Get paid $2,400 to ditch your tech for 24 hours
The pandemic has reinforced the importance of technology in our lives. Remote work enables us to keep our jobs while maintaining social distance. Some children are doing the same with remote learning. We can attend weddings, birthdays and conferences without having to leave home.
No matter how entrenched your life is in tech, there’s always more to learn and do. Tap or click here for 10 tech tricks you may not know about.
As much as we’ve benefited from the digital age, we can all use a break now and then. This can range from putting your phone on silent to setting up an autoresponder for your email while you decompress. You can go the extreme route and do a complete digital detox, but that needs some serious commitment. We’ll tell you about one company that is offering all the motivation you need to unplug.
Put down the phone
It’s great to have instant information at our fingertips, but there are drawbacks. It’s tempting to idly scroll through our phones when we should be doing other things like resting. Tap or click here for 10 ways to get better sleep.
A report from Reviews.org shows that 75% of Americans consider themselves addicted to their phones, and 65% check their phones an average of 160 times per day. Wow, that’s a lot.
Can you take a break from tech for 24 hours? Review.org will give you $2,400 if you can do it. It sounds easy, but it entails more than simply ignoring your phone. Read on for details.
Here’s the catch
To be eligible for the prize, you must go 24 hours without your phone, television, gaming consoles, handheld devices, computers/laptops, smartwatches, wearable tech or any smart home devices, including speakers. The rules state that you can use a microwave to heat food, so the same should go for air fryers.
How to apply
If you think you’re up for the digital detox challenge, go to reviews.org/internet-service/digital-detox-challenge/#Dates_and_Details to apply. You must be 18 or older and eligible to work in the U.S. (Note: There is a separate challenge for Australia.)
Applications are open until 5 p.m. MST on Friday, March 26. Accepted applicants will be announced on Reviews.org’s YouTube channel on March 29.
Check your kid's phone for these apps and remove them NOW
Most parents have to answer this frightening question, eventually. “When is it time to get my kids their own smartphone?”
Their fears are justified because so many things can go wrong when technology and the internet are involved. One example is how tech affects a child’s development. Tap or click here to see how too much screen time changes the way kids’ brains develop.
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Think about what we had to go through to sign documents and send them back in olden times. If the person wasn’t in the same room, you probably had to print it out on paper, sign it with a pen, snail mail it or scan it on your PC and email it back.
Tech how-to: Convert old CDs, tapes and vinyl to digital
Do you remember the last time you listened to music on a CD? If not, you’re not alone. As we’ve transitioned into the digital age, many of our media staples like discs, tapes and records have gone the way of the dinosaurs in favor of streamed digital files from subscription services.