
I was reading an article this morning from the San Fransico Chronicle. Ryan Gates writes,
"... the rise of the smart phone is reordering the way people compute, allowing people to tackle tasks like e-mailing, document viewing, social networking and light browsing from their handheld. In the process, it's lessening some of the need for a laptop or desktop, both in the workplace and at home."Anyone who owns a smartphone knows this to be true. When a person gets their first smartphone, they have no idea how much it will change their life, and within a week they wonder how they got along without one. The invention of cell phones changed everything in that you could always feel connected because you could call your friends or family at anytime (my kids still can't wrap their mind around the concept that there was a time when you couldn't make a call from your car). In the same way, BlackBerrys, Palms, and iPhones have now allowed us to remained connected in a much more significant way. Whether it's, work emails, facebook, or GPS ... we are connected.
Perhaps you have not yet jumped on this bandwagon. Perhaps it all seems too indimidating. Remember how intimidating the internet once seemed? Consider joining the growing number of mobile web users.













