Presentation1 film260

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MOBILITIES By: Katherine Purcell

Transcript of Presentation1 film260

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MOBILITIES By: Katherine Purcell

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THE TECHNOLOGY GENERATION ARE INVESTED IN A FULL

TIME COMMITMENT TO SMATPHONES.

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37% of teens in the U.S. have aSmartphone.

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Younger groups text the most. Teens 13-17 sent and received the most text

messages (an average of 3,417 each month).

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This young generation of "mobile surfers" grows and comes of

age .

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At the tender ages of two and three, 44 percent know how to play a computer

game vs. 43 percent that know how to ride a bike.

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A majority of youngsters claim losing their phone would be "disastrous to their

social lives.”

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Researchers have found that constantly checking for messages is an addiction

which like other drugs can ruin your personal relationships.

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Roughly 58 photographs are being uploaded each second TO INSTAGRAM.

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Instagram gains 1 new user every second.

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Snapchat’s website claims that more than 50 million snaps are sent every day.

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In the U.S., Snapchat was the second-most popular free photo and video app

for the iPhone in early February, just behind YouTube and ahead of Instagram.

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Facebook accounts for 23 percent of the time people spend on Smartphones.

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86% of the US population will own a smartphone by 2017, up from 66% in

2013

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Teens are just as likely to have a cell phone as they are to have a desktop or

laptop computer.

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Young adults spend up to seven hours a day interacting with communication

technology and their behavior can spill over into a problem.

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For some it can become a compulsion and others feel feelings of withdrawal

when they are not with their phone.

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A previous study showed that young people are now so addicted to their mobile

phones it feels like they have lost a limb when they are without them.

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Photo Credits: From FlickrPhoto 1: camknows

Photo 2: BGDL

Photo 3: NewComTech

Photo 4: Dreamcatcher

Photo 5: magnusfranklin

Photo 6: akiko@flickr

Photo 7: IntelFreePress

Photo 8: Telstra Corp

Photo 9: samsungtomorrow

Photo 10: b.byrdInstagram

Photo 11: kari-shma

Photo 12: faara786

Photo 13: USAbloggen

Photo 14: Thos003facebook

Photo 15: Lisa-Marie Kaspar

Photo 16: silvergarden

Photo 17: serena178flickr

Photo 18: tbone_sandwhich

Photo 19: paloetic

Photo 20: brianvan

Photo 21: Uniofmaryland

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Research Sources Slide 3: Teenagers &Smartphones: How They're Already Changing The World By: By Brian

Hall. ReadWriteWeb. April 2013

Slide 4: Teenagers &Smartphones: How They're Already Changing The World By: By Brian

Hall. ReadWriteWeb. April 2013

Slide 5: More youth use smartphones to log online: U.S. report: By: Martha Irvine. The

Associated Press. March 2013.

Slide 6: More youth use smartphones to log online: U.S. report: By: Martha Irvine. The

Associated Press. March 2013.

Slide 7: More youth use smartphones to log online: U.S. report: By: Martha Irvine. The

Associated Press. March 2013.

Slide 8: Mobile phone addiction ruining relationships: By: Richard Alleyne Telegraph.

November 2012.

Slide 9: Mobile phone addiction ruining relationships: By: Richard Alleyne Telegraph.

November 2012.

Slide 10: Instagram and the New Era of Paparazzi: By: Jenna Wortham. The New York Times.

March 2013.

Slide 11: Instagram and the New Era of Paparazzi: By: Jenna Wortham. The New York Times.

March 2013.

Slide 12: Snapchat and the Erasable Future of Social Media: By: Felix Gillette. Bloomberg

BusinessWeek. February 2013.

Slide 13: Snapchat and the Erasable Future of Social Media: By: Felix Gillette. Bloomberg

BusinessWeek. February 2013.

Slide 14: Mark Zuckerberg on Facebook Home, Money, and the Future of Communication: By:

Steven Levy. Wired. April 2013.

Slide 16: More youth use smartphones to log online: U.S. report: By: Martha Irvine. The

Associated Press. March 2013.

Slide 17: Teenagers &Smartphones: How They're Already Changing The World: By: Brian

Hall. ReadWriteWeb. April 2013

Slide 18: Teenagers &Smartphones: How They're Already Changing The World: By: Brian

Hall. ReadWriteWeb. April 2013

Slide 19: Mobile phone addiction ruining relationships: By: Richard Alleyne Telegraph.

November 2012.