Benjamin
Smart phones, Dull people There is no invention more prominent in today’s society than the smartphone. It is used everyday for things as simple as making a call to as complex as using an application to pinpoint your exact location on Earth. I am the owner of an iPhone and it befuddles me to this day as to how a phone has come to be so advanced and influential within our daily lives. There’s not a couple of minutes that go by when I’m out walking where I see people absolutely absorbed to what’s happening on their smartphones, completely oblivious to their immediate surroundings. The great irony of the smartphone is that while it has improved communications through texting, calling, and social networking, our person-to-person interaction has been harmed by this technology. I fear that is a trend that is only going to get worse as technology continues to advance in the future. It can be a bit annoying to have a conversation or dinner with friends when some people are too busy answering a text or checking their twitter. I’m not against having a smartphone or against their usefulness, but the extent of their role in our daily lives is a bit startling. Give someone two seconds without anything to do, and they’ll whip out their phone. It’s basically a knee-jerk reaction at this point. Makes me wonder what we did before all of this. Does anyone remember? I recently watched a news report where they reported an increase in smartphone-related car accidents where people were distracted from texting while driving or pedestrians were too busy looking at their phones to look both ways before crossing the street. Some obituary, huh? Death by smartphone. I am sometimes guilty of paying too much attention to my smartphone and I am trying to limit the amount of times I use it during the day. It is a useful tool and has made many lives easier (or at least simpler). I can’t help but worry about the negative aspects of what is no longer a trend but a normal way of life. I was hanging out with friends the other day when there came a moment of stillness in the midst of conversation. One by one, like bugs to the electric blue light, each of them started to take out their phones. I was the only one not gazing into the alluring screen of a smartphone. It’s as if we’ve forgotten what to do with silence. We’ve given up sharpening our conversation skills for touch screens, and from this I fear we’ve grown dull.
2014年7月28日 18:57
修改 · 3
Best remedy - don't have one! I don't. I manage my life very well without it. If someone wishes to contact me they phone me on my land line (at home). I use a camera to take pictures. I refuse to be sucked in.
2014年7月28日

Smart phones, Dull people

There is no invention more prominent in today’s society than the smartphone. It is used everyday for things as simple as making a call to as complex as using an application to pinpoint your exact location on Earth.

I am the owner of an iPhone and it befuddles / bewilders me to this day as to how a phone has come to be so advanced and influential within our daily lives. There’s not a couple of minutes that go by (Hardly a couple of minutes go by) while I’m out walking when  I see people absolutely absorbed in what’s happening on their smartphones, completely oblivious to their immediate surroundings.

The great irony of the smartphone is that while it has improved communications through texting, calling, and social networking, our person-to-person interaction has been harmed by this technology.

I fear that this trend that is only going to get worse as technology continues to advance in the future. It can be a bit annoying to have a conversation or dinner with friends when some people are too busy answering a text or checking their Twitter.

I’m not against having a smartphone or against their usefulness, but the extent of their role in our daily lives is a bit startling. Give someone two seconds without anything to do, and they’ll whip out their phone. It’s basically a knee-jerk reaction at this point. Makes me wonder what we did before all of this. Does anyone remember?

I recently watched a news report in which they reported an increase in smartphone-related car accidents where people were distracted from texting while driving or pedestrians were too busy looking at their phones to look both ways before crossing the street.

Some obituary, huh? Death by smartphone.

I am sometimes guilty of paying too much attention to my smartphone and I am trying to limit the number of times I use it during the day. It is a useful tool and has made many lives easier (or at least simpler).

I can’t help but worry about the negative aspects of what is no longer a trend but a normal way of life.

I was hanging out with friends the other day when there came a moment of stillness in the midst of the conversation. One by one, like bugs to the electric blue light, each of them started to take out their phones. I was the only one not gazing into the alluring screen of a smartphone.

It’s as if we’ve forgotten what to do with silence.

We’ve given up sharpening our conversation skills in place of touch screens, and through this I fear we’ve grown dull.

[<em>Wow - fantastically high level.  "Bewilder" feels better than "befuddle" in this context but I can't explain very well why - I am a bit tired! Michael</em>]

 

2014年7月28日
Well said! Though I am plenty guilty of paying plenty of attention to my smartphone, I don't allow it to consume my soul completely. As for smartphones in a social setting, it can go both ways. Surely it's annoying when you are trying to talk to someone and they whip out their smartphone in the middle of the conversation and just stop hearing you. Dull is right. People are meant to engage with each other, and the smartphone definitely has affected the normal and natural way people do that. It's great if you need to actually take a picture/video or look something up, if you must, for the sake of conversation. Thank you for sharing your thoughts.
2014年7月28日
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