Forgetting your phone

Soldato
Joined
30 Nov 2005
Posts
13,916
I made the mistake of leaving my phone at home :eek: a whole day at work without it!
It felt like I had lost a limb, at break not having my phone allowed me take notice of my surrounding.
Everyone's glued to their phones, lol. Zero conversation going on! I ended up go back to work earlier as I was bored, pretty sad! I am now thinking of giving it up for a week to see how productive I become as I have lots of jobs (DIY) I can do, but have put off.

Thoughts? Are you a champion procrastinater?
 
Restaurants seem to have become a lonely/odd experience for many people now. The wife and I never get our phones out and just you know talk to one another when we are having a meal. However the amount of tables you see in total silence because everyone is on their phones is ridiculous. Can't people talk face to face anymore and enjoy the company of the person actually sitting with them.

Also people who work out the exact bill need to be hit on the nose with a rolled up newspaper but that's another matter.
 
Modern times, I'm guilty of it to on occasion since I got a 'smart' phone. Pretty pathetic really.
 
I think we all should have a 'no phone day' each month on a designayed day.
People will come to realise that there is more to life than just sticking your head into a glowing rectangular box all day long.
 
Getting work out of my staff has become increasingly difficult over the years as I often find them huddled in dark corners, necks craned, staring at their phones like zombies. A loud clap soon snaps them out of it, but I'm certain some of the 10+ minute toilet breaks are actually phone breaks. It reminds me of that episode of TNG where the crew becomes addicted to that alien game.
 
I've never understood the obsession with staring at a tiny screen all day. It's way worse than the 14" CRTs we had back in the 90s!!

That said, I do take my phone with me everywhere. But it stays in my pocket, unless... a) I'm making/answering a call, b) checking the time (have not worn a watch for over a decade), c) hopelessly lost, need GPS to save me :p

e: d) taking a picture of a cat.
 
Restaurants seem to have become a lonely/odd experience for many people now. The wife and I never get our phones out and just you know talk to one another when we are having a meal. However the amount of tables you see in total silence because everyone is on their phones is ridiculous. Can't people talk face to face anymore and enjoy the company of the person actually sitting with them.

Also people who work out the exact bill need to be hit on the nose with a rolled up newspaper but that's another matter.

I own a few small restaurants. The majority of our customer base stare into their phones. I even ran a test where I would carefully lower the music till it was barley audible and not one person glued to their phone noticed.

It is sad to see families all individually glued to devices and no one speaking to another.

I have had to be very selective of staff for phone addiction.

Oh and the bill thing, I hear you and feel your pain!
 
I have had the displeasure of leaving my phone at home when going out. I can only describe the feeling as sheer emptiness and regret. Hehe.

But it does make you think how life was without mobile devices and how things have changed. For the better or worse.
 
I think we all should have a 'no phone day' each month on a designayed day.
People will come to realise that there is more to life than just sticking your head into a glowing rectangular box all day long.
This is a good idea, I think it would wake people up.
imgres
 
I do often wonder how people get to 4 or 5 hours screen on time. Honestly I don't get that. I don't think I can leave my phone somewhere as I use it in the car or bike, so would realise before I left, but I only have around an hour screen on time a day at most.
 
I do often wonder how people get to 4 or 5 hours screen on time. Honestly I don't get that. I don't think I can leave my phone somewhere as I use it in the car or bike, so would realise before I left, but I only have around an hour screen on time a day at most.
Boring jobs, like today on a fault team so sat around doing nothing untill the phone goes off.

Phones to important to leave behind.

There's only so much crap you can talk about with the same colleagues every day.
 
My phone is basically for emergencies and I get told off all the time for not replying to texts etc however I have forgotten it several times and I feel lost without it.
I think things like 'Typical I could break down or have an accident and not be able to contact somebody'.
My wife is the same and last Monday night we were in Berlin and she had triggered her LifeAssyst app to to send out an emergency message to me and my two daughters.
We both sat in Murphy's Bar taking zero notice of our phones buzzing & ringing for 2 hours because our kids were panicking.
 
People are addicted to their crackphones these days.

It's actually a genuine addiction. Tell them to put it down for an entire day and watch them fidget the entire time feeling urge to pick up their phone.
 
Mine sits in the van glove box all day, I sometimes forget to take it out overnight. Smartphones are wasted on me, I don't need anything they do in my day-to-day life that a dumb phone wouldn't accomplish, the only reason I have it is because it was free.
 
Mine sits in the van glove box all day, I sometimes forget to take it out overnight. Smartphones are wasted on me, I don't need anything they do in my day-to-day life that a dumb phone wouldn't accomplish, the only reason I have it is because it was free.
The appeal of a smartphone for me isn't any of the apps or games. But it is nice that it combines a sat nav, phone, camera, calendar/alarm, SMS/email into a single device.

So whilst you won't find me checking social media on mine, if I'm more than 5m away from my house you will see me using the maps :p (I'm so directionally challenged and useless at finding my way anywhere, it's absurd!!) And I do use it as a memory aide to make sure I don't miss a dentists appt, etc.

I guess mine is really just a glorified PDA.

But how anyone can use them for web browsing or gaming I have no idea. Stare at a tiny screen for so long? Not a chance. But then my eyesight is crap. And more importantly, I hate social media/web 2.0.
 
Back
Top Bottom