Posted on 09/05/2015 9:39:57 PM PDT by Citizen Zed
Smartwatches are slowly starting to catch on, and they bring with them a new type of digital distraction that could further shrink attention spans and make for ruder masses.
My favorite thing about my smartwatch: I no longer need to take my phone out of my pocket 4,718 times a day to check my notifications 4,707 of which are completely useless and require no immediate action. Instead, I now quickly check them on my wrist. I can also pick and choose which apps I want to show up in my notifications, so I get only, say, 2,846 of them on my watch.
But my smartwatch brought out a nasty behavior in me I didn't even notice at first. Even now, when I'm perfectly aware of it, I still catch myself in the act. My watch made me a rude(r) bastard. I have a feeling I'm not alone. And I fear the problem will become an epidemic as smartwatches catch on with everyday Joes and Janes.
The smartwatch faux pas that will turn you into a rude bastard:
The faux pas of which I write relates to how, and when, you check notifications on your wrist. For example, if you're in a meeting and the boss is speaking, you probably wouldn't glance up at the clock to check the time while he or she stares you down well, not unless you're a rude bastard. Doing so would suggest that you're bored, or what the speaker says isn't worth your time or attention.
But guess what? Your smartphone is a tiny clock, and people who don't know that it's not a traditional Timex (or Rolex, if you're lucky) will simply think you're checking the time, instead of a notification. Of course, it's no less rude to check a notification during a meeting, a conversation or a dinner engagement than it is to repeatedly check the time, and as such you probably wouldn't keep glancing at your phone in these situations unless, of course you're a rude bastard.
The problem with smartwatches is that they buzz or ding, tap or bing, and they train you to quickly glance at your wrist whenever they do. Even if you're not aware of it. It's easy to forget the message you send to those around you when you constantly glance at your digital messages. Fact is, the vast majority of "normal people" (read: non-tech geeks) have never used a smartwatch, and they just think you're a rude bastard.
Do your part to combat smartwatch abuse, before it's too late:
Just 15 years ago, it was considered odd to constantly glare at a mobile phone while walking, eating, driving, talking, reading or otherwise communicating with another human being. Today, it's common, and we don't think twice when some rude bastard marches down a busy city sidewalk headed straight for us with his head down, face in phone.
This smartwatch phenomenon could raise the level of acceptable digital distraction to new heights and, frankly, that potential is frightening. So please, do your part. At the very least, familiarize yourself with the Do Not Disturb features on your phone and smartwatch, which you can use to quickly turn off notifications in appropriate situations.
Learn from my mistakes: Dont let your smartwatch turn you into a rude bastard.
I’m quite content with my old Casio ‘dumb’ watch that tells me the time when I look at it. that is all I require in a watch, and my old Casio does that quite well.
I often tell people, what did people do before cell phones? You waited and called people at normal times. I remember when an answering machine was a new-fangled thing many people did not have. People talk and text all the time, can’t make a toilet trip without their phones. I laugh at my husband who used to comment when I didn’t answer a text “what if I was in a ditch”. I would say, well, I hope you call 911 instead of me lol!
There is no time for careful thought or reflection anymore it seems.
Quite a few phone users are rude bastards already, no smartwatch needed.
Im waiting for smartwatch to start killing people,,Your driving your car playing with your watch and get killed or kill someone.They ban using cellphones while driving how will they ban the watch?
I couldn’t care less if they kill themselves, it’s when they try to kill me that I object.
Or, you know, you could have enough self-discipline to NOT look at it just because it buzzed. People do it with their phones and their bowels all the time. Let it sit until you have a proper moment to figure out what it is and take care of it.
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