Friday, June 20, 2008

addiction - it's not no longer just for deviants

here's a story about actual medical diagnosis for tech addiction. you may now commence your 12 steps (the first step is admitting you have a modem...)

http://www.webguild.org/2008/06/internet-addiction-deemed-clinical.php

Thursday, June 19, 2008

The Butterball Turkey Initiative

We are tech addicts. Email, phone calls, web sites. We sup digital stimulation like Wolf Blitzer does precint returns -- voraciously and often without seeming to actually breathe.

Yes, I know the upside. To stay in contact is essentially human. To keep abreast of information is critical for productivity. To obtain baseball scores during a dinner party or romantic evening with your wife is important for the sanctity of the marriage.

But is our compulsive use of our gadgets always so positive?

Two Harvard psychiatrists have coined a phrase for the lure of technology. They call it acquired attention defifict disorder. Their theory basically says that when we check our email, or answer a phone call, or open a new web page, we get a little burst of adrenaline, a "dopamine squirt."

Absent such input, we feel bored. So we crave more.Other psychologists describe the lure in emotional terms. Checking email frequently is a little bit like buying a lottery ticket. You know most of the time you won't get something that interesting. But every once in a while you do, so your checking habits get randomly reinforced. Plus, the shrinks say, no one wants to be the only person in the elevator or at the dinner table not checking a cell phone. It makes you look lonely, like the loser.

There are some astonishing stats about how often we check our devices, but I'll save those for a later post.

Mostly, I want to tell you about the Butterball Turkey Talker. I spoke to her last year while doing a radio interview about Hooked with WGN in Chicago. The host, Alex Goldfayn (his handle is the technology tailor) asked listeners to call in with their personal tales of compulsive technology use. A woman called up and told the story of how she was driving in her car over the Thanksgiving holiday. She grew bored, but didn't have anyone to call. So she called information and got the number for the Butterball Turkey Hotline. The operator answered. And the woman started talking about how her life was going. Never once asked how long you bake a turkey, and at what temperature.

What about you? Are you reading this while driving on the freeway? Are you twittering even now? Am I keeping you from checking a baseball score?

I'd like to hear your stories.

And over the next few months, presuming I haven't crashed into a retaining wall talking to the folks at Taco Bell headquarters, I'll post the stories, report some of the new info I'm learning about compulsive tech use, and we'll begin an interesting conversation. If I have crashed into a retaining wall, please tell the Taco Bell operator that I wanted to pass the time, and a burrito supreme.

Summer Byte-byte

Check out Slate's story today on the sun setting on summer as we spend our days indoors tanning by the light of the computer monitor:

http://www.slate.com/id/2193389/

tech addition stories - top these

A handful of tech addiction tales from FOH (Friends of Hooked)

#1
Matt, I read your email on my Treo last while night driving home from the golf course. Scrolling down through the message as I drove on the busy 19th Ave, I nearly ran into the back of an expensive Mercedes at a stoplight which I hadn't really noticed had turned red...I'll forgive you this time, but don't do that again! You almost caused my insurance rates to go through the roof....

#2
I saw some monks in the backblocks of Bhutan in the Eastern Himalayas who threw caution and buddhism to the wind in their fight...to get to the one and only working computer to check their emails! I also came close to elbowing one of those monks - out of the way to check my emails!)

#3
Funny, especially since our three kids and I have a game of keeping a tally in the car, "Who is on the phone more while driving, men or women".............the kids think it is about even in our little circle in Highlands Ranch ('burb south of Denver). I personally think the women far out number the men..........you can't drive two blocks without some woman yacking and not paying attention to the road. I, however, rarely talk and drive. But take away my email and I'd be in severe depression............

#4
Now that I've moved back home to DC from Seattle, I'm much closer to family. My Mom and one of my triplet sisters (and her family) live in Richmond, VA, a 95 mile straight-shot down I-95 from DC. I drive down fairly frequently, and depending on the time of day and level of traffic... it takes anywhere from 2-4 hours to make the trip. When I get in the car, it's MORE important to me that my bluetooth headset is charged, than to have my iPod ready to go... as I'm much more inclined to catch up with friends on the phone on the drive down than to listen to music! Only when my bluetooth headset finally runs out of juice (and I mutter obsenities that it has died!) do I finally plug in my iPod to listen to tunes! :)

tech titans tame email monster of own creation

story on the onslought of digital communications in saturday's new york times:


http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/14/technology/14email.html?em&ex=1213588800&en=55640a5b320f7f60&ei=5087%0A

tech addiction - Vegas style

interesting article from Forbes.com on cell phone addiction with one analyst comparing the lure of constant chatter to gambling.

http://www.forbes.com/technology/2008/06/15/cellphone-addict-iphone-tech-wireless08-cx_wt0616addict.html