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Why Mobile Phones Are Annoying

griffinn writes "Jakob Neilsen recently conducted a study comparing the perceived annoyance level of two commuters having a face-to-face conversation and one commuter talking on the mobile phone. Interestingly enough, subjects were also asked whether the ring tone is annoying, and people didn't find the ring to be particularly bad."

9 of 519 comments (clear)

  1. Ringtones by Orgazmus · · Score: 4, Funny

    The ringtones arent the bad part.
    The bad part is the loud speakers that really dont need a phone in the first place.

    --
    The system had the verbosity of HTML combined with all the readability of compiled assembly viewed as bitmap images
  2. So that explains it by violet16 · · Score: 5, Funny
    Furthermore, the actors conducted half of the conversations at a normal loudness level, whereas the other half were exaggeratedly loud (as measured on a volume meter)

    I think these guys have been conducting this experiment on the train I catch to work for the last two years.

  3. Re:Ringtones? by Eric+Savage · · Score: 5, Funny

    At least you can make fun of them for paying $0.99 for a 50 Cent ringtone.

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    This is not the greatest sig in the world, this is just a tribute.
  4. It's the people on the phones by tbone1 · · Score: 4, Funny
    I don't know how many times a wanker with one of those walkie-talkie phones has ruined a meal for me. I have been tempted to stand behind the person making comments as if he/she is in a massage parlor, not at lunch, as a way of revenge. I haven't done it, though.

    Yet.

    However, one time I was in a bathroom and the guy in the next stall took a call on his cell phone. I immediately made all sorts of grunting, straining, and moaning noises as if I were trying to pass a moose. He hung up after twenty seconds, and before he could say anything to me, I thanked him and returned to the quiet matter at hand.

    --

    The Independent: Reverend Spooner Arrested in Friar Tuck Incident - ISIHAC, Historical Headlines
  5. Re:Ringtones? by richie2000 · · Score: 4, Funny
    If someone can think of another way to allow for seemingly endless variety in ringtones, I'd take that option any day.

    Text-To-Speech: "Mr. ComboyNeal, telephone for you, Sir" in a husky female voice. Many phones already have loudspeaker abilities and advanced ring tone generation. Use them for good instead of evil.

    --
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  6. As Don Jolly would say by danormsby · · Score: 5, Funny
    [nokia tune=annoying] ring [/nokia]

    Hello. HELLO.

    I'm writing on slashdot.SLASHDOT

    Nah its rubbish

    --
    Omnis amans amens
  7. Apparently... yes! by FunkyRat · · Score: 5, Funny

    I occassionally do some work for a person who works as a producer in Los Angeles. So far, she has answered her cellphone at a museum, at a classical music concert, while in meetings and on a date. The last time I called her she mentioned after about three minutes that she was at a movie theater, watching a movie. I asked her why she even bothered to answer her mobile. I think she was actually dumbfounded that anyone would not answer their phone when it rang.

  8. I've got the perfect ring tone by Greyfox · · Score: 4, Funny
    It'd be a baby crying. It'd start out slow, and it'd get crankier and crankier the longer you ignored it. I can't think of a better way to clear out a meeting. Fire up the auto-dialer from your wi-fi PDA and let it go for a couple of minutes right in the middle of the CFO's presentation before saying "Oh, is that MINE?"

    That's why I'm barred from ever owning a cell phone.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  9. Re:Very interesting hypotehsis... by Alioth · · Score: 5, Funny

    Just once, I want to try this.

    Obtain an old 1960s rotary dial telephone, as found in all British households (since at the time, the phone company was the GPO and were the only people to be allowed to connect phones, so the range was extremely limited. It did include the Ericofon though).

    Inside the phone, insert the guts of a cheap GSM cell phone. Build some electronics to change the LD pulsing from the rotary dial into something suitable to cause the cellphone to dial. Maybe add an extra button as a 'Send' button for the cell phone. Have the loudspeaker of the phone which the ringtone normally plays through connected to a circuit that rings the phone bell.

    Catch the train.

    Receive phone call. "Rrrring rring". Pull out old phone from bag, place on table. Lift receiver.

    "HI I'M ON THE TRAIN!"

    Phone a friend with the rotary dial, too.

    Observe looks of fellow passengers.