If you're constantly stimulated by being called away to the buzzing and the excitement of what's on your phone, solitude seems kind of scary.
I'd like to pretend to be all Olympian and above it, as if this is a phenomenon I'm observing from a great height, nothing to do with my own behavior at all - but the fact is I'm absolutely one of those people in the cafe staring at my phone.
I like having the digital camera on my smart phone, but I also like having a dedicated camera for when I want to take real pictures.
Anyone with a smart phone is a potential eyewitness cameraman capturing and transmitting stories at speeds that turn Reuter photos and traditional reporting into, well... yesterday's news.
I own a Canon 20D, though I don't remember the last time I used it. Ever since the iPhone 4, I've been completely absorbed in taking photos from my mobile phone.
My first phone was two tin cans tied together with string, and it worked pretty good.
If you use a cell phone - as I do - your wireless carrier likely has records about your physical movements going back months, if not years.
Follow up the interview with a phone call. If Carrot Top can figure out how to use a phone, so can you.
It's getting harder and harder to differentiate between schizophrenics and people talking on a cell phone. It still brings me up short to walk by somebody who appears to be talking to themselves.
I like to talk on the cell when I do interviews. That way, I double my chances of getting brain cancer: from the cell phone, and from the questions.
I'm going to put on my gravestone, 'He never owned a cell phone.'
I have one computer that my wife gave me. All I know how to do, and I do it every day, is play Spider Solitaire. And I don't have a cell phone.
I only used a cell phone for the first time after I was released. I had difficulty coping with it because it seemed so small and insubstantial.
The last watch I wore felt like a handcuff. When I need to know the time, I check my cell phone.
My cell phone is my best friend. It's my lifeline to the outside world.
I like 1977 because it is more primitive. If it were modern day, like one Universal guy was like wouldn't they just use their cell phone? I guess he did not read that it was 1977 in the script.
The difference between talking on your cell phone while driving and speaking with a passenger is huge. The person on the other end of the cell phone is chattering away, oblivious.
What did people do prior to cell phones? Read a book? If I'm stuck in a car, and I don't have my phone, I'm like, 'What am I doing?' Car rides used to be one of my favorite things.
My phone has been ringing off the hook. I have like 17 cell phones and pagers.
I never really started to carry a cellular phone until it was small enough so I could put it on my belt and not even feel it was there.