good things and bad thing about phone
Answers
Explanation:
10 Positive Effects of Mobile Phones (On Your Everyday Life)
Improved Communication.
Help Us Stay Organized.
Everyday Chores Made Easier.
Ensure Stress-free Travelling.
Help In Emergencies.
Provide Easy Access to Information and Technology for Students.
Help Teachers Increase Student Engagement.
Increased Security.
Interruptions. Mobile phones are a constant, always available, and real-time communication avenue. ...
Distraction. ...
Isolation. ...
Health problems. ...
Loss of money. ...
Connect to the world. ...
2. Entertainment. ...
Safety.
Explanation:
The Positives Of Smartphone Culture
Where once our backpacks and purses were filled with CD players, cell phones, cameras, video cameras, calculators, laptops, GPS devices, e-readers, and more, we now only need a carry a small, light-weight smartphone to accomplish all those tasks. Smartphones are powerful, little devices, and they have done much for our society.
Here are just some quick stats on smart phone usage.
80% of internet users own a smartphone (Smart Insights)
By 2019, mobile advertising will account for 72% of all US digital ad spending (Marketing Land)
48% of millennials view video exclusively on their mobile devices. (Contently)
Clearly, smartphones are tremendously popular with multiple generations and demographics, and their use has had wide-reaching effects on our culture.
Cameras Everywhere: When everyone has cameras in their pocket, we are digitizing and immortalizing the era. From cute GIFs of cats to videos sparking national debates, a whole population with video cameras at their disposal is something we have never seen before.
Use in Education: Students can snap pictures of their notes to send to classmates, answer quick online quizzes and polls created by their teachers, and even record full lectures with their smartphones. The potential applications for smartphones in educational settings is only just being explored.
Use in Business: Business professionals can more easily access their business communications, more quickly respond to an urgent needs, and do more with less time. For small businesses, smartphones can give quick access to banking functions and allow you to manage your social media accounts on the go.
The Negatives Of Smartphone Culture
Fear of Missing Out (FOMO): There’s a phenomenon that has occurred due to society’s constant connections to social media called the “Fear of Missing Out.” When one is constantly seeing the noteworthy, exciting, or glamorous events of the lives of one’s social media connections, people feel as though their own life is drab and dull by comparison. They fear that they are missing out on their own life. Darlene McLaughlin, M.D., assistant professor at the Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine describes the problem in a Science Daily article, “The problem with FOMO is the individuals it impacts are looking outward instead of inward. When you’re so tuned in to the ‘other,’ or the ‘better’ (in your mind), you lose your authentic sense of self. This constant fear of missing out means you are not participating as a real person in your own world.”
Nomophobia: Nomophobia is a new diagnosable disorder in which the subject has an irrational fear of losing or being without their smartphone. As we become more and more dependent on these devices, our ability to cope without them dwindles. According to a survey by SecurEnvoy, 77% of teens had anxiety about spending their day without their phone.