http://gizmodo.com/5483990/cellphones-become-our-comfort-objects-during-disaster
Two days after a 8.8 magnitude earthquake displaced them from their homes and separated them from dear ones, people gathered at a fire-station in Concepcion, Chile to charge their cellphones—their comfort objects during this disaster.
Chile was becoming a trending topic on Twitter before even the fastest newscasters got a chance to talk about Saturday's earthquake, thanks to many hastily posted Tweets—most of which likely came from mobile devices. Tweets, text messages, emails, calls, voicemails—everything flew across the networks, draining phones and granting people some comfort and peace. Just hearing a familiar voice or reading words of assurance—knowing that your mobile device links you to the world, to family, and to much needed aid—makes one heck of a difference.
We need food. We need medication. We need a hand to pull us out of the rubble. But we also need a little gadget that lets us cry out to the world so that everyone else has a chance to tell us that it'll be ok.
I've seen people on DU claim that they'd never be oppressed by having a cell phone and others who mock Twitter. The reality is that technology has, in so many ways, brought us closer to one another and allows us to experience amazing, wonderful, horrible, things with people all over the world. Things we would never get to experience in our own lives. It can allow us to reach out for help and support and share emotions and information. We mock what we don't understand, but what baffles me most is that some of the people who do this use DU in the very same way others use cell/smart phones, Twitter, Facebook, etc.
If the events in Haiti and Chile and the aftermath of the elections in Iran weren't enough to prove how cool it is to live in the information age, I don't know what is.
:)