Skip to main content

National Day of Unplugging urges 24 hours of tech abstinence

national day of unpluggingTonight marks the National Day of Unplugging. It’s going to be tough and you’re not going to like it, but get a good tech binge out of your system before sundown and then disconnect from the digital world.

The holiday was started by Reboot, a group of Jewish artists who felt the need to take some timeout from technology. It began as a way to reconnect with their heritage, but has found wider popularity in our digital-consumption crazed society. The group partnered with some impressed individuals who have taken the idea and run with it. And don’t go assuming any of the holiday’s founders are tech haters: We spoke with Reboot program director Amelia Klein who told us the group includes “highly connected people from the digital and technology spheres.” One of the creators is Dan Rollman who is the president and founder of world’s record website URDB, and also supporting the cause this year is former MySpace exec Courtney Holt. Further proof it’s not anti-tech? There’s an app for National Unplugging Day, which you can have the organization send to you.

Recommended Videos

Klein also says the holiday isn’t just for extremists – she says it encourages people to make the electronic sacrifices that they can. And that might mean you simply go through a three-hour digital detox, or just eliminate television for the whole 24.

There are ten principles to observe beginning tonight that might help you get through the next 24 hours, if you choose to accept the challenge.

What it might really boil down to is keeping busy. It sounds simple to avoid one or two pieces of tech in your life (putting away the digital camera? Totally do able). But when you think about cutting off access to your precious iPhone or BlackBerry, there are those of us liable to break into a dead sweat.

So why do it? Well there are plenty of studies that say a timeout from gadgets is good for you – even if it’s just limiting yourself to one screen at a time. More and more often, we’re watching TV and simultaneously glued to a laptop, all while comforted by the smartphone in our pocket. Time correctly called this the Multitasking Generation, and it’s become increasingly true as more and more of us have access to a verifiable arsenal of gadgets.

And that’s why I’m stepping up to the plate. Five years ago I had a fraction of the technological temptation I do now: my used iBook had only Word and Internet access, and my flip-phone allotted me no more than 200 texts a month. Now, I’m saddled with an iPhone, a Kindle, software-laden notebook, Xbox, and more digital cameras than I care to say. I sleep with a phone by my bed and watch TV at the gym. So check back to see if I could make it from 24 hours starting at sundown – or possibly how long it takes me to crack.

Topics
Molly McHugh
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Before coming to Digital Trends, Molly worked as a freelance writer, occasional photographer, and general technical lackey…
This gaming PC with an RTX 4060 is on sale for $1,000 today
The iBuyPower Trace 7 on a white background.

Best Buy often has some great gaming PC deals, with one highlight available today: Right now, you can buy the iBuyPower Trace 7 gaming PC for $1,000 instead of $1,300. The PC includes the RTX 4060 GPU, so it’s ideal for mid-range gaming. It even comes with a keyboard and mouse, so you only need to make sure you have a screen to add to it. If you’re looking to upgrade your gaming PC for less, here’s what it has to offer.

Why you should buy the iBuyPower Trace 7
You won’t see anything from iBuyPower in our look at the best gaming PCs, but don’t let that discourage you. This is still a good option for those on a budget. This particular model has great hardware for the price. It has an AMD Ryzen 7 5700 CPU teamed up with 16GB of RAM and 1TB of SSD storage. More pivotal for a gaming PC is its graphics card: a GeForce RTX 4060 with 8GB of VRAM.

Read more
Google’s new Agent will power Mercedes’ next in-car AI assistant
The Mercedes MBUX

Google Cloud released its new Automotive AI Agent on Monday and has named the Mercedes-Benz CLA as the first car model to offer it later this year. The Agent will enable Mercedes' MBUX Virtual Assistant to perform a wider array of conversational functions with the vehicle's passengers.

We got our first look at Mercedes' next generation assistant a year ago, at CES 2024, though the company did not reveal which large language model underpinned its capabilities at the time. This new assistant differs from the existing MBUX that can activate around two dozen in-car commands and provide information sourced from ChatGPT and Bing. While the current generation assistant can be activated by stating "Hey, Mercedes," it functions more like Siri or Google Assistant than ChatGPT's Advanced Voice Mode, offering static responses rather than conversational replies.

Read more
Nvidia CPUs might be coming to laptops sooner than we thought
Lenovo Yoga 7 14 Gen 9 tent mode showing display and hinge.

Semiconductor manufacturer Nvidia is gearing up to be one of the major chip suppliers for AI PCs in 2025, with an upcoming system on a chip (SoC) set to be featured in a Lenovo laptop that could be announced by the middle of the year.

The company made its first run at the CPU market with Project Digits, a desktop PC that can run ChatGPT locally. But it may be breaking into some more consumer-focused markets soon, too.

Read more