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14 Annoying Tech Types



Though technology generally makes our lives better, it can also turn us into idiots. Inspired by Blue Tools -- those people who never remove their wireless headsets -- we've compiled a list of personality types who irritate by misusing gadgets and the Internet in ways that are mean, rude, or simply clueless.

Are we stereotyping a bit? Sure, but ultimately, we're here to help. Recognizing that you have a problem is the first step to recovery. So take that headset off for a moment and ask yourself: "Is this what I've become?" If so, just look up from the screen, turn down the volume, and your friends will be happy to have you back. But first, take a look at 12 types who we think should take their technology and shove it.

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Cell Phones

Send a Text Message to Outer Space

Australia Sending Text Messages to Another Planet
For those who simply want to blast their missives into the depths of space, SentForever.com has served admirably well since 2007. But, if you're really looking to reach out and touch someone -- a non-human someone -- then HelloFromEarth.net might be a more appropriate destination.

In celebration of National Science Week in Australia, the site is collecting text messages from people hoping to get in touch with an E.T. The site, run by Cosmos Magazine, plans on delivering them to one planet in particular -- Gliese 581d, a rocky planet that orbits its star, Gliese, in the so-called habitable zone where liquid water can exist and life might be possible.

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Cell Phones

'Texting Dr. Tagg': Woman Earns Ph.D. in SMS

Proving that you really can study anything you want in college, Dr. Caroline Tagg has received a Ph.D. for studying text messaging. The 33-year-old academic spent the last three-and-a-half years studying the use of language in texts at England's Birmingham University English department. For the purposes of her research, Tagg had 235 volunteers send her every text message they sent or received, totaling 11,000 messages.

Her research showed that people treat text messages in much the same way as they do regular, spoken conversation. According to Tagg, abbreviations show up less than one might expect, while texts, like speech, are often riddled with unnecessary words like "um" and "oh." In speaking with the Telegraph, Tagg called the language used in SMS "playful," going on to characterize it as "quite creative" and "expressive." As an example, she pointed to one message in particular: "I will be there not on the dot," in reference to being late for something.

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Cell Phones, Google, iPhone

Apple Patches iPhone SMS Security Flaw

iPhone SMS Security Flaw DemoedA month after first announcing that the iPhone had a serious security flaw in how it handled text messages (and even longer still since it was first brought to Apple's attention), Charlie Miller at last publicly demonstrated the attack at yesterday's Black Hat Security Conference, and released a paper detailing how it is executed.

The flaw, which allows a hacker to hijack a phone by flooding it with invisible SMS control messages, isn't iPhone-specific. Windows Mobile and Android are also vulnerable, though Google patched the hole with its Cupcake update. The flaw is particularly worrisome since the only sign a user would see is a single text message with a lone box-like character. The rest of the control messages would not appear on the handset, but could shut down the phone entirely or even automatically forward the commands to other iPhones creating a vast mobile botnet.

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Cell Phones

Unsolicited Text Messages as Bad as Phone Calls, Court Says

Court Says Texts Same as Voice Calls Under Law

Let's hope that the Simon & Schuster or marketing firm ipsh! employee who, six years ago, decided to send out thousands of unsolicited text messages reading, "the next call you take may be your last," has lost their job. If they haven't yet, then they probably will soon (assuming Simon & Schuster is forced to cough up the roughly $90 million in fines and payouts associated with the class action lawsuit it's facing for the ill-advised Stephen King promo).

In 2003, to promote the then new Stephen King novel, 'Cell,' the publisher used a list of 100,000 phone numbers collected by a third party, not involved in the case, to send the offending text message. One of the text's recipients, Laci Satterfield, filed suit on behalf of herself and 60,000 others, claiming the company violated the federal Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA). The act prohibits automatic telephone dialing systems from making calls to non-consensual cell phone owners.

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Cell Phones

Boston Trolley Crash Blamed on Text-Messaging Driver

We've seen people caught texting while driving cars, buses, motorcycles, and trains. We can now add to that list: texting in a trolley. The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) announced over the weekend that a 24-year-old Boston trolley operator admitted to texting his girlfriend just before the trolley he was piloting slammed into another, injuring about 50 people, on Friday, May 8.

The crash, which occurred within the Boston city limits, resulted in only minor injuries, but will likely cost the unnamed operator his job. Currently, the MBTA bans employees from using cell phones while working on a train or bus.

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Cell Phones

Why Are Text Messages Limited to 160 Characters?



If you've ever wondered why (or cursed the fact that) text messages are limited to 160 characters, this story, courtesy of the LA Times, may just put your mind at ease (or at least provide a target for your rage).

In 1985, German communications researcher Friedhelm Hillebrand realized that, after using a typewriter to type out random sentences, each message almost always came in under 160 characters. Hillebrand and his colleagues had been developing what would become known as text messaging, and, before the typewriter epiphany, the 160-character limit had been a point of debate.

Do you prefer text messages or phone calls?



In 1986, Hillebrand was working as the chairman of the non-voice services committee within the Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM). While there, he pushed for all cellular carriers and cell phones to support the short messaging system (SMS). Since bandwidth was one of the major stumbling blocks in front of SMS, Hillebrand suggested using a secondary radio channel that was already present on mobile networks. At first, only 128 characters could fit in this space, but, after some reorganization and trimming down of possible characters, Hillebrand's team was able to make the 160-character text message a reality. Whether or not that reality is one that can satisfy a text-crazy world is another topic altogether.

As for the technology's adoption, Hillebrand told the Los Angeles Times, "Nobody had foreseen how fast and quickly the young people would use this." [From: LA Times]

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Cell Phones, Web

TextsFromLastNight.com Collects Drunken Text Messages



Those of you who turn into prolific and inappropriate texters after a few drinks, be warned; your SMS ramblings may end up as someone else's entertainment online. Texts From Last Night (TFLN) collects reader-submitted, drunken text messages, similarly to the hilarious FMyLife, and re-posts them (minus identifying info, of course) for your reading pleasure.

And if, for some reason, you're not entertained enough by the absurd things people (supposedly) text while drunk, then check out the TFLN sidebar for drunken tweets and drunken photos from Flickr.

Have you ever sent a regrettable text-message while drunk?



The site was launched by two friends in February, and has already started pulling in a pretty decent-sized audience. Here's hoping we never find our text messages on the site. [From: Texts From Last Night, Via: Textually.org]

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Cell Phones

Penn Men Attempt Texting Record, Get $26K Bill

PA Men Attempt Texting Record, Slapped with $26k Bill
A couple of very bored Pennsylvania men decided to gun for the world record number of text messages sent in a month, and, over the next four weeks, went about clogging the airwaves with 217,000 SMS messages. The pair, Nick Andes, 29, and Doug Klinger, 30, were a little shocked, however, when T-Mobile went about clogging Andes's mail box with a $26,000 cell phone bill.

Despite having an unlimited texting plan, Andes was hit with a giant (physically and fiscally) bill, packed in a box that cost the provider almost $30 to ship. Andes panicked and contacted T-Mobile, which later told the Associated Press that it had reimbursed Andes's account and was currently trying to get to the bottom of the charges.

Andes and Klinger have yet to hear back from the Guinness Book of World Records in regards to their feat. For our part, we're still wondering how on Earth the pair managed to send so many messages (even if most of them were one-word long) without losing their jobs, or their wives. [From: Daily News/AP and Post Chronicle]

Cell Phones, Computers, BlackBerry, iPhone

Simple Text Messages Can Be Used to Steal Data


Some phones today can have pretty dramatic security functions; case in point, the iPhone will erase itself if you screw up entering your password 10 times in a row. Unfortunately, all a hacker really needs to bypass your password and take over your phone is a simple text message.

In a series of proof-of-concept videos posted on YouTube, Dan Dearing (Vice President of marketing at Trust Digital) demonstrates how, using a text message, he can hijack a phone and steal data off of it. Using an SMS text message, Dearing can force a smart phone to launch Mobile Internet Explorer, download and install a malicious software package, and send data back to his own phone. This attack is referred to as a "midnight raid attack," since it would ideally be done while the victim is sleeping so they don't notice the cellular activity.

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Cell Phones

Man Texts Suicide Note to Wife Before Leaping Off Cliff

Man Texts Suicide Note To Wife
Human decency would demand that you not use text messaging for sensitive exchanges like breaking up with someone or terminating an employee. It should go without saying that suicide notes fall squarely in the realm of things too important to share via SMS.

Sadly, a British man didn't seem to care too much about texting etiquette when he used his handset to send a suicide note to his wife, according to today's report from Mirror.co.uk. Yesterday, a 46-year-old Lancashire man sent a photo of the cliffs above Gogarth Bay, along with a message declaring his intent to jump off of them, to his wife, who notified the authorities. Rescuers rushed to the scene in a helicopter in order to stop the man, but, tragically, were too late. They could only watch him leap to his death, landing on the rocks 500 feet below.

We know that, sometimes, a person can be hurting too much to bear speaking with anybody. But, we implore anybody who is thinking about suicide to reach for their phone and, instead of texting a loved one farewell, give these folks a call. [From: Mirror.co.uk]

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Cell Phones, BlackBerry

Your Thumbs Aren't Made for Texting


File this firmly under "D," for "Duh," but a new study in the South African Medical Journal is reporting that text messaging can lead to repetitive strain injuries (RSI) and damage to our thumbs.

Researchers interviewed 318 teens at two South African high schools for the study, and over half reported having at least one of the main symptoms of RSI, which include pain or tingling in the neck, hands, or back. Even more bizarrely, almost half of the students (125 of them) reported having developed blisters from text messaging. This leads us to believe that South African teens are doing something wrong, since even Emily Jennings, who sent over 41,000 texts in a month, was thumb-blister-free.

We've been warning you since 2007 to take it easy on your thumbs. They're designed for grasping, not for high-speed, dexterity-demanding tasks like typing. [From: Times of India]

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Cell Phones

Dad Takes a Hammer to Teen's Cell Phone Over $5K Bill

Dad Smashes Teen's Cell Phone Over $5,000 Bill
We've seen teens send out 14,000, 15,000, and even over 40,000 text messages in one month, so one girl's firing off 10,000 texts in one month shouldn't really shock us all that much. But the tale of Dena Christoffersen has two ingredients that make it much more interesting than the other tales of texting addiction we've shared before: no text messaging plan, and an angry parent with a hammer.

Dena, a 13-year-old from Cheyenne, Wyoming, incurred the wrath of her father after she rang up a $4,756.25 cell phone bill, which included over 10,000 text messages. The family didn't have a text messaging plan. To make matters worse, most of the messages appeared to be sent during school hours. On one day in particular, Dena sent over 300 texts during the eight-hour school day. Needless to say, this had an effect on Dena's grades, which went from A's and B's to F's.

After seeing the bill, Dena's father Gregg took his aggression out on the teen's handset -- with a hammer.

Now sans cell phone, Dena has pulled her grades back up, and we're quite impressed with Gregg's restraint. If we got a $5,000 cell phone bill, we'd probably smash a lot more than our daughter's phone. [From: Denver Post/9News, Via: Textually]


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Cell Phones

German Man Fined $2,300 for Racist Text Message



A German man has been fined the equivalent of $2,300 for sending a text message, Reuters reported Friday.

The 28-year-old man, who was unnamed in the article, was found to have sent a text message reading, "By opening this SMS, you have killed a Turk." The message, which was sent last June in the midst of Europe's heated Euro 2008 soccer tournament, continued to call for a "clean" tournament, invoking the language of racial cleansing.

Contending that his client had forwarded the chain message inadvertently, and to only one recipient, the man's lawyer Karl Laible managed to convince the court to drop a charge of "inciting racial hatred," which could have resulted in prison time. Instead, due to the man's motive and intent being unclear, the court fined him 1,800 euros.

As a whole, Turkish immigrants have had a tumultuous experience in Germany, where they make up three-percent of the general population. [From: Reuters Via: Textually.org]

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Cell Phones

Bishop Urges Italians to Give Up Text-Messaging for Lent



Christians and Catholics traditionally observe Lent, the approximately 40-day period between Ash Wednesday and Easter, by praying frequently and fasting from certain types of food. Abstaining from food -- and vices such as drinking and smoking -- is intended to help the believer prepare for the Easter celebration of Christ's resurrection, and to also create empathy for Jesus's time spent wandering in the desert before beginning his public ministry. Monsignor Benito Cocchi, the tech-savvy bishop of Modeno in northern Italy, broadened the scope of vices this year by urging Catholic youth to take a vow of texting silence on Fridays during the current Lenten season.

Italians text on their mobile phones, or "telefoninos," an average of 50 times per month, ranking the nation second in European texting frequency behind Great Britain. Because of the high text rate, Cocchi told Italian newspaper La Repubblica that he hopes the suggested fast will prompt the text-mad Italian youth to "detox from the virtual world and get back in touch with themselves." At least he didn't get all old-school and suggest they take part in self-flagellation to atone for their texting sins.

Seriously, though. Give up texting? We could conceivably take a break from all the violent video games with rampant sex and nudity, or maybe even Facebook. But texting? No way. In fact, we're texting someone right now about how we can't stop texting. [From: News24.com]

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Latest Reviews from CNET.com

CNET provides the latest tech news, unbiased reviews, videos, podcasts, software, and downloads, making tech products easy to find, understand and use.

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