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Even Cell Phone Users Annoyed by Them

 
 
Reyn
 
Reply Mon 3 Apr, 2006 03:09 pm
What a surprise: "....poll found the offended don't think they are among the callers who get on other people's nerves."

Even Cell Phone Users Annoyed by Them

(AP) Even cell phone users get irritated at others who yak on their portables about their personal business in public.

An AP-AOL-Pew poll found the offended don't think they are among the callers who get on other people's nerves.

Most cell users find their phones very useful, with half keeping them on all the time.

But almost nine in 10 say they encounter others using those phones in an annoying way. Only 8 percent of cell users acknowledge their own use of cell phones is sometimes rude.

"People tend to talk louder on the phone. That's quite irritating," said Pamela Sorenson, a 57-year-old resident of Bellingham, Wash. "I often hear young people, mostly college age, talking about dating and personal things I don't want to know about."

More than two-thirds of cell phone users say it would be hard to give up their portable, according to the poll, one of the most extensive news surveys of cell phone users yet.

About a fourth of the cell phone users polled, 26 percent, said they can't imagine life without their cell phone. Three-fourths of cell users say they have used it in an emergency.

"My cell phone is pretty much a necessity _ sometimes a pain but a necessity," said Sandra Moore of Colorado Springs, Colo. "I have children and the cell phone gives me the freedom to be places I need to be. It's easier to communicate with people, you can reach them almost any time.

"But that means people can reach me anytime," she grumbled. "Sometimes, I just turn the ringer off."

Almost one-fourth of those polled say too many people try to get in touch with them on their cell phones _ just one of many headaches balanced against the devices' advantages.

The poll also found:

_More than a fourth, 28 percent, said they sometimes don't drive as safely as they should because they are using a cell phone.

_More than a third, 36 percent, said they are sometimes shocked at the size of their service bill.

The bulk of cell users use it traditionally _ as a portable phone. But cell phones increasingly include built-in cameras, MP3 players, games and computers with the Internet and e-mail.

Young adults and minorities are drawn to the multiple uses of a cell phone. They are more likely than older adults and whites to send text messages, take pictures, use the Internet and play music with their cell phones.

If those trends continue, the cell phones' role will change dramatically.

"We've got everything on my phone," said Mark Madsen, a 24-year-old college student from Chattanooga, Tenn. "I use it mostly for the phone, but I also play video games and use the MP3 player. I pretty much use it all the time."

Only one-third of U.S. cell phone owners use text messages _ a practice immensely popular in Europe and Asia. Two-thirds of cell phone owners between ages 18 and 29 send text messages _ one of many areas where young adults have a more versatile approach to the devices.

More than half, 55 percent, of young adults take still pictures with their phones; 47 percent play games and 28 percent use the Internet, according to the poll of more than 1,200 cell phone users.

"We think of them as mobile phones, but the personal computer, mobile phone and the Internet are merging into some new medium like the personal computer in the 1980s or the Internet in the 1990s," said Howard Rheingold, an author who has taught at Stanford University and written extensively about the effects of technology.

Cell phones have changed the way people organize their time. Nearly half freed said they make most of their cell calls in off-hours when the minutes are free. Almost as many say they make cell phone calls to occupy time when traveling or waiting for someone.

"When I'm driving to my appointments, everybody calls me on my cell phone, said 26-year-old Abel Yanez of San Jose, Calif, who works in a landscaping business. "When I'm in my office, I use my cell phone because if I need to leave, I just leave. I have the office phone so I can dial up on the Internet."

The AP-AOL-Pew poll of 1,503 adults included 1,286 cell phone users and was conducted March 8-26. It has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points. About half of the interviews, 752, were conducted by dialing landlines and 751 were conducted by dialing cell phones.
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Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 765 • Replies: 12
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CrazyDiamond
 
  1  
Reply Mon 3 Apr, 2006 04:20 pm
Yeah! I hate it when people starting talking on the phone in my vacinity. Can't they just ask to get a call back? I mean honestly, I--

*ring, ringaling, ring*

HELLO?
HELLO????
HELL--YEAH IT'S ME, WHA--
HELLO?????
YEAH I'M AT HOME, CAN YOU--
YEAH, HELLO? I'M AT HOME CAN YOU--
CAN YOU COME PICK ME UP?
CAN YOU COME PICK ME UP???
CAN YOU COME PICK ME UP?????
HELLO? YEAH, CAN YOU-- HELLO? YEAH, CAN YOU COME PICK--

...oops, dropped the call. Anyway, what were we talking about? Oh yeah, people on cell phones, I hate that. Definately annoying.
0 Replies
 
Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Mon 3 Apr, 2006 04:29 pm
They had a story on CBC1 today about the idling ordinance in Toronto--if your car idles for more than three minutes, you're subject to a fine of $140. They had tape of a t.o. cop talking to some joker in an SUV, to whom he was giving a ticket. At one point you could hear the officer saying, in a rather exasperated tone: "Yeah, well, you could shut the engine off while you talk on the phone." Mumble, mumble, mumble . . . then you could hear the paper being ripped from the book as the cop gave him the ticket. "Have a nice day, Sir."
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Stray Cat
 
  1  
Reply Mon 3 Apr, 2006 06:36 pm
I'd love to know just how many traffic accidents are caused by people yacking on their cell phones while attempting to drive at the same time. I think they've tried to amass some statistics, but they are not reliable because no one will admit they were talking on their cell phone after the accident has occurred. Rolling Eyes
0 Replies
 
Amigo
 
  1  
Reply Mon 3 Apr, 2006 06:40 pm
What would happen if all the cell phones went dead all at once? Shocked

Teenage girls and Businessman Armageddon.
0 Replies
 
djjd62
 
  1  
Reply Mon 3 Apr, 2006 06:42 pm
a sad story from near the barrie ontario area, a pregnant woman was driving on a rural road that runs beside a canal, the weather was quit bad, snow, sleet, wind, she called her mother to tell how bad the roads were, and her mother told her to get off the cell phone and watch the road, if conditions were so bad, she was apparently so mad she called her friend to tell her what her mother had said and to talk about the bad weather and road conditions, and this she did even as she lost control nad slid into the canal eventually drowning

i guess the one consolation is they knew where to find her
0 Replies
 
Reyn
 
  1  
Reply Mon 3 Apr, 2006 07:53 pm
Stray Cat wrote:
I'd love to know just how many traffic accidents are caused by people yacking on their cell phones while attempting to drive at the same time. I think they've tried to amass some statistics, but they are not reliable because no one will admit they were talking on their cell phone after the accident has occurred. Rolling Eyes

Indeed, SC, that would be an interesting statistic.

Never mind the accidents. There would also be the "near misses" to consider. Shocked
0 Replies
 
Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Mon 3 Apr, 2006 08:34 pm
I saw an interesting piece on television a couple of years ago, of a woman who worked out of her car (catering business, she was on the phone to clients and suppliers as she drove from site to site). She flatly denied that she drove unsafely, so the put a video camera on her dash, and a member of the production crew accompanied her on her morning rounds.

By lunchtime, they told her she had run several stop signs, and she vehemently denied. They played back the tape. She had run six stop signs, and a red light. That was just the morning.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Mon 3 Apr, 2006 09:54 pm
My wife and two inlaws and I were nearly killed on the freeway by a woman on the phone not so many months ago. She looked straight ahead, doing about 80, as she switched lanes. She very nearly barrelled into our car. My bro-in-law just did slow enough to let her get by. She never even had a clue. She took the next exit, and I could see her down on the feeder road, tunnel vision, still talking. If she's alive today, it isn't her fault.
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Tomkitten
 
  1  
Reply Tue 4 Apr, 2006 01:04 pm
Am I right in thinking that while we pay both to receive and to make cell phone calls, the rest of the world only pays to make them
0 Replies
 
Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Tue 4 Apr, 2006 02:25 pm
That depends upon whose plan you are using.
0 Replies
 
Amigo
 
  1  
Reply Wed 5 Apr, 2006 09:48 am
Possible hazards:
**Two minutes of exposure to emissions from mobile phones can disable a safety barrier in blood causing proteins and toxins to leak into the brain, could increase chances of developing Alzheimer's multiple sclerosis and Parkinson's. (Scientists at Sweden's Lund University)

**Scientists say exposure to the phones' low-level radiation causes red blood cells to leak hemoglobin and can lead to heart disease and kidney stones.

**Recent studies suggesting a link between cell-phone use and brain tumors, and the possibility that the microwaves could ignite petroleum fumes at gas stations.

**A cell phone unit, or communications tower, has so many of thee radiation emanating gadgets. This can be a problem for its immediate environment.







SPECIFIC HEALTH CONCERNS Cancer / Tumors
Studies have been conducted suggesting that rats that have been exposed to microwaves similar to the sort generated by mobile phones but more powerful, showed breaks in their DNA which could indicate an adverse effect. Also, mice exposed to radiation for 18 months developed brain tumors. Though of course, these studies are not concrete proof.
0 Replies
 
Tomkitten
 
  1  
Reply Wed 5 Apr, 2006 12:08 pm
Even Cell Phone Users Annoyed by Them
Some reports on the use of cell phones point out that any conversation involving the driver is hazardous. However, a more recent report says that talking to passengers is less of a problem because passengers, being physically present, are able to gauge what the immediate circumstances on the road may be, and consequently know - hopefully - when to shut up and not distract the driver.

This, of course, does not apply to three-year olds squabbling in the back seat.
0 Replies
 
 

 
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