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Faithless
02-16-2005, 02:26 PM
I suspected as much with kids. Heck there's probably this sort of thing going on with adults -- being judged by the cellphone you keep. :frown:

Techno-Chic: Youths Gotta Be Up on the Upgrade (http://news.pacificnews.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=3b2d47a41662bc724dbf1 b6f0c2f3076)
Youth Commentary, Hector Gonzalez,
Pacific News Service, Feb 16, 2005

Editor's Note: The kind of cell phone or laptop computer a young person uses has become a new standard of cool, the writer says.

SAN JOSE, Calif.--Technology has been so woven into young people's lives that even the middle school students I tutor have cell phones with cameras on them. In fact, a new cultural trend has emerged: "techno-chic," a standard of coolness based on your ability to keep up with new technologies.

When I was a young kid in the early 1990s, our technology trends were things like a game on a digital watch or an alarm clock that sang. When I was in middle school in 1994, some students had pagers, but that's as techno-chic as we got. Nowadays, young kids have e-mail, instant messenger and cell phones, and that's just to start.

The other day I asked a girl for her number. As I was pulling out my cell phone to add her to my contact list, I realized that my phone was all busted and old. I was embarrassed. I bought my phone close to two years ago, and even then it was a fairly old model. It doesn't have any new features like a camera, e-mail or songs that can be downloaded. Although most people would claim that these things are completely useless, they have become necessities in the techno-chic era.

In the same way that someone might have judged you according to your sneakers and jacket several years ago, people are now being judged according to how technologically updated they are. The difference between techno-chic and sneaker-chic is that sneakers can say something about who we are as individuals -- skater shoes for skaters, or basketball shoes for ballers -- but techno-chic says little about a person. The speed of your laptop, or the number of songs on your MP3 player offers no real clues about who somebody is.

But it still carries cultural capital. Back in the day, young people who were into computers and technology were nerds. Now, techno-savvy is the thing to be.

The other day I heard someone say, "My phone is getting old, I need to upgrade." The idea that people are using words like "upgrade" in regular conversation is a sign of the times. I've known people whose paychecks went to nothing else but cell phone bills and upgrades.

One of the keys to being techno-chic is having a large online identity. Before, the only online identity you might have was your instant messenger profile. But now, with online networks such as Friendster and MySpace, people can become popular, if only through cyberspace. Friendster and MySpace are online networks in which you are given a Web page for others to view. The object is to get people to join your network by adding them as "friends." Your friends' pictures are automatically added to your page as links to theirs, so the more friends you have, the more links you will have on -- and to -- your own page.

If you're on MySpace and you have more than 1,000 friends on your network, you're considered on-point, and everyone will try to be your friend. If you have plain pictures, you're not on-point. But if you have well cropped, Photoshop pictures, then you're cool. Sometimes, people don't even write anything about themselves on their profiles. As long as their page is well designed graphically, people want to join their network. Famous artists and actors even have MySpace accounts, and if you're cool enough, one of these stars will join your network.

Soon enough, I'm sure that cell phones will be as common and practical to young kids as a bicycle, and MP3 song files will be the way of distributing music albums. It seems that technology may soon give young people an identity and status, the way Air Jordan's did back in the day.

PNS contributor Hector Gonzalez, 20, is a writer for Silicon Valley De-Bug, the voice of young writers, artists and workers in Silicon Valley and a PNS project.

Emperor_Mike
02-16-2005, 03:23 PM
Oh, this isn't new, CM. Phones have been a status symbol of sorts for a few years now. It makes very little sense to me actually. It's only a phone (or a laptop) and it doesn't say much. The "Keeping Up with the Joneses" mentality is incredibly wasteful, in my opinion, and the outward image of "coolness" won't compensate for the absurdity of flittering away hard earned cash on irrelevant things. The money spent on the newest mobile or laptop can be better utilised in the form of learning materials, perhaps, which can raise your productivity and/or provide you with new skills with which to increase your earning capacity.

sOKaLiBoY
02-16-2005, 03:28 PM
that would be me. techno-chic. always have to have the latest and greatest. dunno about the chic part though.

YuheiCarreau
02-16-2005, 03:48 PM
That article is just a bunch of whining. And it blows things way out of proportion, I've yet to meet anyone that brags about their Friendster account.

Having a new cell phone is like having the latest Nikes; some people care about 'em, most really don't give a crap.

VV o n g B a
02-16-2005, 04:12 PM
Having a new cell phone is like having the latest Nikes; some people care about 'em, most really don't give a crap.that really depends on what phone it is or what camera. ever since i saw an advertisement for the razor phone, i've wanted to see it. when i met a girl who had it, me and 2 other guys i've never met were instantly asking to check it out. and usually i don't care about this stuff.

sinisterpanda
02-16-2005, 05:12 PM
i'm so techno bland...i've had my phone for a year now, pda for 3 months and pc for at least 1 and a half years...and my shoes...they don't even light up or make me jump better...psha.

Trowa Sky
02-16-2005, 08:10 PM
my phone is old, ( 1yr) but it's a flip phone so um yeah!

VV o n g B a
02-17-2005, 08:34 AM
i think i've posted this site before a long time ago, but here it is again.

http://www.technosexual.org/

Fireblade
02-17-2005, 03:18 PM
not too long ago I saw a kid with a pda phone. Every kept on complimenting him on it on the bus. It just occured to me that kids with this much money, will always show off their new toys to everyone. So I don't think the problem is with the kids, but if adults do it, oh man... they need to grow up and get a life.

bluemonq
02-19-2005, 06:48 PM
there's one word to encapsulize for us techpeople (read: 'geeks') what most of these 'tech-chic' people are.

posers.

when my thinner-than-an-altoid-tin-razr phone-toting neighbor stops knocking on my door at 1 am asking me to recover an essay from his crashed computer; when my instant-tv-and-built-in-dvr-toshiba qosimo-sporting classmate learns to properly secure his computer with a firewall, anti-spyware, and anti-virus; when my first-one-to-get-at-the-SF-store 60gb iPod Photo uncle understands how to manage his mp3 collection....that will be day that i respect their gadgetlove as wanting the best for their money rather than because it's a status symbol and/or nice and shiny.

i don't see that day coming anytime soon.

Faithless
11-30-2005, 11:14 PM
To me, a cell phone is just a means to an end.

The cheapy Motorola is about a techno chic as a pocket protector. But then, whereas the kiddies are yacking it up about he-says-she-says, I'm handling problems, and doing real business. Then I dump it in the drawer at the end of the day.

Even the home phone is to make sure I can be contacted in case of an emergency.

I saw this one girl talking on hers while she was walking down the street. She was gesturing, talking loud, and all that, about how cool she was. Eh.

thaite
12-01-2005, 12:32 PM
techno-chic is so yesterday. I'm a technocrat, and that's where it's at.

snailpoo
12-01-2005, 01:20 PM
not too long ago I saw a kid with a pda phone. Every kept on complimenting him on it on the bus. It just occured to me that kids with this much money, will always show off their new toys to everyone. So I don't think the problem is with the kids, but if adults do it, oh man... they need to grow up and get a life.

It's funny. The only adults who will show off their pda phones are the ones who don't need them.

For everyone else, that sucker is a ball and chain that finds extra ways to give you work during your precious few off hours. It's difficult showing off something you despise, no matter how flashy or techno chic it may be.

hooligan
12-01-2005, 02:24 PM
Nothing, absolutely nothing is nicer than a 12" powerbook.

Azn Retribution
12-01-2005, 07:10 PM
1000 friends on myspace is what it takes to be chic eh.

wow. guess im not cool with my 156 friends.
but I actually really know every single person on my list.

eos
12-01-2005, 08:16 PM
i once saw this girl who was yakking on her phone, walking down the street, not paying attention. she walked right out into traffic, and it took the cars' honking at her to wake her up from her reverie.
"blah blah blah garbage unimportant shit..."HONK HONK!!!! "oh. mah. gawd. i almost got run over. so anyway, yak yak yak...."
however "cool" your shit is....you won't get to use it if you're DEAD.

Faithless
12-04-2005, 08:50 AM
i once saw this girl who was yakking on her phone, walking down the street, not paying attention. she walked right out into traffic, and it took the cars' honking at her to wake her up from her reverie.
"blah blah blah garbage unimportant shit..."HONK HONK!!!! "oh. mah. gawd. i almost got run over. so anyway, yak yak yak...."
however "cool" your shit is....you won't get to use it if you're DEAD.
Not unless they bury the cell phone with you. :rolleyes: