Although the hype and media opinions have focused on the negative side of these expensive gadgets it is not without cause. Happy ending stories like the one above are far and few between and even in the short lived history of these phones they have been used illegally or for illegal purposes on numerous occasions. It has been such a worry for the thirds largest mobile phone manufacturer that they have banned them in their office buildings to prevent spies from having an easy time. Samsung the very company that pioneered the sticking of a lens into a phone have banned them on the factory floors, the office buildings and corridors and have even gone to the extent of fitting X-ray machines that will sound warning if a person has one on their person. A Samsung Official was asked about this latest ruling and he stated that, “camera phones are handy and the quality is so good it can be used for Industrial Espionage”. So whilst trying to justify the ban from the very place that they were invented he also got in a good bit of advertising.
At 400,000 Won (300 GBP), a third of a typical households monthly income these phones are expensive. But it has not prevented a country were 3/4 of the population possess a mobile phone and were all have become crazed over them. Their popularity is soaring, their uses are multiplying and their dependency is increasing on a daily basis. Everybody must have one; everybody will scrimp and save on food and clothes until they have one and without which life is not worth getting up in the morning for.
Since their introduction in 2001, one fifth of mobile phone carriers now have a camera type one. It is not just the camera that attracts such fervor and desperation to own one. As one Korean housewife called Moon Ae-ran said, “I can turn on the washing machine and other home appliances with my mobile phone even when I am out shopping”. In fact she went on further to say that, “How can I live without this thing?”
“A mobile phone can get you to your destination, for example, the closet, gas station or whatever” said Lee Sang Chul. Mr Lee is a thirty seven year old business man who spends 200GBP on his phone bills every month. How he has survived without it is anybodies guess and how he has ever managed to conduct business when he doesn’t even know where his closet is even harder to imagine but such is life in Korea. He went on to say that “it has so many cool functions. It’s a part of my life”.
Back at Koreas majority phone producers’ headquarters workers and visitors are trying to come to grips with a life without a phone. Directors are desperately reading instruction manuals on ‘How to Use a Land Line Phone’ and workers are queuing up to use coin phones that have been dusted off and re-installed.