Posted April 14, 20168 yr FPCH Admin A few weeks ago I undertook a daring experiment: I went without my iPhone for seven whole days. It was a big deal for me. I'm 23, and I've been attached to a cellphone since shortly after I started walking. The first thing I noticed that phoneless week was just how many people stare at their phones all day. I never noticed that before because I was looking at my phone, too. The first morning I started my experiment was a Tuesday, so I joined the morning rush on the subway. I felt like an alien, staring straight ahead at a series of bent necks and earbuds. The sounds of "Candy Crush" — a popular phone game — filled the train car, and I couldn't even listen to music to drown it out. Once I arrived at my office, the elevator was the same story. As soon as the doors opened, all the screens came out. Out of sheer boredom, I tried to make small talk while waiting for the elevator. That's something I never do. Usually my phone is more interesting to me than other people. But perhaps most startling was the realization that so many people look at their phones while they are walking. The weekday New York sidewalks are almost like " an animated science fiction movie. It felt a little dangerous, with so many people paying so little attention to where they are walking, not to mention the traffic streaming by them. We're really distracted by our screens. Scientists agree. Jack Nasar, a professor emeritus at Ohio State University who studies phone use, found that people on their phones are 48% more likely to walk unsafely into oncoming traffic in a 2008 study, highlighted by NPR. from 2013, Nasar found that injuries to pedestrians on their phones more than doubled between 2004 and 2010, according to NPR. And in a 2015 study, Conrad Earnest, an exercise scientist at Texas A&M University, sent 30 people through a course designed to mimic city sidewalks and streets — both with their phones, and without. Earnest found that people who texted while walking moved more slowly and veered off their paths more than screen-free walkers. However, that didn't necessarily result in more accidents, according to NPR. So if I learned anything over my phoneless week, it's simply to look where I'm going when I'm walking. Besides, people-watching can be more fun than texting. NOW WATCH: Here's what happens to your brain when you check your phone — and why it's so addicting Source: yahoo ~I know that you believe you understand what you think I said, but I'm not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant.~~~Robert McCloskey~~
April 14, 20168 yr I am one of those odd people who don't carry a phone. I have one in the car for emergencies. What am I missing? :) Roses are red, violets are blue, I'm Schizophrenic, and so am I Free Photo Restoration and Repair for all Forum members - CLICK HERE Please pop back and let us know if your Computer problem has been solved.
April 14, 20168 yr Author FPCH Admin My adult children and my grandchildren always have their noses buried in their phones. I only pick up my phone to answer it or make a call myself. I rarely use my phone for accessing the internet or viewing social media. I guess it's a generational thing.... ~I know that you believe you understand what you think I said, but I'm not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant.~~~Robert McCloskey~~
April 14, 20168 yr FPCH Admin I see it with the people in my office. You take your life into your own hands just walking the halls. Off Topic Forum - Unlike the Rest