Thursday, May 16, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Why Steve Jobs Didn't Let His Kids Use iPads And Other Digital Dangers

IANS, 16 May, 2017 01:24 PM
    Title: Irresistible: Why We Cant Stop Checking, Scrolling, Clicking and Watching
     
    Author: Adam Alter
     
    Publisher: Bodley Head/Penguin Random House
     
    Pages: 355
     
    Price: Rs 699
     
    Human reactions can be inconsistent. There was a time, if you were found reading a book in company, you could be shouted at by your parents or even have it snatched and flung away, but now if you are eagerly checking your smartphone, no one is likely to say anything -- for they might be doing the same too.
     
    Is this a triumph of technology or a worrying social trend?
     
    The latter, contends academician Adam Alter in this work, which he begins by telling us how Steve Jobs, who extolled the benefits of the iPad for an hour-and-a-half after unveiling it in April 2010, would not let his children use them.
     
    The nearly obsessive use of smartphones and other devices for social media and other online pursuits, argues Alter, is among manifestations of "behavioural addiction", that is affecting quality of life, imagination, social interactions and productivity too.
     
    "...the environment and circumstances of the digital age are far more conducive to addiction than anything humans have experienced in our history. In the 1960s, we swam through waters with only a few hooks: cigarettes, alcohol, and drugs that were expensive and generally inaccessible. In the 2010s, the same waters are littered with hooks.
     
    "There's the Facebook hook. The Instagram hook. The porn hook. The email hook. The online shopping hook. And so on. The list is long -- far longer than it's ever been in human history and we're only just learning the power of these hooks."
     
    An associate professor of marketing at New York University's Stern School of Business and holder of an affiliated post in the psychology department, Alter cites data from by developer of an app tracking time spent on smartphones to reveal that most users spend a quarter of their day's waking period on them.
     
     
    This is about 100 hours a month, or over an average lifetime, "a staggering eleven years".
     
    He goes on to cite some telling facts about the baneful affects of these technologies -- a survey which had 46 per cent of respondents saying they could not bear to live without their smartphones (many would be ready to be injured themselves then their device getting damaged), research by Microsoft Canada estimated the average human attention span had gone down to eight seconds in 2013 (as against nine seconds for a goldfish) against 12 in 2000 and even the these devices' backlight affect on our body rhythms.
     
    Alter also notes that researchers had to coin new word "nomophobia" to describe the fear of being without mobile phone contact, and that if the 280 million smartphone addicts (as of 2015) "banded together to form the 'United States of Nomophobia', it would be the fourth-most populous country in the world, after China, India and the US".
     
    But the author, whose first book "Drunk Tank Pink" dealt with the often surprising forces influencing our thinking, feelings and behaviour, does not here restrict himself to a mere compendium of worrisome statistics about digital addiction or some shocking examples of it, but also seeks to show how it is caused and plays out.
     
    Alter, who, at the outset, clarifies technology is not "morally good or bad" till the time it is "wielded by the corporations that fashion it for mass consumption" and apps and platforms "designed to addict" as well as confessing to falling prey to several online addictions he describes.
     
    Contending that this form addiction closely mirrors substance addiction insofar as human physiology and needs are concerned, he seeks to make his case with various psychological studies and tests.
     
    Alter then lists its six defining ingredients (goals, feedback, progress, escalation, cliffhanger and social interaction), and goes on to deal with each at length with a range of examples before coming to the key question -- is there is a way out, and if so, where?
     
     
    Conceding that we cannot abandon technology or stop going online sometime or the other, he offers a trio of innovative solutions, ranging from control to harnessing them for a better purpose.
     
    Brimming with wit and insight, this book is required reading for all, especially the section described in it -- provided they can abandon their digital preoccupations that long.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    They're Half The Couple They Used To Be: Couple To Wed After Losing Nearly 600 Pounds Together

    They're Half The Couple They Used To Be: Couple To Wed After Losing Nearly 600 Pounds Together
    Ronnie Brower began dieting and working out on his way to losing an astounding 458 pounds. His four-year fitness journey, chronicled on Facebook, earned him the admiration of a woman at his gym who similarly was trying to lose a lot of weight.

    They're Half The Couple They Used To Be: Couple To Wed After Losing Nearly 600 Pounds Together

    US Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal for thoughtful roll-out of H1-B visa changes

    US Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal for thoughtful roll-out of H1-B visa changes
    A US Congresswoman of Indian origin has cautioned the Donald Trump administration against hasty changes in the H1-B visa regime, saying this should be done via the legislative route rather than through a presidential executive order.

    US Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal for thoughtful roll-out of H1-B visa changes

    Here's How TV Limits Women's Sexual Experience

    Here's How TV Limits Women's Sexual Experience
    The way women are often portrayed on television helps accentuate the traditional roles at the expense of their sexual satisfaction, says a study.

    Here's How TV Limits Women's Sexual Experience

    Watch: Indian-American Comedian Hasan Minhaj Vows To Fight For 'Immigrant Narrative'

    Watch: Indian-American Comedian Hasan Minhaj Vows To Fight For 'Immigrant Narrative'
    He became the first Indian-American to host the White House Correspondents' Dinner this year.

    Watch: Indian-American Comedian Hasan Minhaj Vows To Fight For 'Immigrant Narrative'

    Unapologetic Indian Restaurant In South Africa Charges Upto Rs. 190 And It Is Not For Their Food

    Unapologetic Indian Restaurant In South Africa Charges Upto Rs. 190 And It Is Not For Their Food
    "Service charge of 20 rand (95 rupees)per person payable at the counter. This is not a public toilet." reads a board outside Jolly Grubber.

    Unapologetic Indian Restaurant In South Africa Charges Upto Rs. 190 And It Is Not For Their Food

    WATCH: French Circus Lion Locks It's Jaws Around Keeper's Throat In Front Of Terrified Children

    WATCH: French Circus Lion Locks It's Jaws Around Keeper's Throat In Front Of Terrified Children
    Circus performer mauled by lion during a show in France was saved when his WIFE sprayed the animal with a fire extinguisher, it is revealed, as he pleads for the animal not to be killed

    WATCH: French Circus Lion Locks It's Jaws Around Keeper's Throat In Front Of Terrified Children