Originally posted by duncan
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Phones in concerts
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This issue is almost entirely driven by market forces. Audience ‘engagement’ is such a massive ‘metric’ for those running classical venues/concerts etc that they are desperate to permit anything that will raise or maintain ‘brand awareness’. I hear and agree with all of the points made on this thread but if there was a uniform ban on phones at concerts, ditto clapping in the wrong places, which was offset by promotion of the mystique of the experience, you would pretty soon see a change in perception. There are ‘rock’ acts who ban phones, either by confiscating them beforehand or shaming audiences into refraining, and they have only benefited. In the case of someone like Dylan this is in itself remarkable, given the nature of the experience. The current trend for ‘context’, for requiring an audience to absorb so much extraneous ‘identity politics’ by way of background before being allowed to hear the actual piece, is actually degrading their personal individual experiences. No amount of ‘curated’ ‘socials’ will change that. This millennial obsession with externalising every aspect of human experience courtesy of technology is ruining humanity and, as we see all over the world, ushering in a new era of totalitarianism.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
That is a very good question. It’s a form of validation isn’t it... ?
Originally posted by muzzer View PostThis millennial obsession with externalising every aspect of human experience courtesy of technology is ruining humanity and, as we see all over the world, ushering in a new era of totalitarianism.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI think there's more to it than that. Yesterday I had a couple of hours to kill between two chamber concerts in Winchester and went to do some writing at the library, where I was able to join a few students (probably from Sixth Form College) who were working there with books, laptops etc. There were three girls 'studying together' there; at one point one of them fell off her chair to much hilarity from the three, and indeed the rest of us. By the time she had recovered herself and regained her seat, one of her friends was showing her the photo, or video, she'd taken on her phone of the incident. As Muzzer writes above, this is the new normal.
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Originally posted by muzzer View PostThis millennial obsession with externalising every aspect of human experience courtesy of technology is ruining humanity and, as we see all over the world, ushering in a new era of totalitarianism.
My #47 was posted in a bit of a rush and I did not intend to endorse the last seven words of this quote - to me they're a bit of a non-sequitur. I'm pleased to have read more than once lately that some millennials are ditching their smart phones in favour of 'dumb phones', as they are fed up with their self-induced addictions to social media etc and how time-consuming this has become.
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I take it a 'dumb phone' is a mobile phone that is just a phone.
I've always disliked the telephone (probably from some Freudian cause) so the proliferation of mobiles, let alone smart-phones, is to me the epitome of the world gone mad. And certainly there can surely never have been so many bad photographs taken as now. Long ago when computers started to arrive in my workplace we were warned about 'garbage in, garbage out'. This was in the days when printers used a roll of paper about 40cm wide and they were already concerned about the amount of waste. Someone gave us a stack of the stuff which for some reason wouldn't go back into the printer,and it served for our sons to draw on for years .
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI take it a 'dumb phone' is a mobile phone that is just a phone.
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It's curious how some appliances have FM radio but not DAB. My Blu-Ray player has FM radio, oddly. Then of course 'they' don't want us to record, but to sign up to their streaming service. My old LG TV recorder would receive DAB but wouldn't let me record it. My Panasonic DVD recorder lets me record DAB but won't let me edit it to cut out the chat .
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostYes - 'dumb' as opposed to 'smart', that is, not internet-friiendly: no video, no social media, (but no handle on the side to crank it up, either ).
And we thought Apple had destroyed them....
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Originally posted by smittims View PostIt's curious how some appliances have FM radio but not DAB. My Blu-Ray player has FM radio, oddly. Then of course 'they' don't want us to record, but to sign up to their streaming service. My old LG TV recorder would receive DAB but wouldn't let me record it. My Panasonic DVD recorder lets me record DAB but won't let me edit it to cut out the chat .
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Originally posted by smittims View PostIt's curious how some appliances have FM radio but not DAB. My Blu-Ray player has FM radio, oddly. Then of course 'they' don't want us to record, but to sign up to their streaming service. My old LG TV recorder would receive DAB but wouldn't let me record it. My Panasonic DVD recorder lets me record DAB but won't let me edit it to cut out the chat .
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Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostThere are easy, free to use softwares (sic) which allow you to record and then edit live streams.
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