Techoslaves

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Nitin Jain

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Dec 20, 2011, 9:10:42 AM12/20/11
to IIT Roorkee Mechanical 2010 batch
Dear All,
Read this wonderful article on slavery....


Once, while I was riding on a crowded bus, the man sitting next to me threw his cell phone out the window. When his phone rang, instead of dutifully answering it, he casually tossed it away. I was stunned. He looked at me, shrugged and looked away. I had no idea if it was his, if it was stolen or if he even knew what a cell phone was. But in one seemingly careless motion, he managed to liberate himself from something that has completely consumed me.

When my cell phone rings, it's an incessant and incensed vibration that demands my immediate attention. I curse its calling, but am unable to refuse. Whether I'm in the middle of a conversation, in the shower or sound asleep, the ringing causes such panic and excitement that I feel forced to answer.

"The pressure to answer the pulse or ring in a flash has Technoslaves hopping to grab the message, scrambling away to find clearer signals and/or deal with the urgency of the moment as though it borders somewhere on the fringes between life and death," writes The Trends Journal editor Gerald Celente." ... And for what, to say hello, to bitch and moan or do business on the phone?"

Technology is supposed to free us from the shackles of work and give us more leisure time. But it has proven to do the exact opposite. A 2005 Leger Marketing survey for the technology newspaper Computing Canada found that the majority of people feel technology has meant more work and less time with the family. Whether it's cell phones, Blackberry's, video games or email, we have become a culture enslaved by our electronics.

As people fall further into their personal gadgets, scientists and psychologists are now beginning to classify technology dependency as a major health problem, putting it in the same categories as alcoholism, gambling and drug addiction. The stress it creates is causing arthritis, migraines and ulcers. These physical attachments are causing weight gain, back problems and bad skin. But most troubling, it is having a powerful impact on our personal development. It seems the more 'connected' we are, the more detached we become.

"Humans are being trapped in a high-tech cycle that is freezing their minds away from living in the moment, looking at life and taking in what's around them," writes Celente. "While technology has radically altered the externals of life, it has done nothing demonstrable to enhance the internals: moral, emotional, philosophical and spiritual values."

As I stare blankly into a computer screen for hours on end, sometimes I wonder if there's a secret message hidden in this technological maze. But the more I stare, the more I keep coming up with the same answer: I am trapped.


--
Untouchability is a sin. So stay in touch.

Nitin Jain


nishit goel

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Dec 23, 2011, 8:54:51 AM12/23/11
to iit-roorkee-mech...@googlegroups.com
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dOoBe AkAnSh...

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Dec 23, 2011, 7:32:13 PM12/23/11
to iit-roorkee-mech...@googlegroups.com
Due to this technoLogy ...we are abLe to b in touch with each
other...which incLudes very very Less time and 'financiaL'
management...so i think tech isnt that bad...is it? :P

PS: No offense ;-)

On 20/12/2011, Nitin Jain <gr8n...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Dear All,
> Read this wonderful article on slavery....
>
>
> Once, while I was riding on a crowded bus, the man sitting next to me threw
> his cell phone out the window. When his phone rang, instead of dutifully
> answering it, he casually tossed it away. I was stunned. He looked at me,
> shrugged and looked away. I had no idea if it was his, if it was stolen or
> if he even knew what a cell phone was. But in one seemingly careless
> motion, he managed to liberate himself from something that has completely
> consumed me.
>
> When my cell phone rings, it's an incessant and incensed vibration that
> demands my immediate attention. I curse its calling, but am unable to
> refuse. Whether I'm in the middle of a conversation, in the shower or sound
> asleep, the ringing causes such panic and excitement that I feel forced to
> answer.
>
> "The pressure to answer the pulse or ring in a flash has Technoslaves
> hopping to grab the message, scrambling away to find clearer signals and/or
> deal with the urgency of the moment as though it borders somewhere on the

> fringes between life and death," writes *The Trends Journal* editor Gerald


> Celente." ... And for what, to say hello, to bitch and moan or do business
> on the phone?"
>
> Technology is supposed to free us from the shackles of work and give us
> more leisure time. But it has proven to do the exact opposite. A 2005 Leger

> Marketing survey for the technology newspaper *Computing Canada* found that


> the majority of people feel technology has meant more work and less time
> with the family. Whether it's cell phones, Blackberry's, video games or
> email, we have become a culture enslaved by our electronics.
>
> As people fall further into their personal gadgets, scientists and
> psychologists are now beginning to classify technology dependency as a
> major health problem, putting it in the same categories as alcoholism,
> gambling and drug addiction. The stress it creates is causing arthritis,
> migraines and ulcers. These physical attachments are causing weight gain,
> back problems and bad skin. But most troubling, it is having a powerful
> impact on our personal development. It seems the more 'connected' we are,
> the more detached we become.
>
> "Humans are being trapped in a high-tech cycle that is freezing their minds
> away from living in the moment, looking at life and taking in what's around
> them," writes Celente. "While technology has radically altered the
> externals of life, it has done nothing demonstrable to enhance the
> internals: moral, emotional, philosophical and spiritual values."
>
> As I stare blankly into a computer screen for hours on end, sometimes I
> wonder if there's a secret message hidden in this technological maze. But
> the more I stare, the more I keep coming up with the same answer: I am
> trapped.
>
> --
> Untouchability is a sin. So stay in touch.
>
> Nitin Jain
>

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