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Cellphones Technology

How the Smartphone Killed the Three-day Weekend 232

An anonymous reader writes "As we in the U.S. settle in for Memorial Day weekend, this article points out how our cultural addiction to technology is making it less of a vacation than it used to be. 'The average smartphone user checks his or her device 150 times per day, or about once every six minutes. Meanwhile, government data from 2011 says 35 percent of us work on weekends, and those who do average five hours of labor, often without compensation — or even a thank you. The other 65 percent were probably too busy to answer surveyors' questions.' Even for those of us who don't have any work to do over the weekend, we'll probably end up reading all of our work-related emails as they roll in, and take time out of our day to think about what's going on — to the detriment of our weekend activities: 'A study at the University of California, San Francisco, found that new experiences fail to become long-term memories unless brains have downtime for review.' I imagine it's even worse for your average Slashdotter, who's likely plugged in to more technology at home and at work. How can we make our employers understand that downtime needs to remain downtime? 'It took labor unions 100 years to fight for nights and weekends off, some say, while smartphones took them away in about three years.'"
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How the Smartphone Killed the Three-day Weekend

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  • Crap. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday May 25, 2013 @01:49PM (#43822447)

    What took away the three day weekends is having unreasonable deadlines... and wanting to keep a job.

    Has nothing to do with a smartphone.

  • by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Saturday May 25, 2013 @01:57PM (#43822515) Homepage Journal
    I've BEEN enjoying the outside.

    I dunno what the deal is with people and this crap.

    You do it to yourself.

    Yes, I have a cell phone, but when I'm off work and not scheduled to work again for awhile, I do NOT answer any calls that I do not recognize for one thing. And those I do recognize, if it is anything but personal related, it goes straight to voice mail. I will check that at my leisure.

    I don't do work on MY time. The only reason I do work in the first place, is to earn enough money to live the lifestyle I want, and I do that on my free time. It wouldn't make sense to work all days....or I'd not be able to enjoy my 'toys' and other things money enables me to get.

    If you answer the phone for work or are a slave to work...then it is YOUR fault.

    You *do* know that most modern phones have voicemail don't you? USE IT.

  • by mlw4428 ( 1029576 ) on Saturday May 25, 2013 @02:00PM (#43822539)
    Bullshit. Flies don't land in my food, there are no wasps, and even when it's snowing it's still a comfortable temperature. Outside has all the bad.
  • by rmstar ( 114746 ) on Saturday May 25, 2013 @02:04PM (#43822567)

    I don't see there is anything you can do to get 'companies' to recognize the value of vacations...

    That's what unions are for.

    other than quitting and making them scramble to find someone else they can screw over.

    If you do it alone, nobody will notice. You have to unionize. Read some history.

    Sadly, the perception of vacations, much like IT and paid training in general, is that it is a drain on the company (doesn't produce IMMEDIATE revenue but DOES result in IMMEDIATE costs), and if it was possible to run the company without it, most companies would do so in a heart beat. Of course, those companies are often hell-holes to work in and fail on a regular basis.

    ...and that's why regulation is necessary. If you pass solid laws ensuring paid vacations and freedom from weekend work, companies will stop competing by squeezing the employee. Instead, they will compete on something else. Without unions, such laws will never happen, and everybody will continue to be screwed.

  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Saturday May 25, 2013 @02:10PM (#43822615)

    These people (including your CEO) are fundamentally incompetent. Vacations were not established to do the workers any good. They were established because people with adequate vacations make less mistakes, get sick less often, have better ideas and higher productivity, etc. and that pays off financially. Henry Ford, among others, realized this, and he was definitely not pro-worker in any sense. But he valued his own profits and sought to maximize them. Reasonable working hours and vacations are part of that maximization process. Your CEO is costing your company a lot of money. Any senior manager that does not know this is incompetent and should be removed as the amateur he is.

  • by Mozai ( 3547 ) on Saturday May 25, 2013 @03:34PM (#43823143) Homepage

    > If you answer the phone for work or are a slave to work...then it is YOUR fault.

    Sorta. I've had managers with these habits, and they expect me to keep up with them. When I don't, I'm "not a team player" and "the reason why this project failed" and "up for another performance review."

    Not answering the phone one weekend was the reason given as to why I was the only person on my team who did not get a cost-of-living pay raise. It was unreasonable, and petty, and it was the stated reason.

    So, when you say "YOU do this to YOURSELF," I gotta respond "sure, but the alternative is for someone else to punish me for not doing it."

  • So strange... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Genda ( 560240 ) <marietNO@SPAMgot.net> on Saturday May 25, 2013 @03:59PM (#43823277) Journal

    Being a little older its interesting to see the arc of human behavior. Younger people don't question the way it is, it's just the way it is and they rationalize why it's that way and they thing it's normal, even good. There was a time when people actually mattered as people and not interchangeable widgets in a service based industrial engine that consumes people in precisely the same way it consumes paper or water or raw materials.

    When people mattered, their human needs mattered. How the company was loyal to the employee just the way an employee was supposed to be loyal to a company. My Father worked for the same company for 30 years and got a generous retirement from them. Today the shrinking bone and the increasing number of ever hungrier dogs forces us to be happy to give away all our human time, with our families, with our interests and personal joys and passions, or we are forced to do work that leads to living a life that is hungry and wanting.

    The problem isn't and can't be cell phones. It is a ceaselessly ravenous industry that wants all of you, and when it is done will spit you out sans vital juice. The future bodes that human labor is coming to an end. But the industries are the only recipient of the changing world. We must begin to look at how we will deal with a human population that no longer can compete in the market place with robot labor Or society itself will unravel.

  • by Intrepid imaginaut ( 1970940 ) on Saturday May 25, 2013 @04:08PM (#43823321)

    Find a new job. Or move somewhere that legally protects people from bullying pencil necks.

  • by Gr8Apes ( 679165 ) on Saturday May 25, 2013 @05:23PM (#43823675)

    You can retrain your boss. It starts with turning off all notifications on all electronic communication means - IM, Email, Texts, etc. If they don't notify you, they don't interrupt your day. These actions change your day from being interrupt driven to actually being productive. I check email 3-4 times a day during working hours, or after every meeting, since I'm already interrupted. Yes, occasionally I'm late to the meeting that was scheduled 23 min ago, so what? If it wasn't important enough to tell you about, it's not that important. This also trains people to stop reacting to everything and to think their personal small emergency deserves immediate attention from everyone.

    This approach serves me well, and makes my work day manageable. It also has set expectations of "work" time and "timely" responses. Email is not instant. Neither is Text nor IM. Even phone calls aren't always immediate. It's a good lesson to relearn.

  • Re:Crap. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Stormthirst ( 66538 ) on Saturday May 25, 2013 @06:20PM (#43823949)

    <sarcasm>
    But that's socialism. Don't fall into the trap America!
    <sarcasm/>

  • Re:Ah well, no... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Chris Mattern ( 191822 ) on Saturday May 25, 2013 @06:25PM (#43823979)

    Why not just go the whole hog and eliminate that nasty pay all together? That way they company can be super competitive.

    Why do you think they invented unpaid internships?

  • by Darinbob ( 1142669 ) on Saturday May 25, 2013 @09:24PM (#43824827)

    It's insightful. The slavery here is voluntary.

  • Re:Unions (Score:5, Insightful)

    by JDG1980 ( 2438906 ) on Saturday May 25, 2013 @10:51PM (#43825135)

    Yeah unions are great. That steel industry sure is kicking ass and the cost/quality of American cars can't be beat!

    The Germans [forbes.com] and Japanese [wsj.com] don't seem to have any trouble building competitive cars with union labor. So either American unions are considerably worse than their counterparts in other countries, or the problem lies somewhere else. The Big Three haven't exactly had brilliant management. In fact, their management has traditionally been crappy and shortsighted.

    German workers get paid much more than American workers and even have representation on corporate boards. Yet manufacturing in Germany is thriving and the quality of their goods is among the best in the world.

He has not acquired a fortune; the fortune has acquired him. -- Bion

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