If I were asked the question, "How long could you survive without your mobile phone?" My answer would probably be not too long! I was put to that test not too long ago and let me tell you it was tough!
We all know the dangers of distracted driving, but a majority of us still text and drive. According to a recent AT&T poll of over 2,000 respondents, 7-in-10 people admit to using their cell phones while driving. But it's not limited to texting; many of us are checking email, scrolling through Facebook, and even snapping selfies.
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Big test on the radio Friday! from lsu83
Robert lives alone and his family has been joking with him that they were going to get him a medic alert necklace in case something happens to him. He's not too thrilled about the idea. But I asked him: "who do I call if you don't show up for work one morning
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As you know from listening, everybody - especially Erin - made fun of me and my old phone. To be honest, I probably deserved it. I'd had it since 2008, it folded in two and the buttons were about the size of dinner plates. I told folks it was "the rotary phone of cell phones". Erin's best line: "When he wants to make a call he doesn't dial a number, he says, 'Sarah! Get me Mt. Pilot
Everyone makes fun of my cell phone. Even I make fun of my cell phone. I've had it almost five years. It unfolds...I mean, slides to open. And it's old. The joke at work is that it's the rotary phone of cell phones. Erin picked it up one day and said, 'Sarah, get me Mt. Pilot!'
You know that moment of panic when you can't find your cell phone. Well, the security firm Symantic found some alarming facts on what happens to a lost cell phone.