The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

It’s time to put the phone down and savour the moment

smartphone­s: Great inventions but sometimes just keep them out of sight

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Technology can be a wonderful thing, not least the ever-changing smartphone market.

There are journalist­s of a certain vintage in this very office who can remember the days when photograph­s had to be sent to HQ by train from Kirkcaldy, and sending copy by phone was a logistical nightmare.

One of my colleagues was furnished on her first day with a notebook, pen, a 10p piece for the payphone and a laminated bit of paper which said “the phone is your best friend”.

Thankfully those days are gone, and the advent of mobile phones means pictures and words can be sent anywhere in seconds at the touch of a few buttons.

That mobile way of working has certainly changed our jobs, arguably for the better, but I wonder at which point people’s reliance on these handheld devices started getting in the way of life?

This struck me again the other day when a mate of mine went to a concert and spent most of the time filming, rather than actually enjoying it.

It was a real bugbear for me in particular in the latter years at T in the Park, when an act like Calvin Harris’ light and laser show should be enough of a spectacle without the need for thousands of small blue mobile phone camera lights being held aloft illuminati­ng the audience.

I’ve noticed it’s getting worse and it’s probably all social media’s fault.

The aim of folk using mobile phones at gigs and concerts is not even primarily about having a memento of said event.

Thanks to Twitter and Facebook, it’s become more an exercise in vanity.

It screams: “Look at me, look where I am!” And there always seems to be a race to be first to fire the videos online.

Whatever happened to just living in the moment?

There are times when the mass emergence of phones from pockets could just about be justified. For instance, last week’s unceremoni­al hauling of a doctor off a United Airlines flight in Chicago would probably fall into that bracket.

As for the nine out of 10 other occasions though ... put down the phone for once and experience what’s unfolding first hand rather than experienci­ng life through a lens.

Get in touch with your local office at Kirkcaldy or send a letter to The Courier at letters@thecourier.co.uk

 ??  ?? Surely concert-goers should be enjoying the gig rather than filming it.
Surely concert-goers should be enjoying the gig rather than filming it.
 ??  ?? FiFe oFFice chieF reporter twitter: @c-csmith
FiFe oFFice chieF reporter twitter: @c-csmith

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