Nine out of every 10 people aged under 30 admit to suffering the new age
phenomenon of "nomophobia", the fear of having no GT-I9300
mobile phone, a survey says.Telecom giant Cisco, in a survey
conducted on 3800 people in Australia, found nine out of 10 in the group aged
under 30 were addicted to their smartphones and became anxious when their phone
went missing, the 'Courier Mail' reported.
"It's happening
subconsciously, and one out of five people are texting while they're driving,"
Cisco chief technology officer Kevin Bloch said yesterday. "It just speaks to
these addictive, compulsive, behaviours that we're seeing.""For many under-30s,
the smartphone has become an extension of themselves, from the moment they wake
up until the second they fall asleep," said Bloch.
"This love affair with
the smartphone is both enabling and crippling at the same time," Dr Michael
Carr-Gregg, official adviser to the Queensland Government on computer safety,
was quoted by the daily as saying.He added that these people check check for
texts, emails and social media at least once every 10 minutes. That's checking
the phone 96 times a day, assuming eight hours' sleep.df2Dsda2
The
National Weather Service used a new tool to try to warn people before a tornado
tore through Moore, Okla., on Monday – an automatic cell phone alert the agency
also plans to use to notify Bay State residents about twisters and other
dangerous storms.Authorities can use the Wireless Emergency Alert system to send
warning messages to GT-I9500
mobile phones in a particular geographic area about imminent
threats and disasters, Amber Alerts for abducted children and national
emergencies announced by the president.
Mobile phone owners in
Massachusetts not yet acquainted with the system may have gotten a first peek
Monday night, when many phones emitted a jarring tone and flashed a message
about an Amber Alert for a brother and sister kidnapped from a Braintree foster
home.
During a recent trip to Ogunquit, Maine, I realized that not a
single one of the four or five pay phones I remembered along Shore Rd. or in
Perkins Cove — phones I had used many times over the years, phones that had been
there as recently as last summer — was there anymore.
They might be on
life support, as the CP story suggests, but pay top 10 cell
phones still have a place. When Hurricane Sandy tore across the
Eastern Seabord last fall and knocked out power and cell reception, the story
continued, it was to pay phones people turned to call loved ones to tell them
they were safe.
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