So, there will be a few more "unicorns" like Uber, or they have already been founded. Everything will happen, but not everything seems desirable. Above all, the real addiction to mobile phones of our time will lead to new jobs. California is said to have already prepared itself for mobile phone addicts. It is no longer the drug or alcohol freak who enjoys cambodia rcs data the full attention of the best psychiatrists, but the poor worm who (like a five-year-old child today) goes into a state of shock when his mobile phone is taken away or when it simply breaks. The term addiction, another finding that can already be seen in La La Land, no longer refers to partners, children, drugs, tobacco products... but to that damn smartphone. In the Los Angeles Times - the print version - I read about initial studies on four- to ten-year-old children who, when asked who they would rather not do without for the rest of their lives, father or mobile phone, 90 percent of them answered "mobile phone".
On the book table of the only remaining stationary bookstore in downtown Los Angeles (Caravan Book Store), I find "Brave New World," "1984," "We" by Yevgeny Zamyatin, and "Alice in Wonderland" prominently displayed on the first book table. On the flight back to Zurich, I happily watch "La La Land" for the third time - this masterful film that wants to convey only one thing: believe in your dreams, and your dreams will believe in you. If I write this down now in Europe, in Zurich, it sounds cheesy and terrible. But is it really.