How Has Cell Phones Changed Us Socially?

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Most innovations have are two sides, the good side and the bad side and the cell phone is no exception. Many people find it difficult to believe that there was a time that cell phones did not exist. Letters back then were used to pass messages across before the telephones were introduced. Initially, telephones were used only to call people, who would receive the call only if they were near the receiver. Then the cell phones were introduced. They could receive or make calls and text messages to most parts of the world. With the cell phones, it was easier to write a text message than to hand write a note as it was before (). With time, the level of use of cell phones has gone up with more features being introduced. The cell phone technology is a double-edged innovation that inevitably changed as both positively and negatively socially. Cell phones are among the most innovative gadgets of the 20th century. Traditionally, people relied on cumbersome methods to transmit information and data over long distance, which usually made the communication process ineffective and slow. The ability to communicate deferred from one society to another and some societies had advantage over others due to their superior methods of communication. It was problematic to send urgent messages due to the lack of reliable and fast techniques of communication. The cell phone invention solved most of these issues. It introduced a platform through which parties could communicate instantaneously regardless of their location or distance. In addition, the cell phone technology is globally accepted hence it is a uniform medium of communication, making it both fast and efficient in any given community. Moreover, cell phones opened up room for more technological in... ... middle of paper ... ...s into our society. Generally, cell phones have served to improve lives, especially if used correctly. To an extent, life nowadays can be unimaginable without the use of cell phones, as we have come to rely heavily on them in our daily lives. As technology improves, the uses and features of the phones also increase, thus making it even harder to do without one. Works Cited Agar, John. Constant Touch: a Global History of the Mobile Phone. Cambridge: Icon, 2004, Print. Farley, Tom. The Cell-Phone Revolution: American heritage of invention & technology. New York: American Heritage, 2007. Print. Gordon A. Gow, and Richard K. Smith. Mobile and wireless communications: an introduction, McGraw-Hill International, 2006. Print. Sahel, Fluhr and Seibel, Nussbaum. Switching Plan for a Cellular Mobile Telephone System. New York: Penguin, 1973. Print.

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