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	<copyright>Copyright 2005,Emily Sims</copyright>
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		<title>Mobile Phone Dependancy</title>
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		<author>emily@foovely.com (Emily Sims)</author>
		<description>by Emily Sims&lt;br&gt;Tuesday, December 27, 2005&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;I&apos;m waiting for a friend to pick me up. There are nine people coming for dinner and I&apos;m cooking. Our whole evening depends on my hasty retrieval from the train station, and I&apos;ve forgotten my mobile phone. I was standing on the platform, fumbling for it in my bag, when I realised my phone was absent. I had told my friend that I&apos;d call her when I arrived at the station. Unsettled, but not yet disturbed, I located the nearest payphone and picked up the receiver. It was then it dawned on me: I didn&apos;t know the number. The number was in my mobile phone! So, now I am sitting outside the station wondering why I didn&apos;t specify a time or place to be picked up. I watch other commuters rushing out of the station. I envy them their good memories and handheld gadgets. &quot;Hi, mate. Yeah I&apos;m at the station. Where are you?&quot;, a man declares to the other half of the conversation, instantaneously cementing his plans. I go to the payphone and call my boyfriend, I&apos;ve been sensible enough to write a few numbers in an archaic pocket address book. His mobile is switched off. I leave a message asking him to tell my friend that I&apos;m waiting at the station. I pray that he gets it and --heaven forbid-- his battery isn&apos;t flat. I wait. Waiting, I seem to recall a distant time when there were no mobile phones. What did we do? How did we live without them? Have we become dependent upon mobiles?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In 2000, Anthony Townsend (http://urban.blogs.com/research/journal_articles/index.html) specualted that people were becoming &quot;dependent upon the connectivity that the mobile telephone represents&quot;. Prior to mobile phones, schedules dictated the movements of the people who adhered to them. Punctuality was critical. If you arranged to meet a friend at 6pm then you had to be there, or stand them up. Mobile phones allow you to call your friend at 5:50pm and renegotiate.&quot;Information can be updated in real-time, negating the need to plan anything&quot;. Many people, Townsend argues, have grown accustomed to &quot;the flexibility of scheduling and the freedom from punctuality permitted by the constant ability to update other parties as to your status&quot;. Once your life includes the constant connectivity provided by a mobile, it is almost impossible to disconnect.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Recent surveys in Britain and Korea support a finding of mobile phone dependency among mobile users. Two-thirds of the Brits surveyed by Lloyds TSB felt concerned if they left their mobiles at home, some said they felt &quot;freaked out and panicky&quot;. Marketing Insight (http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/200507/kt2005071920313210220.htm) found Korean users to be extremely dependent upon mobiles; over half the respondents feel insecure when their mobile battery runs flat. In the U.S there is concern that dependency upon mobile phones may undermine self-reliance and self-esteem. Psychologist Joseph Tecce told the Sacramento Bee (http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050607/LIVING/506070340/1007), &quot;leaning heavily on cell phones for advice or psychological nurturance is effective in reducing anxiety in the short term...but a problem might arise without mobile phone, and then helplessness rules the hour.&quot;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;This brings us back to my current dilemma. I&apos;m still waiting at the train station, totally absorbed in conceiving this article. It occurs to me that being &quot;disconnected&quot; has forced me to just stay still. In this situation there is nothing for me to do: no emails to check, nobody to talk to, nothing to read. I can only relax and wait. The convenience of the mobile phone is the ability to operate in real time--sending and receiving information continuously. The downfall is that when we operate in real time the speed of life increases, giving us less time to just relax and wait.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;b&gt;About the Author&lt;/b&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Emily Sims is the doyenne of &lt;a href=&quot;”http://www.foovely.com”&quot;&gt;cool ringtones&lt;/a&gt;. She has written many articles on &lt;a href=&quot;”http://blog.foovely.com”&quot;&gt;ringtone culture&lt;/a&gt;, and knows the difference between a &lt;a href=&quot;”http://ringtones.foovely.com”&quot;&gt;polyphonic ringtone&lt;/a&gt; and a &lt;a href=&quot;”http://wallpapers.foovely.com”&quot;&gt;wallpaper&lt;/a&gt;. I mean, who doesn&apos;t?

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		<category>Science &amp; Technology</category>
		<pubDate>Tue, 27 Dec 2005 08:55:14 GMT</pubDate>
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