a thoughtful web.
Good ideas and conversation. No ads, no tracking.   Login or Take a Tour!
comment by user-inactivated
user-inactivated  ·  3201 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: The saddest poem

I've managed to avoid ever owning a cell phone. I am sure some job will force one on me eventually, but I want less connectedness, not more. Having to be available for extended periods of time makes me claustrophobic, I don't think I'd ever stop being on edge if I had a phone with me all the time.





bhrgunatha  ·  3201 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I bought a Nokia 110 dumb phone because all I want is text and phone.

Part of the decision was seeing the effect smart phones have on people; it's so common now to see 2 people sharing lunch with them both just staring down at their screens. Part of the decision was because I knew I would be just exactly the same.

I make a very strict line between work time and non-work time which I think has disappeared for a lot of people.

Sometimes I just turn my phone off - even when there is battery left!

AnSionnachRua  ·  3200 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I'm right with you there. Just the other day I was asked by one of my young Italian students why I don't have a smartphone. Instead, I have this: http://images.samsung.com/is/image/samsung/uk_GT-E1080ZKIXEU_001_Front?$L1-Thumbnail$

I'm no stranger to mindless interest browsing, but I do enough of that at home on my laptop, and the thought of being able to check Facebook every thirty seconds terrifies me. It alarms me that people can't sit on the bus and just think about things during their twenty minute commute, but instead have to listen to music or play a game or chat on Whatsapp - have to have constant access to stimulation.

Not that I'd be one to lambast all of these uses; I just find them very jarring. There's always a moment during a night at the pub when one person starts to look at their phone, slowly prompting a chain reaction until everyone is doing it and I'm just twiddling my thumbs waiting for everyone to come back. It also seems to have become more socially acceptable to look at your phone while talking to someone, which I find quite impolite.

And then there's the ceaseless photo-taking...

But ultimately - depending on your own social environment - you do start to get left behind in certain ways. More and more often I find myself unaware of some planned event and when I ask about it people say "Wait, aren't you in the Whatsapp group?" It's just like being in university and people forgetting to invite you to things because they assume you're on Facebook.