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lifeline
17-02-14, 12:57
http://sg.news.yahoo.com/ve-seen-future-singapore-basically-023047620.html



I’ve seen the future in Singapore, and I have basically stopped using the social media
Vulcan PostBy Guest Post | Vulcan Post – 3 hours ago



Last fall, after years of raids on social networks, I closed my social accounts. I logged out of Facebook, I removed the Twitter app from my smartphone. I had at an average of 5 tweets per day for about 4 years. Luckily I suddenly stopped, and I’m happy with what I have done.

Reason number one for which I have shut down all my social accounts: social network had consumed my life.
I followed the boom of smartphones and without realizing it, I shared everything on the various social networks I am on.
Too much.
And when you share everything at some point there will be a semi-stranger who writes:
“Hey, I wrote you on Facebook , I saw that you’re always online. Why after three days you have not answered me yet?”
Probably the straw that broke the camel’s back. I realized that I had done something wrong when using these social networks. I was drunk and addicted to sharing, with the potential of getting likes, tweets and notifications on my profiles. I was totally addicted .
Go offline and you’ll be happy, I said to myself. And so I did.
Probably if I had not been to Singapore, the message from the stranger would have slipped away. I would be limited to a wink and diplomatically would have shared another tweet or another photo. Useless, but always good to pull in some likes in the social network world.

Reason number two. Singapore A city of robots. I had heard about the city: clean, safe, perfect, futuristic and awesome. Ok. Let’s put aside the city, the skyscrapers and the shopping malls . Let’s talk about the people.
Let’s talk about the people of Singapore and about smartphones. There is not much difference. In Singapore I have seen the future and I shuddered.
Just take a ride on the public metro and you will understand how smartphones have ruined people. I’ve seen people walk down the street holding a tablet with two hands, without looking where he walked; what was most important to him was not to miss the latest episode of The Voice. It did not matter if you have to crashed into someone else, the important thing was to never remove the gaze from your rectangular friend, preferably a 10 inches digital tablet.
I’ve seen people scroll pages of the smartphone for endless minutes, without doing anything, or without launching any applications.
Simply go back and forth with your thumb and staring on the screen of the phone. Back and forth, without doing anything.
I’ve seen people playing Candy Crush in every corner of the city, at any given time: in the queue lines at McDonald’s, on escalators, walking in the subway. Saying “ Hi” to his friend, looking down, three bubbles exploded, pull out your eyes and say “ How are you”, look down and explode yet another three more bubbles.
In Singapore you do not do anything without interacting with your smartphone. I saw scenes on trains where there were thirty people and the only ones who were not using a smartphone were me and my girlfriend. Everyone else was looking down at the smartphone, in deafening silence. The people in Singapore do not use the phone to make phone calls: I have not seen anyone calling. I’ve only seen people using their phones to log onto their Facebook or play some stupid games.

Five days in Singapore and we only saw one person reading a real book. I still have doubts whether that it was an hallucination.
“I may be wrong, but the Italian trains are much better where people scream at the phone speaking with their mum about the next delicious pasta. At least we communicate, we are real, we interact.”
So “thank you Singapore” for giving me the knowledge that smartphones and tablets are ruining us, we do not talk anymore.
I have seen the future and I know now that life is better in the past.
Go offline.

The article is written by Giorgio Fochesato, and first appeared on Medium.

lifeline
17-02-14, 12:58
oops ! and now I too have shared ! :doh:

Arcachon
17-02-14, 13:59
I have Stop using Fire because,

1. Fire burn my hand.
2. It can burn a house down in second.
3. It make the food taste bad.
4. It make the place feel hot.......

princess_morbucks
17-02-14, 14:25
Singaporeans are shy mah.......so we communicate better via smart phones.
It is better too...cos less things said on impulse if you communicate via smart phone apps.

Read real book?
I prefer to read e book- less bulky.

Social media has connected us globally and general knowledge can be improved via social media news platform.

It is the communication of the next generation.
Resist it and you will be unable to communicate well with the next generation.

Resistance is futile ;):D!

Astronotus oscellatus
17-02-14, 14:34
I am FB addict...haha...

lifeline
17-02-14, 14:38
I have Stop using Fire because,

1. Fire burn my hand.
2. It can burn a house down in second.
3. It make the food taste bad.
4. It make the place feel hot.......


hahaha! lol! :D
balanced approach is the best !
though seriously we do tend to go overbroad with our attachment to (or dependence on) social media. so much so that it's not uncommon to see colleagues lunching together at same table glued to their mobiles with reduced interaction.

princess_morbucks
17-02-14, 14:38
I am FB addict...haha...

You should try twitter...it is even more addictive.

All the news feeds..it is like watching the whole world unfolding before you- better than any soap opera.

princess_morbucks
17-02-14, 14:40
hahaha! lol! :D
balanced approach is the best !
though seriously we do tend to go overbroad with our attachment to (or dependence on) social media. so much so that it's not uncommon to see colleagues lunching together at same table glued to their mobiles with reduced interaction.

Actually it is not reduced interaction...it is multitasking!

lifeline
17-02-14, 14:45
Singaporeans are shy mah.......so we communicate better via smart phones.

sometimes i wonder whether our online personality is in fact the dominant one! particularly with the highly intense megabytes exchanges sometimes seen in this forum, i wonder how everyone actually is in real life! i will not be too surprised that we are actually very nice, pleasant and civil offline. :)

lifeline
17-02-14, 14:48
Actually it is not reduced interaction...it is multitasking!

you are right! that chap missed out on our ability to multitask. opening pages on browser as well as running several applications / sms chats ... but never chatting to the `augmented reality applicant' seated next to one another! :doh:

onglai
17-02-14, 16:52
singapore got future or not still dunno yet... but this guy confirm no future la...
go live in a mountain ba... toot.

princess_morbucks
19-02-14, 16:55
Disconnect – The future of Singapore from a Singaporean’s point of view

http://sg.news.yahoo.com/disconnect-future-singapore-singaporean-point-043038085.html?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter