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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, February 22, 2001 |
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A mobile mania
It is useful. What is more, it is fashionable. The cellular
telephone is part of the Chennai scene, its shrill ring adding to
the deafening cacophony. Walk into a cinema or a hospital, you
will find several of these gizmos shining and shouting for
attention, writes GAUTAMAN BHASKARAN.
A SHRIEK interrupted the kiss. As Kamal gathered Rani in his
arms, and his lips sought hers on the screen, a viewer's cellular
telephone played spoil sport. Some in the audience laughed. Some
moaned. The others tried hard not to let their minds wander off
that celluloid moment of sheer ecstasy.
This about all sums up the mobile angst the world over. As has
been the case with just about every other invention over the
centuries, the cellular technology has been viewed with both joy
and sorrow, with excitement and irritation.
Of course, nobody can even remotely disagree that the mobile
telephone has been a great boon. Whether it be the fishermen of
India's West coast or the small businesswomen in Bangladesh or
Japan's teeming number of schoolgirls (not quite boys, and I
wonder why), this little gadget, which is indeed getting tinier
and more sophisticated by the day, has virtually changed the
user's life. It has made his or her economic struggle that much
more easy to grapple with, and for the kid in a Tokyo cafe or on
Hiroshima street or in the parks of Europe, the instrument helps
connect with love, romance and fun.
The cellular telephone has a hundred other uses, some of which
are really beyond the wildest of one's imagination. A group of
journalists at Cannes on the French Riviera might have spent the
entire night in a small elevator - which stalled between two
floors - had it not been for their mobiles. In Mumbai, I remember
being guided to a difficult address over this device, and without
which I could have well taken hours to find the person I was
looking for.
In Rome, in London, in Singapore, it is common to see men and
women utilise the cellular telephone with apt appropriateness: as
a time saver. They speak into it as they walk, as they ride an
escalator, as they drive or travel in a train.
But in India, Chennai included, there is more hype to it, there
is still that tag of status attached to this "walkie-talkie".
Young executives, women at kitty parties and college kids flash
their mobiles with an air of unconcealed glee.
And what do they normally use them for ? One, to say "hello" to a
colleague. Two, to ask the maid if tea is ready ? Three, to
whisper "I love you". These wireless sessions can stretch
endlessly, and can be annoying to others...
---as an elderly couple realised. Out to spend a quiet evening
with each other in a Chennai restaurant, they found the
hackneyed, loud conversation of a youth over the cellular at the
next table a terrible nuisance. Till, the old man got up, walked
up to the offender and ticked him off in no uncertain terms.
Mobile manners are just absent in Chennai, and elsewhere in the
country. Repeated requests to switch off cellulars during a Jaya
Bachchan play the other evening in Chennai made no impact on a
crowd that was educated and elitist. Later, even the warnings
made no difference.
But what I consider a greater blot on etiquette is the use of
this contraption in a crematorium. I heard people talking shop at
the one in Besant Nagar, unmindful of the grief and wailing all
around. Such disrespect to the dead, such callousness to
suffering are a terrible reflection on our society.
However, a more pressing concern today has little to do with
decency and decorum. As with most other discoveries, the cellular
telephone has its share of controversy. Can the radiation it
emits harm one who holds it ? Can it lead to brain tumour? Are
children more vulnerable than adults? Naturally these questions
are worrying, particularly in the kind of times we live in when
health is a major casualty of just about every modern ism.
Whether it is the food we eat or the air we breathe, they seem to
be laced with poison. The mobile is an added anxiety.
But P.H. Rao, the managing director of Chennai's SkyCell, thinks
that there is no basis for this apprehension. "It is only people
like you and me who do a lot of reading tend to get perturbed.
The average person here or elsewhere in India does not even give
a thought to this".
Instrument manufacturers and other service providers agree with
this. They say such fears were associated with so many other
inventions. The steam engine, at one point of time, seemed
ghoulish to many, who literally took to their heels at the sight
of this "puffing devil". The electric bulb had its early
detractors, some of whom were candle-makers whose dislike for the
glowing glass had an obvious reason.
Although research into cellular science has not revealed any
definite link between usage and disease, one would do well to
exercise restraint. It must not be forgotten that most of the
study has been conducted by mobile telephone makers themselves,
and there is this sneaking suspicion that they can be withholding
vital information from the people, similar to the way some major
tobacco companies manipulated facts to safeguard their commercial
interests.
So, some countries, like for instance, Britain and the U.S.,
have, as a measure of abundant caution, made it compulsory for a
cellular instrument to carry a declaration of the radiation level
it discharges. Despite all this, the number of "mobile maniacs"
is growing. Globally, it is about 600 million today, and is
expected to touch 1.5 billion in the next five years.
In India, the problem has not yet reached a level to cause undue
concern. There are not too many cellular telephones going around
- there are three million plus (compare this with China's 105
million) - but their number is bound to shoot up, now that they
are becoming increasingly affordable.
With the prices of handsets (particularly in the grey market) and
call charges diving, Chennai's growth rate has caught up with the
other metros. It was 100 per cent last year, though the total
number of mobile users in the city - 90,000 - is far below
Mumbai's 400,000, and Delhi's almost 400,000. Kolkata claims to
have touched the 100,000 mark.
Chennai started as a very conservative market, says RPG's vice-
president, M. Padmanaban. It has always been a slow adapter, but
it is picking up now, especially among the business classes,
which see a tremendous potential in cellular communication. The
pre-paid card has really helped the small trader, because he
feels that "the expense is within his full control".
Yet, Chennai and the rest of India have still a long way to go
before they can match Malaysia's 20 per cent penetration and
China's eight percent.
However, this is perhaps the right time for every man and woman
to decide how much of a mobile prisoner he or she would like to
be.
Communication is fine, but when it becomes compulsive, even
something as handy as the cellular telephone can be distracting
and distasteful. And, who knows, a threat to our well-being.
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