Unplug Challenge

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  • Mid-Day.com

    January 30th, 2012 by admin

    Get Ready for Sabbath

    An offshoot of the Slow Movement, the Sabbath Manifesto has taken hold of the urban Indian psyche, with men and women around the country, and even abroad, turning to the 10 principles of the Manifesto, expounded over a website, to cut the fat from their hectic lives. Top on their list: Avoid technology, connect in person

    Proteeti Chandra, a 40 year-old educationist based in South Mumbai loves her Apple Macbook, her two dogs and her weekly game of tennis, in that order. A few weeks ago, however, when she came across a link on a friend’s Facebook wall, it struck her that perhaps, something’s got to give.

    Read the full article here

  • Newstime.com

    January 30th, 2012 by admin

    Sabbath Gives Us Time to Breathe

    I no longer read email or spend time on Facebook on Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath (Shabbat). I need to stop and take a deep breath.

    Shabbat is commanded in the Torah as the day God rested after the six days of creation. It is a remembrance of the creation of the world and the Israelites’ Exodus from Egyptian slavery. It is an observance and awareness of making the day of rest holy.

    Shabbat is a spiritual oasis at the end of an arid week, a time to breathe, detach from daily concerns and acknowledge the world beyond ourselves.

    Read Penny Kessler’s full article here

  • Fort Wayne Journal Gazette

    January 12th, 2012 by admin

    Many Americans first learned the term “digital detox” when musician John Mayer completed a one-week detox in 2010 and encouraged his fans to do the same.

    Digital Detox Week, an annual event in April, is gaining in popularity. National Day of Unplugging is set for March 23 and 24 this year.

    Excessive connectedness is straining our bodies and brains, says Kim John Payne, author of “Simplicity Parenting: Using the Extraordinary Power of Less to Raise Calmer, Happier, and More Secure Kids.”

    Read the full article here

  • J Weekly

    January 6th, 2012 by admin

    Do you want to spend your life checking Facebook updates?

    In 1983 I was the only kid in my neighborhood who didn’t have a television. In fact, I was such an anomaly that our local newspaper, the Cambridge Chronicle, profiled my family in a piece about growing up TV-free. It ranks among the better decisions that my father made in regards to child-rearing, and it is, in part, why I became a writer. While other kids were watching “Chips,” I was reading “The Diary of Anne Frank.”

    Not surprisingly, I was also among the last of my friends to join Facebook. I did it reluctantly, and only in the wake of a breakup that had left me feeling bereft and in need of connecting. At the time I was living in Los Angeles, where I served as West Coast correspondent for the Forward newspaper, and between being new to L.A. and suddenly without the boyfriend who had become my best friend, it seemed like a decent idea.

    Read the full article here

  • Beta Beat

    January 6th, 2012 by admin

    Predictions! What do New York techies think will happen to the internet-centric economy in 2012? We asked some smart founders, VCs and members of the startup ecosystem where they think tech, the internet and the New York tech scene are headed in 2012 (assuming the world doesn’t end either due to the apocalypse or SOPA, that is). Without further ado!

    Read the full article here

  • KQED Radio – NDU a Break from Digital Jungle

    March 29th, 2011 by admin

    A Call to Take a One-Day Vacation From the Digital Jungle
    Listen up you iPhone, Blackberry, texting, Tweeting social media junkies. Tonight at sundown is the second annual National Day of Unplugging. You can think of it like digital detox—the idea is to recharge by going without computers, cell phones, or any technology for a full 24 hours.

    Host Kelly Wilkinson talks about the challenge of going without your digital connections with Tanya Schevitz, spokeswoman for Reboot.

    Hear the entire interview here.

  • All Things D: Unplug with the App

    March 4th, 2011 by admin

    It’s Time Again For “National Day of Unplugging” and Ironically Enough, There’s an App For That

    By Ina Fried

    All Things D

    Read the entire post in the Mobilized blog here.

    In case you haven’t heard, tonight is the start of the second annual “National Day of Unplugging”–a grassroots effort to get people to shut off our precious mobile devices, if only for a day. The two-year-old project encourages all of us iPhone addicts and CrackBerry enthusiasts to turn off our cell phones for 24 hours in an effort to reconnect with the world.

    And yes, for those who need it, there’s an app for that. In a new twist this year, the backers of the event have created an iPhone, Android and Web apps that can both remind users to shut off their device as well as alert social media connections of why they will be offline. The apps were created by a team from Washington, DC-based Revolution Messaging. The Web app can even be sent to a device via text message by testing REBOOT to 738674.Among those backing the project this year is Courtney Holt, who until recently was head of MySpace Music.

    “You can’t always do it, but I think it is something worth trying,” Holt told Mobilized. Holt said he would have liked to take part last year but that the event conflicted with duties related to South By Southwest conference, which was taking place at the same time.

    I teased him that perhaps it was easier for him to unplug this year since he is between gigs. He assured me that he is still plenty busy, but said he couldn’t really talk about what he is up to. That said, he said he is looking forward to taking part this year and hopes others in his social circle will do the same.

    Holt also said he was aware of the irony of the fact that the company is using a mobile app to promote taking a break from mobile apps.

    “As ironic as it is that we created an app to do it, sometimes you need a tap on the shoulder,” Holt said.

    For National Day of Unplugging, people are being encouraged to turn off their devices from sundown on Friday until Sundown on Saturday. The backers have also partnered with San Francisco Bay Area-based Volunteer Match to give people options of what to do with their hands when they aren’t texting or catapulting red birds into a pile of bricks.

    It grew out of a larger effort, known as Reboot, that is pushing for more frequent downtime, encouraging weekly breaks as part of a “Sabbath Manifesto” designed to allow people to redefine the notion of a day of rest. Among the creators of the Sabbath Manifesto is Dan Rollman, who founded the Universal World Record Database, an online database that aims to do to the Guinness Book of World Records what Wikipedia has done to the encyclopedia.

    Although the Sabbath Manifesto project has Jewish origins, Holt said tech addicts of all faiths (or no faith at all) can get something out of the act of unplugging.

    “It came out of a Jewish conversation, but I dont think there’s anything inherently Jewish,” Holt said.

    Mobilized is strongly considering turning off the phone (well, all the phones) but not sure how that will go over with the BoomTown boss. Holt did say he’d write me a permission slip.

  • WSJ: Group Offers Sleeping Bags For Smartphones

    March 4th, 2011 by admin

    By Michael Hickins, Wall Street Journal

    Reboot, a Jewish non-profit based in New York, has a novel way to encourage people to take a day off from digital communication — it is handing out “sleeping bags” so people can put their smartphones “to sleep.”

    It’s all part of the second annual National Day of Unplugging, which begins at sundown today and goes through sundown tomorrow. Reboot launched the day last year as a way of promoting its Sabbath Manifesto.

    The group hopes that the National Day of Unplugging will inspire people to unplug one day of every week, and recapture the “real interconnections between people,” Tanya Schevitz, a spokesperson for Reboot told Digits. “People are overwhelmed by the relentless deluge of information in their lives.”

    Read the entire article here.

  • CNN: Craving a Respite From Technology

    March 4th, 2011 by admin

    Dan Rollman, founder of the Sabbath Manifesto with Reboot, tells CNN’s Carol Costello why a weekly day of unplugging is beneficial to us all.

    See the video here.

  • SF Examiner: App to Help Wean Tech Addicts

    March 4th, 2011 by admin

    By Dan Schreiber, SF Examiner

    A new mobile-phone application is designed to reduce the use of the ubiquitous devices — an irony that is not lost on the people behind the new “Sabbath Manifesto” program.

    “Yes, it’s using a high-tech app to tell people you’re having a low-tech day,” said Tanya Schevitz, a spokesperson for Reboot Communications who is promoting the app in conjunction with the second annual National Day of Unplugging that goes from sundown Friday to sundown on Saturday. “We’re not anti-technology. The idea is to take a pause and reconnect with people lost in this deluge of information.”

    The Sabbath app lets users post a message to their Facebook and Twitter accounts that they are having a “digital detox,” among other stock status updates. The app also promotes 10 principles of Sabbath in the modern world, including avoiding commerce, lighting candles, drinking wine and giving back.

    Read the entire article here.

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