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Have problems disconnecting? Mail your mobile phone away for a few days

Categories: Research
By: , IntoMobile
Monday, March 22nd, 2010 at 3:26 AM

Johanna Nieminen, a student at the Aalto University School of Art and Design in Finland, created an exhibit titled “Disconnected Holidays” for her MA Industrial and Strategic Design Program. The concept is devastatingly simple. Say you’re going to go on a holiday, and you don’t want to be plagued by the constant beeping and buzzing of your mobile phone. You just load disconnectedholidays.com (not a working URL) into your browser and enter in your home address, they send you a box, you put your mobile phone inside, mail it off, and then it’ll be mailed back to you after a few days.

Johanna was inspired by the “emptiness” of the northern region of Finland known as Lapland, and its “isolating character”, when coming up with her project. She says:

Today’s world demands its citizens to play an active role in different kinds of communities, react and follow up on everything that happens in our surroundings. We are reachable by diverse means of communication 24/7. E-mails are read several times a day, the mobile phone is always with us. At the same time, we are connected to Facebook or other social networks.

When we get home from work, we switch on television, computer and radio. We are drowning in the social noise surrounding us. Even during the holidays many people report having problems with disconnecting from work—because they of course took with them the mobile phone and laptop.

For many of you ADD afflicted, mobile phone addicted, “need to be in the loop” type of people, this concept of wanting to be disconnected seems straight up barbaric, but for Finland, one of the first countries in the world to have mobile phones, this shows a future all advanced countries are heading towards.

When Rudy De Waele from M-Trends asked me to give him 5 trends that we’re going to see during the next decade for his “Mobile Trends 2020” project, one of my predictions was:

Rich nations will start seeing the number of hours people spend in front of screens decline for the first time and the masses will limit or stop use a certain technology or service to reconnect with the joys of overcoming an obstacle.

It’s counterintuitive to what everyone is saying right now, that we’re all spending more and more and more time online, and the number of hours we spend in front of a screen will only go up, but someone needs to stand on the opposing side of this march toward connected chaos. Whether it’s the “Web 2.0 Suicide Machine“, or The New York Times article on people who elect to operate in today’s world without a mobile phone, there is a growing trend that people have had enough with being connected and available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

To quote Karl Lagerfeld, German fashion designer, who recently gave an interview to Vice:

I’m not a chambermaid whom you can ring at every moment. Today, you know, most people act like they work at a switchboard in a hotel.

Personally, if it wasn’t for IntoMobile.com, I’d probably throw my laptop and mobile phone into the nearest river.

[Via: Textually]

About The Author

Stefan Constantinescu

Stefan Constantinescu (@WhatTheBit on Twitter) has loved technology since as far back as he can remember. It started with computers, but in the past few years his passion has turned to mobile devices. As a mobile phone enthusiast who lives and breathes devices that connect to the internet, he knows he is not alone with this radical fascination of all things wireless. He is strongly opinionated and enjoys a good debate so leave comments in his posts and he’ll get back to you! Stefan began blogging as a hobby in the fall of 2006 and joined IntoMobile in the summer of 2007. Later he got a job at Nokia in March 2008, but as of June 2009 he has rejoined the IntoMobile team. He is currently based out of Helsinki, Finland.