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The Mobile Connection: The Cell Phone's Impact on Society

Rich Ling
TLDR
Ling et al. as mentioned in this paper examined the once unexpected interaction between humans and cell phones, and between humans, period, based on world-wide research involving tens of thousands of interviews and contextual observations, looked into the impact of the phone on our daily lives.
Abstract
Has the cell phone forever changed the way people communicate? The mobile phone is used for “real time” coordination while on the run, adolescents use it to manage their freedom, and teens “text” to each other day and night. The mobile phone is more than a simple technical innovation or social fad, more than just an intrusion on polite society. This book, based on world-wide research involving tens of thousands of interviews and contextual observations, looks into the impact of the phone on our daily lives. The mobile phone has fundamentally affected our accessibility, safety and security, coordination of social and business activities, and use of public places. Based on research conducted in dozens of countries, this insightful and entertaining book examines the once unexpected interaction between humans and cell phones, and between humans, period. The compelling discussion and projections about the future of the telephone should give designers everywhere a more informed practice and process, and provide researchers with new ideas to last years. *Rich Ling (an American working in Norway) is a prominent researcher, interviewed in the new technology article in the November 9 issue of the New York Times Magazine. *A particularly "good read", this book will be important to the designers, information designers, social psychologists, and others who will have an impact on the development of the new third generation of mobile telephones. *Carefully and wittily written by a senior research scientist at Telenor, Norway's largest telecommunications company, and developer of the first mobile telephone system that allowed for international roaming. Table of Contents Preface Acknowledgments Chapter 1: Introduction Chapter 2: Making Sense of Mobile Telephone Adoption Chapter 3: Safety and Security Chapter 4: The Coordination of Everyday Life Chapter 5: The Mobile Telephone and Teens Chapter 6: The Intrusive Nature of Mobile Telephony Chapter 7: Texting and the Growth of Asynchronous Discourse Chapter 8: Conclusion: The Significance of Osborne's Prognosis Appendix Endnotes Bibliography Index

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Citations
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Mobile Communication and Relational Mobilization in China

Jun Liu
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated two cases in rural and urban China in which Chinese people employed their mobile phones to mobilize participants for protests, and conducted 24 in-depth interviews with participants in these protests.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dragging Young People Down the Drain: The Mobile Phone, Gossip Mobile Website Outoilet and the Creation of a Mobile Ghetto

Alette Schoon
- 23 Nov 2012 - 
TL;DR: The authors used the domestication model to describe how a geographically based gossip mobile website, Outoilet (old toilet), helped to shape the meanings of everyday life for young adults in Hooggenoeg, a poor black low-income urban settlement in Grahamstown, South Africa.
Journal ArticleDOI

Information Technology and the “Arab Spring”

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the distribution and growth of several digital information technologies in seven countries rocked by recent protests and argue that information technology has democratized the sphere of public debate throughout the Arab world.

Emotional experience with portable interactive devices

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report on a six month longitudinal study exploring people's personal and social emotional experience with Portable Interactive Devices (PIDs) based on the theoretical framework of Activity Theory.
References
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Diffusion of Innovations

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Social Capital in the Creation of Human Capital

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Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community

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The Tragedy of the Commons

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