[Krimel]
... with the invention of the Bluetooth headset, that talking to yourself in
public was no longer a reliable sign of psychosis.

[Arlo]
The other day I was walking across campus and saw someone talking on (what I
assumed was) a cellphone. He hand was up at his ear, in the same manner as one
would expect a cell-phoner to be. When I got close, I noticed his hand was
empty, and in his ear was a blue-tooth device. I actually stopped and asked
him, why, if you have that headset, are you putting your hand to your ear.
"Because I didn't want everyone to think I was some crazy guy", was his reply.

This reminded me of an article I had read that looked at those gestures we make
when we are walking down a hallway and realize we left something back where we
were. You know them, you put your hands on your pocket, make a gee-whiz face,
sometimes even smack your forehead, shrug your arms and then turn around. Funny
thing is, we do this even if no one else is around, and when we KNOW already we
forgot something. We do it, they found, because it would be a sign of psychosis
in our culture to just abruptly change direction with no gesture to accompany
it.

Despite the Luddites in our midst, who are already likely cackling about "gal
derned rock music" and how great movies where back in the good ol' days, the
netbooks you mention are really set to significantly impact the way we think
about education and how we conduct business. Their low cost (relative to a
MacBook Pro, say) is another bridge that will allow many to cross the divide. 

I notice the rapid changes in the way my own extended family keeps in contact,
going all the way back to simply landline phones and postal mail, to twitter,
facebook, texting, and cell calls that make our interactions more frequent and
really make distances feel not so great. My daughter, for example, shared the
pictures from her prom in real time to my mother via her blackberry (my mother
lives several hours away and was not able to make it up). 


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