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Home March 22 2004
An annual Massachusetts Institute of Technology survey, known as the Lemelson-MIT
Invention Index, found that among adults asked what invention they hate most but
can't live without, 30 percent said the cell phone.
Alarm clocks were a close second, with 25 percent, followed by the television
with 23 percent and razors with 14 percent. Microwave ovens, computers and
answering machines also earned spots as detested technology.
The survey has been conducted for the past eight years to gauge public
opinion toward inventions, inventors and technology.
"The interconnectedness you get from the cell phone is a very positive thing,
and I think that's one of the most important things, the bringing together of
people. The downside of that is that you sometimes want to be alone," said
Lemelson Center Director Merton C. Flemings.
The random telephone survey of 1,023 adults and 500 teenagers was conducted
Nov. 12-19 by Princeton, New Jersey-based Taylor Nelson Sofres Intersearch and
was released Wednesday
Ninety-five percent of the adults surveyed felt that inventions had improved
the quality of their lives.
A handy invention -- a two-way radio -- allowed Bob Dillon, 51, and his
companion Deborah Bleau, 44, to keep tabs on Bleau's 12-year-old daughter, Kate,
and Kate's two friends, as all five strolled through downtown Boston on a recent
visit.
Bleau said it was hard to find fault with the technology keeping her in
constant touch with her daughter, and Dillon did not find much to criticize
about cell phones, other than their pesky habit of going off in public places.
But Dillon said he had a love-hate relationship with television. He ditched
his television years ago. Now, he, Bleau, and Bleau's daughter have a TV in
their Latham, New York, home, but it is used only for watching movies.
"It's not hooked into any kind of broadcast or anything like that, primarily
because it's so invasive, and can take over your life," he said. "But it's a
double-edged sword. I miss the History Channel."
Jaime Wasserman, 26, of Boston, walked through Quincy Market with her cell
phone pressed to her ear.
"I love technology. There's really nothing that irritates me. I love it all.
Computers, television," she said. "An alarm clock? You need an alarm clock.
People who hate it are probably lazy people who just don't feel like getting up
in the morning."
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