Im so over this whole cell phone thing. I was at a Broadway play in NY and someones damn cellphone went off and they had the nerve to answer it DURING THE PLAY! Helloooo, I mean seriously its just so sad now. I did have a cellphone for like 7 years and then when I changed me job I lost the one from the company and still havent gotten one since and it has been over a year now and I just love not having it. No more random drunken phone calls @ 2am from friends, no more constantly checking my vcmail and texting and spending hundreds a month just to jabber about nothing.
Obviously doctors and people within that profession will always have to be at the hospital beck and call but damn do we really need to jabber all the time. And now with businessess they give you the cell phone so that they can stay in contact all the time, but are we really getting the short end of the stick on this? My hours are from 8-5 everyday and I dont want my business or co-workers calling me when I get off to ask me a dumb question or tlak about something. I dont get paid enough for it!
This whole cell phone addiction is pathetic! Im sry that I was ever sucked into it.
2006-09-19 04:24:47
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answer #1
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answered by Kit 4
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Before cell phones we used pay phones and that is why they have gone up in price as have long distance charges and home phone prices.
It is just like the internet and text messaging doing away with the post office and causing stamps to rise in cost.
When if ever did you send a telegram?
The times they change and as they change new modes of communication replace old ones.
Have you priced an lp lately. Soon video tape will be the same thing. Magazines and Newspapers are getting more expensive.
It all has to do with innovation and convenience.
And yes if you go far enough back in time we did miss all these calls because there was no call waiting, no answering machines, and no voice mail. Oh wait that was the seventies.
2006-09-19 10:33:38
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answer #2
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answered by LORD Z 7
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We moved at a slower pace. We didn't miss the phone calls because we had more face to face conversations and more was said that way. Body language is a great communication method. As for are we over communicating I think more trivial information is being passed on now. But it's now a necessity for business people and especially the sales force. They can now reach more contacts in an hour then they could all day before this tool came along. If you see it as a tool and use it as such it's a great thing. If you see it as a wireless home phone then your home is wherever you are. Proper cell phone etiquette should always be used in public places. I've worked in the cellular industry for over 15 years and seeing someone with one of them in use is good for me, but I also think is it really necessary. Do we really need to be in contact with someone any time at any place. Have you ever sat at a stop light and looked at the faces of the people turning left from the other direction? Some of them are on the phone and others have a nasty face on, yet others have a smile on their faces. It's a good day to be alive.
2006-09-19 04:36:56
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answer #3
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answered by Dorkboy 7
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- Our bumper stickers now: "Hang up and drive!" then: "If you're doing your make-up again, by the time you read this, it'll be too late!"
- The emergency that makes us turn around and go back home now: forgetting our phones. then: forgot to feed the dog, left the stove on, forgot the kids' school lunches, forgot the kids, left the Elton John 8-track in the home player the size of a Buick
- Bumping into an aquaintance on the street now: "I'll call you in a minute." then: the kids left in the car waiting and honking and hanging out the windows making desperate, overexaggerated death impersonations
- Pulling up to the car next to you at a stop light now: if you don't notice the hands-free, you'd swear they need to be committed. then: someone's always making out or beating their kids.
- Now we have e-mail, IM, faxes, and cell phones; then we had US Mail, passed notes and wrote love letters, Atari 2600, read magazines or books, for entertainment even!, and made appointments to discuss important business and personal matters over a communication device with this swirly cord attatched to it and when it rang, the whole neighborhood knew it.
With all this technology, are we really more connected to each other, or less?
2006-09-19 17:42:11
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answer #4
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answered by Antny 5
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We're not overcommunicating (Which I don't believe is ever possible to have too much communication). Our technology has advanced leaps and bounds over recent history, giving us more options and solutions in order to be more productive in our lives, and to make every day life more convenient.
The kids in highschool on their cell phones use them as a 'fad' .. to be cool ... but there are so many real life and business situations where the cell phone has improved our lives immensly
2006-09-19 04:15:47
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answer #5
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answered by toronto_guy77 2
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I was quite happy using two soup cans connected by a long piece of string. It worked when I was a kid. There were no blackout periods and the rates were reasonable. When I leave the house I take a toy cell phone and talk on it just to look like I have something to say. It makes me look like I am in demand, and that the rest of the world can't be out of contact with me for even a moment. Well, I have to run. I'll call you back on my cell phone, if I can get my daughter's gum off the receiver. She thinks it's her toy phone.
2006-09-19 06:17:02
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Cell phones are lovely things to have in an emergency situation, like when you're in a car accident or you're late for an important meeting or something...my larger problem with them and all of the new technology that has emerged in the last decade is that ...
As a society we now "over communicate" and say absolutely nothing.
As a species we have evolved over the last few millenia to "communicate" with our entire being. We can say more with a glance or a slight shift in our movements than we can ever say just using speech or text messaging.
It is the nuance of our personalities that can tell people if we are happy, sad, angry or pensive. Talk is cheap...cause actions speak louder than words, right? We all know the people in our lives...and we know them because we can "read them" we don't need to hear them talk or see text messages flash across a screen...all we have to do is "see them" and we know if they are okay or not.
The more technology gives us the "freedom" to remove ourselves from physical contact with others, the more we will continue to loose a part of ourselves.
2006-09-19 04:42:56
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answer #7
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answered by gotalife 7
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I think a lot of people use the phone to just gab about nothing. My cell phone IS my phone so I certainly use it for gabbing but if I'm in my car, I'm only using my cell phone to briefly tell someone where I am or that I'm running late or something necessary like that. Life before cell phones sucked because you had to rely on pay phones and it really gets under my skin when I don't know where someone is and I can't get a hold of them so a cell phone is a great way for me to keep up to date on why the hell someone is late, etc. Basically they relieve me of my weird OCD symptoms.
2006-09-19 06:09:32
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Overcummunicating... I have never had a cell phone and i don't miss anything. People just have them because they think it looks "proffesional." Others have them because their friends at school all have them so they think they're missing something without one.
Seriously i've overheard conversations where people have said, "i'm opening the door, now i'm going in the room." Or "yes i'm eating dinner. Oh it's a salad." Now that hardly sounds like necessary phone calls. People just use their phones more often now, simply because they can.
2006-09-19 04:19:02
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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One of the things we did before cell phones was being able to write REAL words instead of all this rubbish texting language which has evolved in the pursuit of saving money on text messaging. In those days, we STILL managed to live perfectly adequate lives without having a phone glued to one ear all the time and therefore had less distraction.
As this question has obviously originated in USA (use of the words "Cell phones" is a give-away) please note that in GB it is against the law to use a mobile phone whilst driving.
2006-09-19 04:27:07
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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