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Confessions of a CrackBerry addict

Opinion: I even take it kayaking with me...

Tags: blackberry

By Simon Moores

Published: 14 September 2006 09:00 BST

Simon Moores

Simon Moores loves his BlackBerry but admits it's made him forget what it's like to switch off - and he bets he's not the only one.

You may have noticed I haven't written a column for several months - time for reflection and a sabbatical from writing after almost 25 years without a break.

Technology is rather more difficult to escape, particularly the kind offered by my BlackBerry. I've discovered during the summer while I've been building up Airads, my aviation business, that the device is quite invaluable in the cockpit as long as you don't fly too fast and too high.

As an example, earlier in the summer I had an engine starter motor problem on the way back from Devon which needed urgent attention and I knew that my aircraft engineer was on holiday in Wales.

My BlackBerry and wireless laptop give me a remarkable freedom to live and work where I want that I could never have imagined 25 years ago.

So while flying the aircraft back to base, I managed to conduct a two-way diagnostic conversation by BlackBerry SMS, which ensured, thanks to having my Outlook address book replicated on the device, that I had a second engineer and a replacement engine part available for the following morning.

I know what you're thinking: 'You're not supposed to have a mobile phone switched on when flying.' But to be honest the only problem I've noticed with having mobiles on board is that if you happen to be flying with passengers all those phones keep up a constant 'polling' noise in your headset which is annoying and distracting. Still as standby communications device they have their uses.

A few years ago I had a radio problem when coming into what is now Kent International at Manston - I could hear but I couldn't transmit. So I pulled out my phone, dialled up the operations - a number I had already stored in my address book - and shouted my problem into the phone, not certain whether I could be heard over the engine noise or not.

A couple of minutes later I heard the air traffic controller use my aircraft call sign and tell me that he understood I had a problem and that I was to follow his instructions to land, which I did, without any further hitches.

That is of course a useful face of the BlackBerry. The negative side, as many of us know is the cocaine-like addiction to the device which has given it the popular nickname 'CrackBerry'.

If, like me, you find it almost impossible to ignore the device during your waking hours and even take it kayaking with you in a plastic pouch, then it's time to recognise the warning signs of addiction.

Still my BlackBerry and wireless laptop give me a remarkable freedom to live and work where I want that I could never have imagined 25 years ago. It allows me to run two completely different businesses in situ, working with Microsoft one day and flying the next.

So if I'm hooked on the practicalities of the 'BlackBerry lifestyle', what gives me cause for concern is the pervasive spread of such devices among a new generation of young people who are already hooked on other forms of consumer technology, such as Sony's PlayStation and Apple's iPod.

Will the future be so personally wired and digitally intrusive that it will offer no place to hide, other perhaps than a Trappist monastery?

That's a real problem. Because pervasive communications technology of this kind muddies the great 'Sunday morning principle' - the great human switch-off.

In accepting the benefits of 24x7 availability I realise I've lost something equally valuable. I've forgotten how not to be at work and I wonder how many people reading this share the same problem.

Simon Moores is managing director of Zentelligence Research and vice chairman of policy development for the Conservative Technology Forum.

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