The Impact of the Smartphone on Society

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Technology has, since the primitive years, always been used to invent tools in order to solve problems. This would, in turn, simplify and make man’s life easier. Through advancements in the field, man has become more efficient on both the macro- and microscopic level. Anything nowadays can be attained with either the flip of a switch or a click of a mouse. One particular technology that came about in this time was the smartphone. Since 2008, the smartphone, a device that combines a normal cell phone with a computer, typically offering Internet access, data storage, e-mail capability, etc. all in your hand was deemed as ground-breaking technology and created one of the largest and most competitive market in terms of technology to date. Their increased popularity continued to grow and today, it is very hard to encounter someone without a smartphone. These devices allow people to disconnect from reality and grant them access to the world as a whole. People use these devices to manage their daily routine, dictating what they should do and when they should do it. The capabilities of this device had been unheard of before their time. However, is there more to this technology than what has been made aware to their owners? We have become overly obsessed with these devices that it has impacted our humanity – our interaction with others and society. Since its upbringing, the invention of the smartphone has come to negatively reinvent the way people go about their daily lives because we have become detached from society, let these smartphones govern our lives, and have become obsessed with these devices. To begin with, the smartphone allows for its user to detach him/herself from society. Nowadays if a conversation do... ... middle of paper ... ... detach ourselves from social interaction and create a device that we would not control, but rather would control us. Remember that time without technology, especially smartphones, governing our lives and dictating our every move. It was a time of socialization, relaxation, and open thought. Why can’t we go back to this time and relive it once again? Works Cited Baker, Russell. “The Plot Against People.” The Norton Mix: Readings on Science and Technology. Elizabeth Kessler, etal, eds. W.W. Norton and Company. New York: 2011. Print. 7-9. Bittman, Mark. “I Need a Virtual Break. No, Really.” The Norton Mix: Readings on Science and Technology. Elizabeth Kessler, etal, eds. W.W. Norton and Company. New York: 2011. Print. 20-24. Turkle, Sherry. “Connected, but alone?” TED Conference Feb. 2012. Lecture. TED: Ideas Worth Spreading. TED, Apr 2012. Web. Feb 2013.

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