It's not, if the phone is on vibrate, and not ring.Rick Denney wrote:How is that different from a vibrating cell phone?ThomasDodd wrote:Would a vibrating pager not be just as effective?
The trouble is, more often than not the ringer stays on.
If I though 25% of the cell calls taken during a performance/rehersal/meeting were emergencies it'd be different. But after years of constant phone ringing during times when they should have been silent, I convinced that you don't really notice the users who really need them. They are the courteous users who never have the ringer on loud or answer the phone when quiet is called for.We complain that cell phone users are so wrapped up in their personal reality that they are oblivious to others, but I find that many who complain about cell phones users (including those who use them legitimately and courteously) are offended because their personal reality was invaded. I think the solution is not a ban (however localized) on cell phones, but rather that people stop being so selfish.
Rick "who suspects nobody was annoyed 60 years ago when volunteer firefighters left the summer band concert--from both audience and band--when the sirens went off" Denney
And 60 years ago, when the fire bell rang, everyone knew why people were leaving, and that it was a resonable distrubance. But joe schmoe answering his buddys call during that performance, and yapping loudly for 10 minutes is not reasonable.
I work with volunteer firmen. There pager/radio never interrups a meeting. They might a the get up and leave, but it's short, and minor. They tend to sit near the exit to minimize that.
But how do you deal with the bad apples?
Especially when they outnumber the good ones 10:1 ?