Communications Major
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Communications Major
Shifts and nuances in the way we communicate online.
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Are Teenagers Replacing Drugs With Smartphones?

Are Teenagers Replacing Drugs With Smartphones? | Communications Major | Scoop.it

Amid an opioid epidemic, the rise of deadly synthetic drugs and the widening legalization of marijuana, a curious bright spot has emerged in the youth drug culture: American teenagers are growing less likely to try or regularly use drugs, including alcohol.

With minor fits and starts, the trend has been building for a decade, with no clear understanding as to why. Some experts theorize that falling cigarette-smoking rates are cutting into a key gateway to drugs, or that antidrug education campaigns, long a largely failed enterprise, have finally taken hold.

But researchers are starting to ponder an intriguing question: Are teenagers using drugs less in part because they are constantly stimulated and entertained by their computers and phones?

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Tech Predictions for 2013: It's All About Mobile

Tech Predictions for 2013: It's All About Mobile | Communications Major | Scoop.it

People now spend 37% of online time on mobile devices - smartphones and tablets.

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When BlackBerry Reigned (the Queen Got One!), and How It Fell

When BlackBerry Reigned (the Queen Got One!), and How It Fell | Communications Major | Scoop.it

A short history of BlackBerry smartphones, which now may be destined to become relics.

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A Hardy Group Holds Out on Smartphones

A Hardy Group Holds Out on Smartphones | Communications Major | Scoop.it

If it seems everyone you know has a smartphone, think again. According to a Pew report published last year, 35 percent of Americans owned a smartphone as of May 2011. That means 65 percent still don't. And, among that group exists a hardy contingent of smartphone holdouts, people who seem like the ideal iPhone owner (under 40, urban, professional) but shun it and its app-friendly cousins for a low-tech “dumbphone.”

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