On 03/01/2013 12:52 PM, Daniel Barrett wrote:
You're not the last. I still don't own one and perhaps never will. My days are already jam-packed with technology; the last thing I desire is to carry more technology around with me.

I keep my phone on silent almost always, I pull it out when I want it and seldom when it wants me. I don't do work e-mail on it, I very seldom don't do e-mail from this account on it (too old an address, too much spam).

I don't let it have to power to stress me, I assert my power over it, it serves me.

The idea that I would want to not have it because I don't want it to drive me is like not wanting electricity because I don't want to labor after dark. Both arguments make some sense, but seem remote. I am sure there were those back when who resisted hooking up to electricity because they didn't want it to ruin their lives, but they seem silly, too.

I like reading on my small tablet, which I have with me almost as much as my phone, but not quite. And the other day I was standing in the basement waiting for the washer to fill and mix with the soap a bit more before I put the clothes in, so I read another page, in the same book, starting at the same location, but on my phone. I didn't have to anticipate that I wanted to do this, I didn't have to remember what page I was on, the Kindle app was already on my phone and it already knew where I was. Yes, the screen is little, but it is sharper than many printed books. Yes, the screen doesn't work in bright light, but I wasn't in bright light--and I could get an e-paper Kindle if I were going to the beach.

I can understand wanting to live slowly. But why is that incompatible with a smartphone? Learn how to turn off the beeps.

A phone isn't an autonomous and sentient Taser that will sneak up on you and attack when you aren't looking. No, once you turn off the beeps it sits quietly until you decide to pick it up. Why is that stressful? It sounds like you know there is forbidden stress in the phone and can't stop yourself from reaching for it and taking a drink. Yes, in that case I can see you are better off without one, but it sounds more like you are enjoying being a fuddy-duddy and wearing the mantle of Wise Old Timer.

-kb, the Kent who was savoring the language of _Richard_III_ the other day, off some instance of his "more technology", with his feet up, wine in hand, and not feeling stressed at all.

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