10. Spend more money on useful things than on your phone.
It started with something as harmless as a car charger, but then you moved up to the FM transmitter, arm strap, a separate case for each day of the week, backup batteries, screen protectors, a Bluetooth stereo adapter, a wireless speaker, and even a dock-enabled tube amps. You see it’s just a phone, not a child, right? And nothing will work if you upgrade to the next version six months from now?
9. You have 30 different apps installed. And use them all.
We’ve all gone through an app installation where we put questionable items on our phones. After two weeks, we may find that it is trash and we will remove it, or we will leave it standing. But those of you who are still exploring your digital iPhorest trees, using the car park to get your Camry under the block every morning, and check out digital copies of the U.S. Constitution. in the midst of heated political debates they are real nuts.
8. You have alarms that tell you when you have done everything in your life.
Business meetings, doctoral sessions and group meetings. All valid events you can add to your phone. Do you have a trash can on Wednesday night? You are so deep, dear. If you need your phone to teach you every step of the day, it can be your breathing apparatus or dial.
7. You read with your phone on your phone.
You are not content to dream about your phone, love it in your pocket all day, and enjoy every opportunity to use it, you actually spend time finding out more about it, while using it. You read TUAW's latest posts on your iPhone, or threads on Crackberry sites from your Bold. Your phone is no longer a way to reach a conclusion, a conclusion.
6. Reduce your needs so you can pay off your $ 100 monthly mobile phone bill.
OK, lunch is very important. But $ 5 a day includes a love of $ 150 a month, and that can completely pay off your phone bill if you just switch to Jell-O and ramen noodles for a while. Or maybe you could start jumping on the turnstile instead of paying for the subway pass. Or move to a cheaper apartment. Or manage the balance on that credit card ...
Does this idea sound familiar?
5. Full battery charge does not last a day.
After brushing your teeth and brushing your face, your last bedtime routine connects to that smartphone. Because if you don't, there is no way that that sucker can stay another full day after the exercise you gave today. We will admit that the battery life on some modern smartphones is very bad, but if you charge in full on a daily basis, you may need to give up the juice.
4. You broke it, and it sounds like you've lost a friend.
In a moment of desperation, he pulled it out of his pocket for the last 37 hours, slipped, and sent the pinafore towards the paved road, where it landed with a sick crack. Or, in a moment of negligence, let it out of your pocket on the train, waiting to be snatched by a hawkeyed bum. Worse, in less-than-useful time, he threw it into a well (not urine, by the way). No matter what the circumstances, you can never stop playing an event in your mind, run over its immutable digital content in your mind, and kick yourself by letting it happen. Maybe you even dream of reuniting with a friend you lost long ago. Er, phone. When symptoms begin to appear within the boundary of post-traumatic stress disorder, it is time to move on.
3. When you meet people who have the same phone, you can only talk on the phone.
“Do you have an iPhone too? Oh well, have you tried the PDXBus app? Yes, this case is very good, but I find this strong one soon to be very small. "
If this sounds like a conversation you might have when you meet someone with the same smartphone, you should reconsider your smartphone addiction and your public health.
2. You feel a moment of shock when you touch your pocket (or fumble to the bottom of your wallet) and it disappears.
We're not talking about the lost phone here, we just see that you left it at home. And to feel the extreme heartbeat of great fear.
"What if people try to call me?"
“What if I can't find the nearest Starbucks without asking someone?”
"What will my followers think on Twitter?"
Take a deep breath before you need the iDefibrillator app and move on without your trusted digital assistant. Life will be better.
1. Use it in the bathroom.
This is incorrect. But not for the sake of hygiene as you all suspect. If you are using your smartphone in a can, you have just stripped yourself of your last refuge from distractions. He has polluted mankind's last solitary fortress by dragging everything computer-matched into statistics. Can't live five minutes without email? Really?
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