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In: web resources
20 Mar 2010
A non-profit organization called Reboot has a mighty challenge for you this Friday night: Power down your cellphone, let your FarmVille crops languish and sign out of Skype for a full 24 hours. What do you think: Can you hack a single day sans technology?
We’re seen efforts of this nature before — remember when John Mayer wanted you to make like a Luddite for the first week of 2010?
But this event, which Reboot is calling The National Day of Unplugging, goes the extra mile with promotions (ironically enough) through Facebook, Twitter and a website called the Sabbath Manifesto (the day itself is part of a larger movement called the Sabbath Manifesto, a movement started by a group of Jewish artists, writers, filmmakers and social media professionals seeking to integrate traditional rituals into their modern lives).
There will also be a series of events in New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco (according to Reboot, they’re private and space is limited). All guests at these events will be asked to check their phones at the door, where they will sleep the next 24 hours away in a cell phone sleeping bag [pictured above].
Tanya Schevitz, a Reboot rep, told us that the idea is spreading. “We are hearing from people all over the county –- and beyond –- that they will create their own events, gather with friends, family, etc. to embrace the Sabbath Manifesto and the National Day of Unplugging,” she said.
Participants are also encouraged to sign on to the Sabbath Manifesto website and report back on their technological withdrawal experiences.
This venture is certainly interesting in light of recent stats that point to our society’s obsession with technological communication and increasing fascination with social media.
“There’s clearly a social problem when we’re interacting more with digital interfaces than our fellow human beings,” said Dan Rollman, Sabbath Manifesto creator and founder of the Universal World Record Database. “Rich, engaging conversations are harder to come by than they were a few years ago.”
What do you think? Do you think digital communications are eroding our ability to truly connect with others? Or do you think Twitter, Facebook and the like serve as channels to bring people together? Let us know in the comments.
Tags: apple, facebook, iphone, twitter
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4 Responses to Non-Profit Challenges You to Ditch the iPhone for a Day
anonimous
March 21st, 2010 at 5:53 pm
Change is hard for people to accept. At the begining of the last century most people in the world lived their lives within a hundred miles of where they were born. Today most people have traveled more than a thousand miles from where they were born. When I was a child we had Sunday dinner at my grandmother's house almost every week. My children live hundreds of miles apart and two of my nephews live on a different continents from the rest of the family.
Laura Y
March 28th, 2010 at 3:33 pm
Warren
bobo
May 4th, 2010 at 2:42 am
artprice.dom lists an isaac lichtenstein, only on work though. it come to auction in 2003 (a jewish cemetery) with an estimate of 1500-1800 euro.
jsglm231
May 28th, 2010 at 9:36 am
Well I remember the last time I went to Universal Studios I was 6 and really I couldn't ride much. There is the Spiderman ride in Islands of Adventure. There is also this flying unicorn ride near the Deuling Dragons that was fun when I was young. I rode it like 30 times in a row. haha.