Last weekend, I was at a USS swim meet and heard parents and coaches complaining about the "distraction" of many swimmers now. They blame this distraction (in addition to the rise of the boy/girl crazy period) on the advent of cell phones and IM-ing, etc. Apparently, at meets, and I've seen it, the kids spent scads of time on their cells phones, phoning friends, phoning kids across the pool, texting constantly (even to kids 5 feet away). Then they go home and IM for hours, checking and gossiping over the instant meet results and who beat who. Now, all the swimmers seem to know each other because, even if they're not on the same team or live in different states, they now can communicate easily via IM-ing and texting. I heard one coach say he's not sure how to get his swim kids to focus in this new techo-age. Obviously, some kids are focused like lasers, but I see an abundance of chatting and cell phone use too. Would kids do better without cell phones at meets? And is technology distracting them? Some seem to be swimming blazingly fast, but are others not swimming up to their potential because of this?
The news anchors on our local station were commenting today about rock concerts...then and now.
Back then the audience held up lighters and candles. These days they all wave cell phones.
Things certainly have changed.
Yes, we can blame two things for this:
Motorolla ran a commercial a years ago where their phones lit up the SD Charger's stadium during a power outage.
Some of these indoor venues, at least where I am, do not permit smoking in their arenas. No smoking = no lighter brought to concert.
For U2's vertigo tour, Bono had everyone pull out their cell phone at one point, before he got us all to text something to join the One campaign. The arena looked awesome with all those lights.
The news anchors on our local station were commenting today about rock concerts...then and now.
Back then the audience held up lighters and candles. These days they all wave cell phones.
Things certainly have changed.
Yes, we can blame two things for this:
Motorolla ran a commercial a years ago where their phones lit up the SD Charger's stadium during a power outage.
Some of these indoor venues, at least where I am, do not permit smoking in their arenas. No smoking = no lighter brought to concert.
For U2's vertigo tour, Bono had everyone pull out their cell phone at one point, before he got us all to text something to join the One campaign. The arena looked awesome with all those lights.