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Polite Cell Phones

yEvb0 writes "Researchers at Motorola and Carnegie Mellon University are developing more polite cell phones. Strategies include programming the ringer to turn on and off according to the time of day, monitoring sound light levels to determine if the owner is a movie theater or talking to his boss, and even letting callers decide whether they'd like to interrupt based on this information."

8 of 292 comments (clear)

  1. once again, trying to get machines to "think" by acroyear · · Score: 4, Interesting

    since people obviously don't anymore...

    --
    "But remember, most lynch mobs aren't this nice." (H.Simpson)
    -- Joe
  2. But... by gEvil+(beta) · · Score: 4, Interesting

    But can it tell the difference between a movie theater and my pocket?

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    This guy's the limit!
  3. Re:It's Called 'Vibrate' by LinuxHam · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Not to mention something Nextel has had for years. If I put my regularly scheduled meetings in my datebook, I can program the phone to switch to vibrate on its own, shut off the two-way radio feature, and even decide who in my phonebook is allowed to ring through, just for the length of the meeting. Its really an excellent feature, and I love it.

    --
    Intelligent Life on Earth
  4. Pocket Watch by clickety6 · · Score: 3, Interesting


    A lot of people use their phone as a watch these days, so it would be nice to have the possibiltiy to turn off the phone functionality but keep the clock functionality. Ditto with phones that have cameras, PDA capabilities, etc. That way you could still use them in aircraft, hospitals etc. without having the problems an active phone are supposed to cause.

    All the phones I've had are either fuly ON or fully OFF with maybe juts an alarm fucntion being available.

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    ----------------------------------- My Other Sig Is Hilarious -----------------------------------
  5. How about human politeness by binaryDigit · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It seems to me that most of the "rudeness" of phones stems from peoples strange addictions to ringtones. I just leave my phone on silent/vibrate all the time, and just never worry about disturbing anyone. It's sad that so much energy has to be expended to deal with such an issue. Plus, many of those strategies sound iffy at best since, for instance, many women keep their cell phones in their purse/bag, rendering any attempt to guage light or sound pretty much useless. Plus, as far as sound is concerned, how many people are going to feel a bit disturbed by the fact that their phone is now ALWAYS "listening".

    That being said I see two useful features (which may have been mentioned in the article that I admit I haven't read). One, simply have the phone check your calendar to see if you have a meeting scheduled. Two, provide some type of "snooze" button. Right now, if you decline a call because you're in a meeting, you still get an annoying beep when they leave a message, or the same damn "ringing" 10 min later when they call again. Why not have a single button basically put the phone in silent mode for the next half/hour/n minutes?

  6. monitoring WHAT? by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 3, Interesting
    monitoring sound light levels to determine

    So your phone is constantly 'listening' and evaluating the sound level.

    Listening to what, exactly? I can see the headline in a couple of years:
    "Your cellphone is listening in to all your conversations"
    And thanks to a new virus, is transmitting them!"

  7. Re:vibrate? by dave420 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It will work regardless of whether the phone owner is rude or not. Like someone on the bus who gets a call they don't want to answer, and their phone is not on silent. They just stare at the phone as it rings and rings. I hate 'em. There is absolutely no reason for phones to have ring tones at all. The amount of intrinsic rudeness in mobile phones is ridiculous.

  8. Re:Silent by Overzeetop · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There's some merit to this, actually, though it has certain limits. I'd love to know when I call someone's cell (especially those who have no landline) whether I'm going to interrupt them in a meeting or during a meal. A lot of folks will not put their phones on vibe or silent - some are inconsiderate, some are just forgetful - when they don't really want to be disturbed. When I call, I have a reason - I rarely call "just to chat". I want someone's full attention, and if they are busy, I'd rather get voicemail than interrupt. The flip side is the occasional time I might call just to talk. I don't want to interrupt something important with a useless call. I'll just hang up.

    Then, there's the reason to want forced ring-through. If something happens to a family member, I want someone to interrupt me, whatever I happen to be doing. Even if that just happens to be a vibe when I've got the cell set for silent. If it's serious, I'd rather be rude. I'd probably not give out the "ring anywhere" access to most folks, or put a block in the phone (say, a per-number access level). Likewise, if I have an urgent message, I'd like to make sure the person gets notified of my call.

    This won't fix the problem of rude users who - rather than leaving the room - will take a call anywhere, anytime, and talk at full volume. That's not something technology can't fix (though I would recommend a location-specific bark-collar device for repeat-offenders while they're in otherwise quiet spaces)

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    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?