Ethnography of the Telephone: Changing Uses of Communication Technology in Village Life

Posted by ccarlon on Jan 27, 2012
Author: 
Wang, Tricia and Barry Brown
ISSN/ISBN Number: 
978
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Publication Date: 
Sep 2011
Publisher/Journal: 
MobileHCI 2011
Publication language: 
English
Abstract: 

While mobile HCI has encompassed a range of devices and systems, telephone calls on cellphones remain the most prevalent contemporary form of mobile technology use. In this paper we document ethnographic work studying a remote Mexican village’s use of cellphones alongside conventional phones, shared phones and the Internet. While few homes in the village we studied have running water, many children have iPods and the Internet cafe in the closest town is heavily used to access YouTube, Wikipedia, and MSN messenger. Alongside cost, the Internet fits into the communication patterns and daily routines in a way that cell phones do not. We document the variety of communication strategies that balance cost, availability and complexity. Instead of finding that new technologies replace old, we find that different technologies co-exist, with fixed telephones co-existing with instant message, cellphones and shared community phones. The paper concludes by discussing how we can study mobile technology and design for settings defined by cost and infrastructure availability.

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Citation: 
Wang, Tricia and Barry Brown. “Ethnography of the Telephone: Changing Uses of Communication Technology in Village Life.” MobileHCI (2011): 37 - 46.
Featured?: 
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Ethnography of the Telephone: Changing Uses of Communication Technology in Village Life data sheet 2086 Views
Author: 
Wang, Tricia and Barry Brown
ISSN/ISBN Number: 
978
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Publication Date: 
Sep 2011
Publisher/Journal: 
MobileHCI 2011
Publication language: 
English
Abstract: 

While mobile HCI has encompassed a range of devices and systems, telephone calls on cellphones remain the most prevalent contemporary form of mobile technology use. In this paper we document ethnographic work studying a remote Mexican village’s use of cellphones alongside conventional phones, shared phones and the Internet. While few homes in the village we studied have running water, many children have iPods and the Internet cafe in the closest town is heavily used to access YouTube, Wikipedia, and MSN messenger. Alongside cost, the Internet fits into the communication patterns and daily routines in a way that cell phones do not. We document the variety of communication strategies that balance cost, availability and complexity. Instead of finding that new technologies replace old, we find that different technologies co-exist, with fixed telephones co-existing with instant message, cellphones and shared community phones. The paper concludes by discussing how we can study mobile technology and design for settings defined by cost and infrastructure availability.

Countries: 
Upload Paper: 
Citation: 
Wang, Tricia and Barry Brown. “Ethnography of the Telephone: Changing Uses of Communication Technology in Village Life.” MobileHCI (2011): 37 - 46.
Featured?: 
No

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