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Friday 14 April 2017

Good Friday !
Happy Easter All...

It's day 14 of 30 poems in 30 days and we are still going strong !
Today's guest poet is the Sensational Susan McCartney.

A great little ditty based on our love for our smart phones !



THE DAWN OF THE LIVING SMOMBIES

The world has…..
Gone to hell in a handcart
The culprits? Phones not smart!
Unfocused, unheeding – hordes of zombies
Phones to ears – walking smombies

Eyes down, they’ll be sorry
In the path of oncoming lorry
Walking dead! What are you thinking?
You’ve no idea. Your brains are shrinking

As you shuffle on the street
Looking down, towards your feet
Bobbing to the music’s beat
You’ll fail to spot
That pile that’s hot

Finger-twitching slouching herd
Glazed-eyed dead to the world
Ooops!
Another smombie stepped in a turd

Lovers?  Are you so averse?
To look up – to converse
Eyes down, texting, sexting, fingers tapping
Your knuckles need a rapping

But patience put to test
On the bus, the mobile pest
Personal information he bellows
Loud and thick those ignorant fellows

Get off the bus, leave us alone
And where to stick your mobile phone
It’s likely to make you rave and rant
But enough of this foolish cant

I’ve a friend to meet
I can see her standing on the street
She’s waving I can see her face

But I better phone just in case


Interesting Facts About Mobile Phone :-

The first mobile telephone call was made on April 3, 1973 by Martin Cooper, a former Motorola inventor, who is known as "the father of the cellphone".
The weight of the phone used to make that call was about the same as a bag of sugar (2lb). The brick–like battery required, which allowed a talk time of just 30 minutes and took 10 hours to charge, made carting it around even more of a chore.
A decade later in 1983 the first mobile phones went on sale in the US costing about £2,500 each. By 1990 there were a million users.
The first mobile phone call made in the UK was in 1985 when comedian Ernie Wise called from London to Vodafone's offices in Newbury, Berkshire. Mobile phones went on sale here two years later costing £1,200 each and became the must–have gadget of the yuppie. They entered popular culture when Del Boy was seen brandishing one in hit TV series Only Fools And Horses. Nine out of 10 adults in the UK now have a mobile phone.
Voicemail was first added to mobile phones in 1986, followed 10 years later by the first laborious internet access from handsets.
The bestselling single model is the Nokia 1100, made in Finland. More than 250million devices were snapped up, also making the phone the top–selling electrical gadget in history, ahead of the PlayStation 2. The phones are still highly sought after on the second–hand market and sales boomed after a false rumour that a software glitch allowed fraudulent bank transactions to be carried out using the device.
Mobile phone texting was first introduced 21 years ago. Neil Papworth, a 22–year–old software programmer from Reading, sent the first message when he wished his friend Richard Jarvis of Vodafone: "Merry Christmas." At the time mobile phones didn't have keyboards so it was sent via personal computer.
The first photo to be shared using a mobile phone was taken in 1997 by Philippe Kahn. He sent snaps from the maternity ward where his daughter Sophie was born. Kahn, an inventor from France, is credited with developing the world's first camera phone.
Celina Aarons, from Florida, is thought to hold the dubious honour of having racked up the highest ever mobile phone bill. She neglected to change her calling plan to an international one when the phone was used for two weeks in Canada. The result was a £142,000 bill, which was later reduced to £1,800 by the phone company.
In the UK a mobile phone is stolen every three minutes. The Metropolitan Police claim that such thefts account for one third such thefts account for one third of all street robberies in London. Inventors are working on the idea of keeping your sim card safe by inserting it into your forearm.
The Sonim XP3300 Force is recognised by the Guinness World Records as the toughest phone. It survived after an 84ft drop on to a layer of concrete without suffering any operational damage.
Drivers' reactions are a third slower when talking on a handheld mobile than when under the influence of alcohol.
Fake trees and cacti, which are used to conceal mobile phone masts, have become an art form and featured in photographic exhibitions. Following complaints about the appearance of the 40,000 masts in the UK, companies have developed ingenious disguises. Next time you're out take a closer look at that chimney, clock, drainpipe or weather vane.
The first cell phone to be used by James Bond was an Ericsson JB988 in Tomorrow Never Dies in 1997. The handset contained various fictional extras such as a fingerprint scanner, lock pick, stun gun and remote control for 007's BMW car.

Poetry Challenge

NaPoWriMo, or National Poetry Writing Month, is an annual project in which participating poets attempt to write a poem a day for the month of April.
NaPoWriMo
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1 comment:

  1. Good job I do most of my texting sitting down!! Well done, once again, Susan!!

    ReplyDelete