
- •О.А.Артеменко
- •Методические рекомендации по работе с пособием
- •What are the world's most widely spoken languages?
- •The Résumé Secret Employers Love and Job Seekers Rarely Use
- •Unit 3
- •9 Things You Should Never Say in an Interview
- •1. "What does your company do?"
- •2. "My salary requirements are very flexible."
- •Unit 4
- •12 Crucial Tips for Interview Looks
- •Will a Bigger Salary Make You Happier?
- •It Isn’t Easy Being Wealthy
- •Http://msn.Careerbuilder.Com/custom/msn/careeradvice/viewarticle.Aspx
- •Will a Bigger Salary Make You Happier?
- •Unit 6
- •Smart home dream could be for all
- •Unit 7
- •Technology evolution brings new ways to pay Cashless payments becoming quicker, more secure, more fun
- •Us school swaps10 books for bytes
- •Unit 9
- •Uk firms get fresh hacker warning
- •Structured and organised
- •Alert and aware
- •Up to you
- •Unit 10
- •Mobile phone Part 1 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- •Worldwide deployment3
- •Mobile phone culture
- •Part 2 Health controversy
- •Driving controversy
- •Security concerns
- •Additional reading.
- •Tech Support
- •Section 2 Text 1
- •Wimbledon begins
- •How Safe Is Grilled Food?
- •Adobe shares dip as it plays safe
- •Text 4
- •Ikea plans small high street shop
- •Text 5
- •Ears recommended for biometrics
- •Microsoft steps up piracy fight
- •Germany shows signs of recovery
- •Text 10
- •Phone technology aids uae dating
- •Instant messaging
Text 10
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/4718697.stm
Phone technology aids uae dating
By Heather Sharp BBC News, Dubai 29 July 2005
As part of a series on young people in the Middle East, the BBC News website discovers how technology is aiding the secret liaisons of young men and women in the conservative culture of the United Arab Emirates.
It happens in malls, cinemas and cafes - in Dubai's notorious traffic jams, and now by mobile phone. Many of the city's black-shrouded UAE girls say they cannot check out the latest fashions in Zara or sip a smoothie in a cafe without being bombarded with the phone numbers of hopeful admirers.
Among UAE nationals - as the minority of the UAE's residents that are not expatriates are called - it is generally considered impolite for a man to speak to a woman he is neither married nor related to in public. Traditionally, a young man's first amorous approach to a woman is supposed to be a marriage proposal made by his parents to her parents. But the cards, scraps of paper and mobile phone messages that pass from male to female are testament to the double existence of some young UAE nationals as they take their love lives into their own hands.
Wireless advances
One technology is proving particularly useful.
Bluetooth is a feature built into some mobile phones which enables the user to transfer data to another wireless device nearby. But crucially, it also enables one person to contact another within a 10 metre radius without knowing their phone number.
Ahmed Bin Desmal's friends joke that he is a "Bluetooth king". The 20-year-old says he has used the technology to send notes to girls he sees in public places.
"In our country it's very rude to go up and talk to them," he says. "I sent some notes, they liked them - they took my number and they called me. I say nice things - I'm into poems."
While to many like Ahmed, Bluetooth is just a way to start a conversation, for some it can go much further.
Mohammed, 24, does not know how many girlfriends he has had. He prefers expat girls because he can take them to the beach or to parties, but finds Bluetooth useful when pursuing locals.
"In some areas you can't talk to a girl except through Bluetooth."
His flirtations by phone and other means sometimes end in sex. Even with national girls, it is possible to keep it secret: "Hotels, flats, houses, anything - there's always a way," he says.
But he wants to marry a virgin eventually: "The girls I have sex with are different from the girls I would marry - these girls want to play around," he says.
Choosing a wife
But not all are like this - far from it. At Dubai Men's College I meet several bright, studious young men. Most want to wait until they are established in careers and in their late twenties before marrying. Few have had friendships that would approach the Western definition of a girlfriend.
"If I tell you I don't think about it, it's a lie. Every day I meet a lot of women, but in the end if you can control yourself that's something good," says Salim Alakraf, 25.
For them the issue is how much they will be involved in choosing their wife.
"Nowadays people are really open-minded, although we still follow our culture. If I'm working with a girl and I think she is suitable for me, I can ask my family to go and ask her family about her to see if she is suitable," says Saeed Suwaidi, 27, the leader of the student council.
'Perfect talk'
Among national girls, it is virtually impossible for a young woman to admit to clandestine meetings with boys, although from the tales young men tell, it is clear that these take place.
Even being friends with such a girl can damage a reputation, a word that comes up often.
And while some would like to meet their future husband "by coincidence" or through work, there is still caution about "love marriages".
"I don't think I'd have a love marriage. It's not that I don't want one, but our contact with guys is not that good, and a guy talks his perfect talk when he sees a girl so it could be a misjudgement. Family marriage is a bit more risk-free," says accounting student Maryam Abdullah Bin Bilaila, 19.