We Are Hopelessly Hooked [on our Gadgets]

We check our phones 221 times a day—an average of every 4.3 minutes—according to a UK study. This number actually may be too low, since people tend to underestimate their own mobile usage. In a 2015 Gallup survey, 61 percent of people said they checked their phones less frequently than others they knew. Our transformation into device people has happened with unprecedented suddenness.
[…]
What does it mean to shift overnight from a society in which people walk down the street looking around to one in which people walk down the street looking at machines? We wouldn’t be always clutching smartphones if we didn’t believe they made us safer, more productive, less bored, and were useful in all of the ways that a computer in your pocket can be useful. At the same time, smartphone owners describe feeling “frustrated” and “distracted.” In a 2015 Pew survey…[n]early half of eighteen-to-twenty-nine-year-olds said they used their phones to “avoid others around you.”  — Jacob Weisberg, NY Books

Post was last modified on 28 Feb 2016 4:07 pm

View Comments

  • This number goes up exponentially once one is foolish enough to download Neko Atsume. Not that I'm speaking from personal experience. Just repeating what I've heard. From someone else. Not me

Share
Published by
Dennis G. Jerz

Recent Posts

Yesterday my stack of unmarked assignments was about 120, so this is not bad.

Nothing in this stack is pressing, but they do include rough drafts of final papers,…

8 hours ago

ai, ai, ai: critical thinking and literacy won’t save you

Here’s the underlying problem. We have an operating image of thought, an understanding of what…

10 hours ago

Representing the Humanities at Accepted Students Day.

Representing the Humanities at Accepted Students Day.

4 days ago

The daughter opens another show. This weekend only.

The daughter opens another show. This weekend only.

4 days ago

How to Disagree Academically: Using Graham’s “Disagreement Hierarchy” to organize a college term paper.

How to Disagree Academically: Using Graham's "Disagreement Hierarchy" to organize a college term paper.

5 days ago

A.I. ‘Completes’ Keith Haring’s Intentionally Unfinished Painting

After learning of his AIDS diagnosis, artist Keith Haring created the work, "Unfinished Painting" (1989),…

5 days ago