Read-only archive of the All About Symbian forum (2001–2013) · About this archive

Phones to rule us all?

22 replies · 4,296 views · Started 24 July 2009

As I head out the door, I turn back, unlock the house, and sheepishly pick up my smartphone from the office desk. Probably a scene that we've all done once or twice, but have you ever wondered how much freedom the mobile phone actually takes away from you? In my musings below, I keep my tongue firmly in cheek and my paranoia firmly in my brain. Read on...

Read on in the full article.

slitchfield wrote:(Lets ignore the fact that I use Amazon and Ebay to find the little cute gifts, okay?).

LOL 😊

Great article Steve... And a big reality. I cant tell you the number of times I have received a cold stare from my wife when suddenly I just pick up my (smart)phone and start checking my email. Or my IM list.. 😊

malerocks wrote:LOL 😊

Great article Steve... And a big reality. I cant tell you the number of times I have received a cold stare from my wife when suddenly I just pick up my (smart)phone and start checking my email. Or my IM list.. 😊

Spence will be furious.

Very furious, so much so that he'd check this thread on his handphone and wonder how did you confuse Steve and him.

As I've pointed out to people on the bus, as they rummage in their bag for a ringing phone, the really great thing about phones is that if you leave them alone, they eventually stop ringing.

Yes, I take mine with me, but if a client asks me for my mobile number, I point out that the mobile is for my convenience, not theirs. They can ring my office number and leave a message; it means there's only one number for them to call, and if they press the menu option to say it's urgent, the voicemail system calls my mobile, and I'll decide if it really is worth interrupting a day off, or a holiday.

If I'm on the move for a while, I divert the mobile.

And for those who do get the mobile number (if I answer an unknown number, my response is "Who are you and what do you want?"😉, they're in caller groups; at certain times of the day, the phone only alerts for specific groups.

I'm in a minority, of course. All too often people do become enslaved to their phones. They gratefully accept the Blackberry or the E71 from the office, thinking it means they've arrived in their career, while management are chortling at the fact that now people even think they have to respond to corporate emails when they're on the beach, all in the name of productivity and shareholder value.

Mobiles are a great tool - but they should remain just that. Learn to manage you phone, rather than letting it manage you.

Unregistered wrote:Spence will be furious.

Very furious, so much so that he'd check this thread on his handphone and wonder how did you confuse Steve and him.


My mistake Evan... Sorry...

But I am curious, how did I get Steve's id when I used the quote option for the article to include that particular line in my post?

Guess it seems like he's doing it on purpose..lol

Anyway, nice article Ewan, it does make me realize..not to spend too much time on mobile phones..but isn't that what humanity is all about? we create, we utilize it and we enjoy it =D
You wouldn't want to go back to a world where you'd have to find a public telephone just to tell Steve about your discovery would you? =)

I think the site's workings were getting confused by the fact that *I* re-pasted Ewan's text from an 'Article' into a 'News item'. Don't worry about it though 8-)

I must confess I refused to have a mobile phone for several years just so I could remain uncontactable outsider the office. Having eventually succumbed - more through the toy factor than anything elses 😊 - I still don't hand out my number and anyone trying to contact me has to do it through my office.

I ignore calls from people I don't know, or set my phone to offline when I don't want to answer calls.

I've been told that I'm a bastard for doing that 😃

Hi there symbian lovers 😃
Nice post on the freedom these days but I really think you are overreacting. You still remember that there is a mute button on the phone right. People CAN get in touch with you only if you WANT them to get in touch with you. The freedom that the phone gives is exceptional, but we can still keep our privacy just by ignoring the boss that wants to give you an assigment on saturday or the girl from last night that you don't want to see again in a million years. I am 23 years old and practically almost can't remember the time people didn't had mobile connection and have to admit there is a certain level of addiction with these tiny boxes and all the stuff they can do, but remember there is always a power-off button 😊

P.S. Please excuse me for my English, but the grammar is not my strong part :P

Right on, Ewan. I like the step back here, because it's something that while we're always so intent on the next set of information (by whatever means it comes through), it's easy to forget. Yes, there are certainly ways to manage, though there are also very deep trends that have been forming in recent years which are currently transforming the way that we as humans live a daily life. The number of hours staring at a screen, be it a computer at work or home, or a phone/internet device has only been going up, mostly because the price of these devices are now a lot more accessible than they were ten+ years ago.

My personal method for coping has been to disable the 3G capabilities on my phone and to rely on WiFi alone. (Which, and here's my Nokia plug, is rather easy with my 5800 using the Destinations system: I simply deleted the packet data connections from all routes and now do not have to worry about charges, etc.) If I'm outside or away then I can't, and, after some mental training and practice, don't _want_ to be kept up to date. Otherwise, I've personally found it to be just a bit too much and too tempting, resulting in lost hours and slightly less appreciation of the physical world around me.. :P

Heh.. Mobile phones joining up and taking over the world. There's a movie script in there somewhere..

Good post. The movie Wally is a extreme representation of your poiint. When i saw it i began understanding what you wrote. But it was when i bought my E71 and being connected allmost all the time to s sccreen, not to the telefone but to the screen, that i realised how f**king close we are from that twisted future.

brilliant piece Ewan but it was long time coming.

I know I am hooked but don't know whether I can switch off.

Can i really afford to miss that call from an important customer on a sunday whom I have been chasing for months? Can I really miss my boss's call?

I rather feel, that they have given me much more freedom than ever before.

I have a Nokia N79, primarily a multimedia phone but used heavily as an enterprise phone by me (sorry :P)

Just because, I am connected, I am available, I can check and send mails real time, I can see office docs, edit them and send them back, I get "THAT" elusive leave that otherwise would had been impossible for me to take.

I can attend a wedding function, take 30 minutes out of that, work on my files, send them and then get back to the function.

I do not see where I am missing.

Perhaps, there are times, when you just want to be with yourself, but for me, that period is just half a day per week and I do try to minimise my use then.

Count me out. If I leave the house and notice my phone is not in my pocket and the door is shut then the phone stays behind.

Sounds like Ashu is not a slave to his phone but IS a slave to his job.

If I ever get like that then I know it's time to quit. I have my own time and my leave when I want it and it hasn't held me back. I also instruct my team to switch off their business phones in their own time.

Unregistered wrote:Sounds like Ashu is not a slave to his phone but IS a slave to his job.

If I ever get like that then I know it's time to quit. I have my own time and my leave when I want it and it hasn't held me back. I also instruct my team to switch off their business phones in their own time.

I do not contest that. It's just that I know the economic environment right now and treasure my job at this point in time. Ofcourse, I know when will I need to jump the ship! But enslaved to my job is a big word, I think, the correct situation is, I need my Job more than it needs me right now! 😊

In India, many of us are like that - especially in the 1st 10-15 odd years of our career and definitely if we are in IT. Unfortunate, but true. Thats how we have to earn our money. And then be able to afford these wonderful phones 😃

I have been smartphone dependent for less than 5 years now. And there's nothing wrong with me. Haha. Smartphone is a help, it is not a temptation. It is increasing the productivity of every individual. And the rumors about new models (specifically Nokia) still always bring excitement to me.

The thing why these conceptions are blooming about technology overruling the world is the normal and natural trend mentality of human being where we seek supply in times of scarcity, but also seek curtail in times of abundance.

Let's just enjoy what technology is bringing to us.

"In the next few years, phones will be able to run our lives, with prediction, navigation, recommendations and communications."

Oh, if only!

The reason I continually download the latest updates is in the vain hope all those promised features finally work properly!

And no sooner does the next model appear on the market (with perhaps a higher resolution camera, which I could care less about), than the updates for the old model cease!