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I’ve had a Blackberry for about 6 months now and it has changed my life. No joke. It has changed my life, but in ways that have been surprising. The amazing ease of viewing emails which appear instantaneously on its screen like text messages is notoriously mesmerizing and hard to ignore, but has allowed me real time-savings. Also, the line between my work and my life outside work has become blurred, since I am able to see any new emails I receive at just about any moment I choose, whether that moment is when I’m watching TV and there’s an ad break, when it’s late and I can’t be bothered to get up and switch on my PC, or best of all, whilst I’m in a queue or waiting for a train.
This may all sound like a horrific scenario for some people who delight at shutting down their email service when they log off their computers every evening, content that this will mean nobody will be able to ‘get them’. But for those of us who show Generation Y tendencies towards non-stop communication and to having annoying short attention spans this is simply neat way of using ‘dead time’ effectively. Having got used to texting from a relatively young age, the impatient young upstarts that make up Generation Y are used to being contactable at most times and via multiple mediums. They are adept at organizing their time effectively in order to get the most out of their days; not content to just stand and wait like a lemon for another delayed train, or waste time on endless emails whilst they’re back in the office and have so many other things they need to do. They use ‘dead time’ as an opportunity to check their emails for anything that they could respond to now, rather than later.
Many people will also see Blackberries as inducing obsessive, addicted behaviour in their owners. But their owners/users can always, always choose when to use them; Blackberries can be set so that you don’t receive an irritating beep on receipt of a new email (and you therefore have to actually look at the thing to know about it), plus you can use filters to select the types of messages you DON’T want to receive when you’re out of the office. Moreover, remember that you can turn them off. Repeat after me “you - can - turn - them - off - you - have - the - power”.
More than that though, it’s about the user prioritizing their lives, and knowing when and when isn’t a good time to be engaging in a little cheeky email checking. A conversation with a loved one in which they are telling you something vitally important or highly personal is probably a good example of non-good time.
Penelope Trunk discussed self-discipline and Blackberries the other day. Actually, in doing so she called into question the idea of of work-life balance. This is a very interesting, and probably 100% accurate, view of 21st century careers. Speaking as a freelancer, ‘work-life balance’ is nothing but a myth. I don’t mean that to sound negative, far from it. Although the intersection between work and ‘life’ has become blurred, I see it more as being that my career is synced in with my life. My non-work life is busy and full too, but I don’t think of it as entirely separate to my career.
There is a point in every day and weekend when I ignore my Blackberry altogether or turn it off; we all need a little down time. However, my career is inextricably part of my life, and vice versa. I don’t see how it could work any other way, and I don’t want it to. Rather than running my life, my Blackberry helps me control and manage the two intertwining strands of life and work as if they were one and allows me to maximize my time in order to spend it doing the things I love, rather than spending vital time at my desk checking emails.

@ philippa - I don't have a blackberry, and I don't really like them, so there's no issue there - but I have been using palm phones almost two years. The number one thing I made sure to do was NOT enable any emailing features. For a while, I didn't subscribe to a data package because I wanted to make sure I wouldn't get online when I was away from a computer. I have a data package now, mainly because I can look up transit schedules from wherever I am.
My boss and I text each other throughout the day, so I do leave my phone on. I have stopped initiating text conversations with people, which in turn means they often don't initiate them with me. So other than texting with the boss several times a day, I've been able to get that under control.
You're right - you do have the power to turn it off. I think people know that, but they just don't think about it. Or once they are at the addictive stage, they think life will end without it. I still do have the bad habit of checking my phone if I've walked away from it for a minute or if nothing has come up in a while. I'm working on that...
@adam. Outlook notifications are definitely starting to get to me. I do leave them on at work, but I have them disabled at home.

Great post Philippa, and one I'm a definite believer in. I've been a blackberry user for a little over a year, and while I slipped into the stereotypical CrackBerry addiction for a bit after I got one, I've now reached a nice equilibrium. It's pretty much off from 7PM until 530AM, and I almost always have it set to ring for the phone only, and check emails when I want.
It's much like turning off my notification in Outlook. I don't need something popping up every time I get a copy of the latest press release.

Oh my - you hit the nail right on the head! My BB changed my life, too. I never want to turn it off. I read with it just in case I need to hope on dictionary.com to find a word. GPS is my savior. I could go on and on, but I all ready did that in my Ode to BlackBerry at http://knowledgeiscool.blogspot.com/2008/06/ode-to-blackberry.html
I just love it.

Thanks for all the responses to my post - I'm clearly not the only recovering Blackberry addict! Eva - I love your Ode to Blackberry post.