调查:美国人有哪些手机礼节?
Unspoken rules govern cell phone etiquette
People are using cell phones in a Manhattan subway. Most Americans believe there are unspoken rules about mobile phone etiquette, according to an online poll.
It may not seem like it when commuters are shouting down their cell phones to the dismay of other passengers but most Americans believe there are unspoken rules about mobile phone etiquette. Checking emails, sending text messages and making telephone calls while in the company of others are definite breeches of mobile manners. Texting during a date is also strictly forbidden. But most people questioned in an online poll said they would not be offended if they received an electronic thank you, instead of a written note and 75 percent had no objections to anyone using laptops, netbooks and cell phones in the bathroom. "Etiquette is first and foremost a question of awareness," said author and etiquette expert Anna Post. But she described the results of the Harris Interactive poll commissioned by Intel as "pretty surprising statistics." Sixty-two percent of the 2,625 adults who took part in the survey agreed that cell phones, laptops, netbooks and other electronic devices are part of daily life. Fifty-five percent also thought the demands of business mean people must stay connected, even if it involves taking a laptop on a holiday or answering a cell phone during a meal. But despite the need to be constantly connected and the general acceptance of the technology, people were more sensitive about technology abuses during holiday and religious activities. Nearly 90 percent of Americans think cell phone use is unacceptable during a religious service and 30 percent admitted they would be offended if they received an online gift wish. But more than half revealed that they intended to send an electronic greeting card, instead of a traditional one. "These are issues about common sense," said Dr Genevieve Bell, an ethnographer and director of Intel's User Experience Group, adding that the social rules of when and how it is appropriate to use the technology are still being formed.
shout down: to overwhelm or silence by shouting loudly(高声喝止,大声喊叫使对方的声音听不到)
to the dismay of sb.:使某人沮丧;使某人惊慌
etiquette: the practices and forms prescribed by social convention or by authority(礼节)
breeches: conceited; unduly self-confident(妄自尊大,目中无人)
netbook: a small portable laptop computer designed for wireless communication and access to the Internet(上网笔记本电脑)
first and foremost:first of all, most important, primarily(首先,首要地) |