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View Full Version : Poll finds Cell Phones Irritating, Invaluable



johnnymk
04-03-2006, 03:37 AM
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Even cell phone users get irritated at others who yak on their portables about their personal business in public. An AP-AOL-Pew poll found the offended don't think they are among the callers who get on other people's nerves.

Most cell users find their phones very useful, with half keeping them on all the time.

But almost nine in 10 say they encounter others using those phones in an annoying way. Only 8 percent of cell users acknowledge their own use of cell phones is sometimes rude.

"People tend to talk louder on the phone. That's quite irritating," said Pamela Sorenson, a 57-year-old resident of Bellingham, Wash. "I often hear young people, mostly college age, talking about dating and personal things I don't want to know about."

More than two-thirds of cell phone users say it would be hard to give up their portable, according to the poll, one of the most extensive news surveys of cell phone users yet.

About a fourth of the cell phone users polled, 26 percent, said they can't imagine life without their cell phone. Three-fourths of cell users say they have used it in an emergency.

"My cell phone is pretty much a necessity - sometimes a pain but a necessity," said Sandra Moore of Colorado Springs, Colo. "I have children and the cell phone gives me the freedom to be places I need to be. It's easier to communicate with people, you can reach them almost any time.

"But that means people can reach me anytime," she grumbled. "Sometimes, I just turn the ringer off."

Almost one-fourth of those polled say too many people try to get in touch with them on their cell phones - just one of many headaches balanced against the devices' advantages.

The poll also found:

-More than a fourth, 28 percent, said they sometimes don't drive as safely as they should because they are using a cell phone.

-More than a third, 36 percent, said they are sometimes shocked at the size of their service bill.

The bulk of cell users use it traditionally - as a portable phone. But cell phones increasingly include built-in cameras, MP3 players, games and computers with the Internet and e-mail.

Only one-third of U.S. cell phone owners use text messages - a practice immensely popular in Europe and Asia. Two-thirds of cell phone owners between ages 18 and 29 send text messages - one of many areas where young adults have a more versatile approach to the devices.

More than half, 55 percent, of young adults take still pictures with their phones; 47 percent play games and 28 percent use the Internet, according to the poll of more than 1,200 cell phone users.

The AP-AOL-Pew poll of 1,503 adults included 1,286 cell phone users and was conducted March 8-26. It has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points. About half of the interviews, 752, were conducted by dialing landlines and 751 were conducted by dialing cell phones.

MJordanash
04-03-2006, 04:58 AM
I usually text message, keeps things short, and keeps it quiet all at the same time.

Itsme
04-03-2006, 05:46 AM
It's only going to get worse. A bunch of new services via cell phone are coming very soon....resulting in even more people using cell phones. New things coming:

1. Pay for parking, vening machine items, etc. via cell phone.

2. Credit card purchases in stores will soon have an option of using your cell phone instead.

3. Etc.

nickel
04-03-2006, 05:50 AM
cellphones are very useful. i feel safer having mine in my vehicle with me, but there is nothing worse than being in the grocery store or some place within earshot and hearing someone say to another person on their cellphone: "yeh, i'm in the grocery store. yeh, i'm getting groceries. what do you think i should buy? yeh, i'm almost ready to check out. so where are you? etc. etc. etc."

:gle:

MJordanash
04-03-2006, 05:52 AM
cellphones are very useful. i feel safer having mine in my vehicle with me, but there is nothing worse than being in the grocery store or some place within earshot and hearing someone say to another person on their cellphone: "yeh, i'm in the grocery store. yeh, i'm getting groceries. what do you think i should buy? yeh, i'm almost ready to check out. so where are you? etc. etc. etc."

:gle:

I love listening to other people's conversations. Especially the play-by-play if they should by the low fat dressing or the regular....ha
annoying

mcs328
04-03-2006, 06:39 AM
Yeah I don't like it when people carry on a conversation that can wait until later. I mean there are conversations that I think are necessary if something needs to get done. Like hey we're going to see a movie...which one do you want? When it gets off to a tangent, then it's like ok...hang up the cell phone...have the conversation f2f.

johnnymk
04-03-2006, 07:53 AM
On my pool team which I joined last September, everyone has cell phones. I just can't believe the CPA (Cell Phone Addiction) that exists among younger people today, and many older people.

I really don't understand the need to be connected 24/7.

Merlin
04-03-2006, 08:32 AM
Remember the old 80-20 rule. It only takes a small percentage of folks being annoying on a phone to set the stereotype.

clutchy
04-03-2006, 09:28 AM
we have this ghetto(tries to be) cell service out here called boost mobile. Their signature phrase is "where you at" I've started hearing that alot now and it's pissing me off. bunch of lame no originality posers....

zenbooty
04-03-2006, 10:34 AM
we have this ghetto(tries to be) cell service out here called boost mobile. Their signature phrase is "where you at" I've started hearing that alot now and it's pissing me off. bunch of lame no originality posers...."Where you at?" is a common colloquialism down South. People on the West Bank of New Orleans even got the nickname, "Y'ats" because of the accented way they speak the phrase. Oh, and you'll be glad to know that on the West Bank pretty much everybody was white and middle class.

Markel
04-03-2006, 10:39 AM
It took a poll for them to find out that cell phones can be irritating? :nuts:

Paniolo
04-03-2006, 10:53 AM
I am especially bothered by the cellphone users that feel the need to chat (non-emergencies excepted), when I'm out & about trying to enjoy outdoor leisure activites/hobbies.....eg., walking, jogging, biking, riding, etc.,etc.
Movies/theatres are another annoyance, where they open/ close their lighted phones to check for messages/time.

clutchy
04-03-2006, 03:43 PM
"Where you at?" is a common colloquialism down South. People on the West Bank of New Orleans even got the nickname, "Y'ats" because of the accented way they speak the phrase. Oh, and you'll be glad to know that on the West Bank pretty much everybody was white and middle class.


thanks Zen, I wouldn't have thought you'd be down with the southern lingo... i've lived in the south, unfortunately this is urban california and these "thugs" are just immitating a TV commercial they've seen replayed multiple times...

MJordanash
04-04-2006, 05:48 AM
I am especially bothered by the cellphone users that feel the need to chat (non-emergencies excepted), when I'm out & about trying to enjoy outdoor leisure activites/hobbies.....eg., walking, jogging, biking, riding, etc.,etc.
Movies/theatres are another annoyance, where they open/ close their lighted phones to check for messages/time.
I think thats one of the worst, when in a movie and someone not only keeps the ringer up loud, but then answers and talks over the movie.

Houdini
04-04-2006, 08:48 AM
Zen's right, for the most part. It's not really a Southern colloquialism, just a New Orleans one. Heck, the New Orleans accent sounds more like Brooklyn than the rest of the South. But yeah, yats and chalmatians are prevalent here.

On topic, I don't like people gabbing on their cell phone, especially at louder than normal voices, in publc. If I have to take a call, say, in a store, or at work, I move away from people and talk very quietly. If I'm at a movie or church or am particularly busy at work, I just put it on vibrate and return the call later.

I just remember that 5-10 years ago, most people didn't have cell phones, and the world ran just fine. So if I have to wait a couple of hours to return a call, so be it. Plus, voicemail lets you know how important the call was anyway...

clutchy
04-04-2006, 10:00 AM
Ok, i've thought about this for awhile, and i think i've figured out why people talk so loud on cellphones.

there isn't a repeater on the cell. When you talk on a normal phone your voice gets bounced back at you so you can tell how loud you're talking. On a cell that function isn't present so you don't have any way of measuring your voice expecially if your doing some sort of activity or you are in a noisy location.

annoying yes, but there is a reason for it...