to learn Russian somehow. And of course, these decisions weren't entirely independent either, were they?

M: How often do you use apps?

R: In a nutshell, probably too often. But if we expand on that a little, then maybe every hour, I'm awake, since people are always trying to get hold of me on social media, or I'm queuing up videos to watch or listen to. So that's a very noisy experience, isn't it?

M: Do you use your smartphone more now than in the past?

R: Oh, absolutely. Much more now. Especially since I installed all of the social media apps, the increase in connectedness to the world has definitely resulted in greater use. Not that this is necessarily a good thing.

M: Are smartphones annoying?

R: Well, that's very context-specific, isn't it? They tend to come in handy when you need to find your way around. But if you're trying to teach and they're going off all the time, and distracting students, then it's really frustrating. Sometimes I wish we could just, I don't know, flip a kill switch in certain places and have silence, even just for a few minutes.

M: What kind of smartphone will you use in the future?

R: Probably the one I have now, it does the job quite well. I don't think I really need much from it. Despite all the apps that I talked about having. It helps me interact with other people get access to media and run my finances and then get out and about when I need to. People often want something that is faster processing speeds. But how fast do you really need these kinds of things to be?

M: Supersonic fast, faster than the light. This fast.

R: Okay.
M: We just had a staring moment. A staring moment is just when Rory just stares at me, I stare back at him.

R: And we expect something to happen.

M: Yeah. And we're just like what, what?
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