Welcome to Our WirelessAdvisor Community!

You are viewing our forums as a GUEST. Please join us so you can post and view all the pictures.
Registration is easy, fast and FREE!

Lose cell phone, get cast away from society

Discussion in 'Wireless News' started by strunke, Mar 22, 2008.

  1. strunke

    strunke .:|Always Covered|:.
    Senior Member

    Joined:
    May 28, 2005
    Messages:
    1,794
    Likes Received:
    6
    Location:
    BVR
    My Phone:
    Blackberry 8230, KRZR K1m
    Wireless Provider(s):
    Alltel, T-Mobile, Sprint, Centennial
    Lose cell phone, get cast away from society
    In wireless world, living without a mobile like living on a desert island

    Last Fourth of July at the beach, Leah Wilson lost her “lifeline.”

    Wilson, a 22-year-old graduate student, had clipped her blue flip phone around her bikini bottom — for safekeeping. Then, she left her towel, her other belongings, to let her hair down at Pacific Beach in San Diego. But between playing sports on the beach — and drinking — Wilson’s cell phone went missing.

    “My whole life crashed,” she said. “The only number I knew by heart was my mom’s.”

    Many of us are so reliant on our cell phones that when they're lost, we quickly feel lost without them.

    Major mobile carriers AT&T and Verizon Wireless say they don't track how many people lose their cell phones a year. But losing these small devices happens “a lot,” and when they go missing, it's a huge disruption to our lives, according to Avi Greengart, mobile analyst at market research firm Current Analysis.

    Cast away from society
    A Pew Internet & American Life Project report released this month found that Americans for the first time picked cell phones as the technology they can least go without. In today’s wireless world, living without a cell phone is like living on a desert island. And losing one is like being suddenly cast away from society.

    “Without it, there’s a disconnection with life,” said Marian Salzman, a cultural trendspotter and partner at Porter Novelli, a public relations powerhouse in New York.

    People who’re out of their elements — drinking at a bar, rushing to leave a cab or traveling in a foreign country — are particularly prone to losing their cell phones — and its impacts.

    Joe Huttner, a Haverford College junior, procured a prepaid cell phone for his time studying in Argentina, as did others in the program.

    But the foreign language and environment disoriented students, some of whom lost their phones, Huttner said.

    Getting a new prepaid phone meant getting a new number — so none of their study-abroad pals could contact each other, he said.

    “If you didn’t have a class with them, you lost them as a friend,” said 21-year-old Huttner, who was fortunate enough to hold onto his. “That was a bummer.”

    Lose new friends, keep the old
    Losing your cell phone might mean losing acquaintances — but old friends can usually find you.

    It’s all the more difficult, though, if you’re looking to establish new friends like Wilson was.
    Before you lose it ...
    Back up what you can

    Losing your cell phone can mean losing your contacts, ringtones and text messages. So what mobile information can you safeguard? To find out, click here.
    She had just moved to San Diego to attend graduate school at National University. During her first month, Wilson had collected plenty of phone numbers, particularly on the Fourth of July. She never recovered them.

    “It’s already hard moving away without friends and family — and then having to do it again,” Wilson said.

    But reconnecting with close friends was made easy thanks to MySpace and Facebook, where “lost my phone” groups can reel in castaways.

    Two weeks after Wilson got a new cell phone and things started to look up, they went amiss again. While trying on a pair of shoes, she set down her wallet, keys — and her new phone.

    It was at the store’s front counter that Wilson realized she was empty handed. It turned out her cell phone was stolen — and the thief only spared her keys and wallet case.

    “The second time all I could do is cry,” Wilson said.

    Are we enslaved to our cell phones?
    While sudden disconnection shocks initially, it wears off and other losses emerge. Unlike address books that can be at least partly recovered, cool ring tones and sentimental text messages can sometimes be lost forever.

    Cell phones "are our repositories of our lives, our loved ones,” said Salzman, the cultural trendspotter. “My friends keep SMS (text message) trails. They’re kind of like their diaries.”

    Living without them is only expected to get harder as their importance grows. Far from just a phone, mobiles are also used as alarm clocks, watches, music players, cameras and calendars.

    And they’re on their way to becoming full-blown mini computers, personal organizers — and gaming devices. Is our dependency on a single gadget for everything healthy?

    “You become enslaved to the device,” said Leysia Palen of the University of Colorado, who researches how technology impacts society. “You’re more beholden and expect it to be our dependent brain.”

    Dialing down our dependency
    Losing a cell phone can help dial down our dependency — some.

    Michael Bonfanti from Monticello, Fla., was so furious when he first lost his at a wedding that

    Video

    Time running out for the watch?
    March 14: More young people are looking to their cell phone to check the time. Mara Schiavocampo reports.

    Nightly News
    he refused to buy a new one. And after a week, he started to like being without it — a lot.

    “It was liberating,” he said. “Nobody could get me if I didn’t want them to.”

    Bonfanti’s wife disagreed. But he kept up his “anthropological experiment, like going back to the Stone Age,” for three weeks.

    In that time, he became the office freak at his law firm, where he says colleagues are hooked on “CrackBerries,” a nickname for popular BlackBerry phones.

    Bonfanti eventually acquiesced to his wife’s wish, persuaded that if something should happen
    Before you lose it ...
    Back up what you can

    Losing your cell phone can mean losing your contacts, ringtones and text messages. So what mobile information can you safeguard? To find out, click here.
    to him, he couldn’t connect with her or she with him.

    She also got him a “man bag,” a purse made for and used by men, to carry his new mobile. Bonfanti uses the man bag to subdue the phone’s ringing so he can ignore it as he pleases.

    “I know it’s there. I’m not going to lose it — but I still have that freedom when I leave work,” he said. “It goes in the closet at my house.”

    ‘Impossible to live without it’
    Despite attempts to curb cell phone use, experts say we’re permanently bound to the devices. That’s because we want — and depend on — constant contact and instant information.

    “With a cell phone, once we get used to the information, whether online or talking to a person, it becomes impossible to live without it,” said Paul Levinson, author of “Cellphone: The Story of the World's Most Mobile Medium and How It Has Transformed Everything!”

    Wilson’s new BlackBerry Pearl keeps track of things like her grocery list.

    She is now attending her alma mater, West Virginia State University, and is surrounded by her old college friends again. Wilson never set foot in San Diego’s National University. Her lack of financial and emotional support made her time there difficult — and losing her cell phone, twice, pushed it to unbearable, she said.

    “It was absolutely the worst thing that ever could have happened.”
    © 2008 MSNBC Interactive

    Lose cell phone, get cast away from society - Wireless - MSNBC.com
     
    Stop hovering to collapse... Click to collapse... Hover to expand... Click to expand...
  2. M in LA

    M in LA Mobile 28 Years Plus
    Super Moderator Senior Member

    Joined:
    Sep 24, 2004
    Messages:
    8,053
    Likes Received:
    347
    Location:
    Los Angeles, CA
    My Phone:
    iPhone 13 Pro Max, XS Max
    Wireless Provider(s):
    Verizon (since 1994)
    Being "cast away from society" because of a lost cell phone??? Give me a break. :rolleyes:

    It's useless media opinions like this that enforce idiotic notions about what's most "important" in this society, IMO. Interesting article, though.

    I keep an Excel backup of important numbers in case I ever lose my phone. It's better to be safe than sorry.
     
    Stop hovering to collapse... Click to collapse... Hover to expand... Click to expand...
  3. RJB

    RJB Gold Senior Member
    Senior Member

    Joined:
    Dec 9, 2004
    Messages:
    7,069
    Cell Tower Picture Gallery:
    99
    Likes Received:
    36
    My Phone:
    iPhone
    Wireless Provider(s):
    AT&T
    LOL Mike I could not agree with you more lol. But I think for some people it could be a huge thing to loose their phones. I know if I lost mine I would loose out on some conversations but not society. Hell there are enough phones around now a days I could just borrow someones if I needed to make a call. Also most people who loose their phones loose them for dumb reasons.
     
  4. cheddar

    cheddar Senior Member
    Senior Member

    Joined:
    Sep 26, 2006
    Messages:
    306
    Likes Received:
    2
    When my boss lost his cell phone he realized he couldn't even call his kids because he didn't know their phones numbers. He was still tracking people back down a month later.
     
  5. RJB

    RJB Gold Senior Member
    Senior Member

    Joined:
    Dec 9, 2004
    Messages:
    7,069
    Cell Tower Picture Gallery:
    99
    Likes Received:
    36
    My Phone:
    iPhone
    Wireless Provider(s):
    AT&T
    LOL it is one thing to not know your works number but to not know your children or wifes number that is sad. That should be an obligation taken by everyone to know those by heart.
     
  6. Eric47

    Eric47 Bronze Senior Member
    Senior Member

    Joined:
    Dec 25, 2007
    Messages:
    1,400
    Cell Tower Picture Gallery:
    49
    Likes Received:
    2
    Location:
    in my own house
    My Phone:
    crackberry's
    thank god for outlook.


    now if my phone is lost and my computer dies, id probably be screwed too.

    however i do have a probably 10-20 of my most important phone numbers memorized. but my contacts list is over 200 so that is alot i would be missing.
     
  7. M in LA

    M in LA Mobile 28 Years Plus
    Super Moderator Senior Member

    Joined:
    Sep 24, 2004
    Messages:
    8,053
    Likes Received:
    347
    Location:
    Los Angeles, CA
    My Phone:
    iPhone 13 Pro Max, XS Max
    Wireless Provider(s):
    Verizon (since 1994)
    And if they can't remember any numbers or didn't take any precautions to keep those numbers somewhere, I have no sympathy for them. It's carelessness. It seems like many people just don't think anymore...

    Amen to that brother!!! How hard can it be to remember a few VERY IMPORTANT numbers???
     
    Stop hovering to collapse... Click to collapse... Hover to expand... Click to expand...
  8. Jay2TheRescue

    Jay2TheRescue Resident Spamslayer
    Super Moderator Senior Member

    Joined:
    Dec 17, 2002
    Messages:
    12,405
    Cell Tower Picture Gallery:
    158
    Likes Received:
    438
    Location:
    Northern Virginia
    My Phone:
    Pixel 4a 5G
    Wireless Provider(s):
    AT&Tingular 310-410
    If someone is important enough that I have them in my cell phone, then I also either have them as a friend on Myspace, or I have their email address. If I ever had to rebuild my phonebook I could probably restore 99% of it by sending emails out.

    -Jay
     
    Stop hovering to collapse... Click to collapse... Hover to expand... Click to expand...
  9. M in LA

    M in LA Mobile 28 Years Plus
    Super Moderator Senior Member

    Joined:
    Sep 24, 2004
    Messages:
    8,053
    Likes Received:
    347
    Location:
    Los Angeles, CA
    My Phone:
    iPhone 13 Pro Max, XS Max
    Wireless Provider(s):
    Verizon (since 1994)
    Another good point. I would have the ability to do the same thing IF I ever lost one of my phones (which hasn't happened yet in 14 years of having mobile service).
     
    Stop hovering to collapse... Click to collapse... Hover to expand... Click to expand...
  10. Jay2TheRescue

    Jay2TheRescue Resident Spamslayer
    Super Moderator Senior Member

    Joined:
    Dec 17, 2002
    Messages:
    12,405
    Cell Tower Picture Gallery:
    158
    Likes Received:
    438
    Location:
    Northern Virginia
    My Phone:
    Pixel 4a 5G
    Wireless Provider(s):
    AT&Tingular 310-410
    Same here. I've never lost a phone for more than an hour or 2. Most often when I loose a phone its just misplaced somewhere in the house. I usually find it when the couch starts ringing.

    -Jay
     
    Stop hovering to collapse... Click to collapse... Hover to expand... Click to expand...
  11. M in LA

    M in LA Mobile 28 Years Plus
    Super Moderator Senior Member

    Joined:
    Sep 24, 2004
    Messages:
    8,053
    Likes Received:
    347
    Location:
    Los Angeles, CA
    My Phone:
    iPhone 13 Pro Max, XS Max
    Wireless Provider(s):
    Verizon (since 1994)
    Jay, now that's something I'd like to see!!!:lmao:
     
    Stop hovering to collapse... Click to collapse... Hover to expand... Click to expand...
  12. Jay2TheRescue

    Jay2TheRescue Resident Spamslayer
    Super Moderator Senior Member

    Joined:
    Dec 17, 2002
    Messages:
    12,405
    Cell Tower Picture Gallery:
    158
    Likes Received:
    438
    Location:
    Northern Virginia
    My Phone:
    Pixel 4a 5G
    Wireless Provider(s):
    AT&Tingular 310-410
    Yeah, especially if its late at night, and you're home alone. Lately I've been using the theme music to the Halloween movies as my ringtone.

    -Jay
     
    Stop hovering to collapse... Click to collapse... Hover to expand... Click to expand...
  13. M in LA

    M in LA Mobile 28 Years Plus
    Super Moderator Senior Member

    Joined:
    Sep 24, 2004
    Messages:
    8,053
    Likes Received:
    347
    Location:
    Los Angeles, CA
    My Phone:
    iPhone 13 Pro Max, XS Max
    Wireless Provider(s):
    Verizon (since 1994)
    That adds even more tension to the experience! :lmao::rotfl:
     
    Stop hovering to collapse... Click to collapse... Hover to expand... Click to expand...
  14. Gamer03

    Gamer03 Technology Aficionado
    Super Moderator Senior Member

    Joined:
    Jul 30, 2003
    Messages:
    9,065
    Cell Tower Picture Gallery:
    74
    Likes Received:
    249
    Location:
    The Florida Everglades
    My Phone:
    Motorola X Pure
    Wireless Provider(s):
    Verizon Wireless
    I have been very fortunate. I have never lost my cell phone. All of my contacts are backed up on Microsoft Outlook. In case I ever lost my phone, I could have my contacts but the PDA would have to be replaced (which would cost a lot of $$).
     
    Stop hovering to collapse... Click to collapse... Hover to expand... Click to expand...
  15. Analog man

    Analog man Member
    Senior Member

    Joined:
    Jan 5, 2008
    Messages:
    214
    Likes Received:
    2
    Location:
    california
    My Phone:
    Motorola timeport p8767
    Wireless Provider(s):
    pageplus
    ive never lost my phone
    nobody would steal obsolete tecnollagy any way
    evan if i did lose my phone, i only had 6 numbers in my memory, just numbers, it aint an alpha microtac. and if someone was stupid enoght to take it, well the battery would die, and they wont have a charger for it, and i'll just stick my esn/min on another old microtac. tobad the networks around here are spotty
     
  16. walkguru

    walkguru Wireless Guru
    Senior Member

    Joined:
    Dec 26, 2005
    Messages:
    6,084
    Cell Tower Picture Gallery:
    28
    Likes Received:
    2
    Location:
    Oklahoma
    My Phone:
    iphone 3gs 32black
    Wireless Provider(s):
    cingular,family plan w/4 lines
    no biggie if i lost my phone, i would just grab a backup.
     
    Stop hovering to collapse... Click to collapse... Hover to expand... Click to expand...
  17. M in LA

    M in LA Mobile 28 Years Plus
    Super Moderator Senior Member

    Joined:
    Sep 24, 2004
    Messages:
    8,053
    Likes Received:
    347
    Location:
    Los Angeles, CA
    My Phone:
    iPhone 13 Pro Max, XS Max
    Wireless Provider(s):
    Verizon (since 1994)
    Unfortunately there are a lot of people out there who aren't as prepared as those of us here on W.A.! ;)
     
    Stop hovering to collapse... Click to collapse... Hover to expand... Click to expand...
  18. walkguru

    walkguru Wireless Guru
    Senior Member

    Joined:
    Dec 26, 2005
    Messages:
    6,084
    Cell Tower Picture Gallery:
    28
    Likes Received:
    2
    Location:
    Oklahoma
    My Phone:
    iphone 3gs 32black
    Wireless Provider(s):
    cingular,family plan w/4 lines
    Wirelessly posted (Walkguru's: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows 98; PalmSource/Palm-D062; Blazer/4.5) 16;320x320)

    yes that's very true.
     
    Stop hovering to collapse... Click to collapse... Hover to expand... Click to expand...
  19. MasterC

    MasterC Junior Member
    Junior Member

    Joined:
    Mar 25, 2008
    Messages:
    90
    Likes Received:
    0
    Location:
    Texas
    My Phone:
    Iphone 3G
    Wireless Provider(s):
    AT&T
    Losing your phone is a big deal to some people, I have lost mine and I feel all weird.
     
  20. bdot

    bdot Junior Member
    Junior Member

    Joined:
    Mar 27, 2008
    Messages:
    72
    Likes Received:
    0
    Location:
    Rosslyn, VA
    My Phone:
    Motorola V3xx Platinum
    Wireless Provider(s):
    AT&T
    I agree. I knew maybe a handful of numbers off the top of my head when I lost my cell. Rebuilding my phone book was a hassle, but until I even got a replacement, I felt cut off from the world. I guess it's all the texting I do that I made me feel disconnected without it.
     
  21. M in LA

    M in LA Mobile 28 Years Plus
    Super Moderator Senior Member

    Joined:
    Sep 24, 2004
    Messages:
    8,053
    Likes Received:
    347
    Location:
    Los Angeles, CA
    My Phone:
    iPhone 13 Pro Max, XS Max
    Wireless Provider(s):
    Verizon (since 1994)
    Sometimes there's a benefit to having more than one...:browani: (such as having a backup or secondary phone WITH all of the same contacts in it).
     
    Stop hovering to collapse... Click to collapse... Hover to expand... Click to expand...
  22. bdot

    bdot Junior Member
    Junior Member

    Joined:
    Mar 27, 2008
    Messages:
    72
    Likes Received:
    0
    Location:
    Rosslyn, VA
    My Phone:
    Motorola V3xx Platinum
    Wireless Provider(s):
    AT&T
    this is where I've been debating with myself for the past year whether to join the crowds and get a PDA also
     
  23. M in LA

    M in LA Mobile 28 Years Plus
    Super Moderator Senior Member

    Joined:
    Sep 24, 2004
    Messages:
    8,053
    Likes Received:
    347
    Location:
    Los Angeles, CA
    My Phone:
    iPhone 13 Pro Max, XS Max
    Wireless Provider(s):
    Verizon (since 1994)
    bdot, you don't even need to get a PDA. If you wanted a secondary carrier, you could get a prepaid plan with one of the others, buy a simple phone and have a secondary right there.

    You could even get a Go Phone cheaply (like a Nokia 6102i, for example), not activate the SIM, but just have the phone as a back-up in case you need it. Just save any contacts from your main SIM to the backup phone.

    Any one of these ways work and give a peace of mind in the event the primary phone is lost or misplaced.

    Welcome to Wireless Advisor, by the way! :)
     
    Stop hovering to collapse... Click to collapse... Hover to expand... Click to expand...
  24. bdot

    bdot Junior Member
    Junior Member

    Joined:
    Mar 27, 2008
    Messages:
    72
    Likes Received:
    0
    Location:
    Rosslyn, VA
    My Phone:
    Motorola V3xx Platinum
    Wireless Provider(s):
    AT&T
    Very true, but I figure why not go all out and splurge on the PDA while I'm at it. Lot of cool features my V3xx doesn't have.
     
  25. M in LA

    M in LA Mobile 28 Years Plus
    Super Moderator Senior Member

    Joined:
    Sep 24, 2004
    Messages:
    8,053
    Likes Received:
    347
    Location:
    Los Angeles, CA
    My Phone:
    iPhone 13 Pro Max, XS Max
    Wireless Provider(s):
    Verizon (since 1994)
    I'm with you on this!!! Go for it and get yourself a smartphone! There are so many to choose from nowadays and they improve all the time, so the sky's the limit. Have fun! :D
     
    Stop hovering to collapse... Click to collapse... Hover to expand... Click to expand...

Share This Page

Copyright 1997-2023 Wireless Advisor™, LLC. All rights reserved. All registered and unregistered trademarks are the property of their respective holders.
WirelessAdvisor.com is not associated by ownership or membership with any cellular, PCS or wireless service provider companies and is not meant to be an endorsement of any company or service. Some links on these pages may be paid advertising or paid affiliate programs.

  1. This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
    By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.
    Dismiss Notice