Bibliography
1. Brown, Bill. "Smartphones Really Are Useful." - ABC South East NSW. ABC, 15 Feb. 2012. Web. 01 Apr. 2015.
This Article from ABC goes into the different factors that pertain to the usefulness of smartphones in not just an educational setting, but in terms of all the aspects of our lives. The author explains his newfound experience with a smartphone in his life. He is able to use it to map out a great place to surf, browse the web, and look up funny jokes on the internet. From there he says it's hard to go back since the utility smartphones provide is so helpful and simple, that it is hard to go without.
2. Lyngsie, Kaspar, Martin Pedersen, Jan Stage, and Kim Vestergaard. Human-computer Interaction - INTERACT 2013 14th IFIP TC 13 International Conference, Cape Town, South Africa, September 2-6, 2013: Proceedings. Heidelberg: Springer, 2013. Print.
This informative study shows the effects that smartphones have on drivers' reaction times, attention, and number of crash/near crash incidents. The important factor that this study includes is that it compares Smartphone, to regular cellphone showing how although both might be harmful, smartphones have a much more safety risking effect on drivers since they don't have tactile feedback. Smartphones use touch and this requires more attention and concentration to type something. Smartphones take your eyes off the road much more frequently and in turn have a higher chance of causing accidents, crashes, and deaths.
3. Adrienne Porter Felt, Serge Egelman, and David Wagner. 2012. I've got 99 problems, but vibration ain't one: a survey of smartphone users' concerns. In Proceedings of the second ACM workshop on Security and privacy in smartphones and mobile devices (SPSM '12). ACM, New York, NY, USA, 33-44. DOI=10.1145/2381934.2381943. Web. 1 Apr. 2015.
This survey article discusses and observes the risks that everyday people like you and me perceive about our smartphones. The group of scholars finds out that what people are most afraid of isn't the social concerns that smartphones bring, but rather the risk of data loss, or the stealing of their financial data. This study pertains to you because it shows that social health is not one of the issues that people in the survey gave much thought.
4. Kim, Daejoong, Heasun Chun, and Hyunjoo Lee. "Determining the Factors That Influence College Students' Adoption of Smartphones." Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology (2014): N/a. Wiley Online Library. Web. 1 Apr. 2015.
This journal explores the factors and therefore reasons that so many American college students adopt smartphones. This article will help you in deciding your standpoint by revealing that some of the main reasons people get smartphones in the first place are related to perceived price, and perceived popularity of the product. The article then goes into say that the main uses for smartphones in the demographic of American college students is Social interactions via social networking services. That says something about the way handle our social lives through smartphones.
5. Park, James J., Laurence T. Yang, and Changhoon Lee, eds. Future Information Technology. Berlin: Springer, 2011. Print.
This next article reports on a study they conducted based on how satisfied consumers are with social networking services or (SNS). Based upon their findings I think it is important to note that the biggest factors that increased user satisfaction were the social presence that SNS are able to mimic off of real conversations, How easily absorbed each user can become, and lastly the ease of self disclosure or ability to represent themselves. Basically this study is telling you that the more closely you can recreate a real conversation in a SNS, the more satisfied consumers of a SNS application will be.
This Article from ABC goes into the different factors that pertain to the usefulness of smartphones in not just an educational setting, but in terms of all the aspects of our lives. The author explains his newfound experience with a smartphone in his life. He is able to use it to map out a great place to surf, browse the web, and look up funny jokes on the internet. From there he says it's hard to go back since the utility smartphones provide is so helpful and simple, that it is hard to go without.
2. Lyngsie, Kaspar, Martin Pedersen, Jan Stage, and Kim Vestergaard. Human-computer Interaction - INTERACT 2013 14th IFIP TC 13 International Conference, Cape Town, South Africa, September 2-6, 2013: Proceedings. Heidelberg: Springer, 2013. Print.
This informative study shows the effects that smartphones have on drivers' reaction times, attention, and number of crash/near crash incidents. The important factor that this study includes is that it compares Smartphone, to regular cellphone showing how although both might be harmful, smartphones have a much more safety risking effect on drivers since they don't have tactile feedback. Smartphones use touch and this requires more attention and concentration to type something. Smartphones take your eyes off the road much more frequently and in turn have a higher chance of causing accidents, crashes, and deaths.
3. Adrienne Porter Felt, Serge Egelman, and David Wagner. 2012. I've got 99 problems, but vibration ain't one: a survey of smartphone users' concerns. In Proceedings of the second ACM workshop on Security and privacy in smartphones and mobile devices (SPSM '12). ACM, New York, NY, USA, 33-44. DOI=10.1145/2381934.2381943. Web. 1 Apr. 2015.
This survey article discusses and observes the risks that everyday people like you and me perceive about our smartphones. The group of scholars finds out that what people are most afraid of isn't the social concerns that smartphones bring, but rather the risk of data loss, or the stealing of their financial data. This study pertains to you because it shows that social health is not one of the issues that people in the survey gave much thought.
4. Kim, Daejoong, Heasun Chun, and Hyunjoo Lee. "Determining the Factors That Influence College Students' Adoption of Smartphones." Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology (2014): N/a. Wiley Online Library. Web. 1 Apr. 2015.
This journal explores the factors and therefore reasons that so many American college students adopt smartphones. This article will help you in deciding your standpoint by revealing that some of the main reasons people get smartphones in the first place are related to perceived price, and perceived popularity of the product. The article then goes into say that the main uses for smartphones in the demographic of American college students is Social interactions via social networking services. That says something about the way handle our social lives through smartphones.
5. Park, James J., Laurence T. Yang, and Changhoon Lee, eds. Future Information Technology. Berlin: Springer, 2011. Print.
This next article reports on a study they conducted based on how satisfied consumers are with social networking services or (SNS). Based upon their findings I think it is important to note that the biggest factors that increased user satisfaction were the social presence that SNS are able to mimic off of real conversations, How easily absorbed each user can become, and lastly the ease of self disclosure or ability to represent themselves. Basically this study is telling you that the more closely you can recreate a real conversation in a SNS, the more satisfied consumers of a SNS application will be.