"A cell phone does much more than make calls for the 'single mobile female,'" Randy Smith, vice president of Channel Marketing for Samsung, said in a statement. "The cell phone is an integral part of the SMF's life, serving as a pocket-size detective, matchmaker, wing-woman and beyond. It is now officially a girl's best friend."
Overseas, cell phone companies are already attempting to deal with text shame. In Australia, Virgin Mobile's Dialing Under the Influence program allows users to dial 333 and then the number they want to block at the beginning of the night; the women will not be able to contact that number until 6 a.m the next morning.
Twenty-seven-year-old Samantha Tabes from Falls Church, Va., who said her phone is her livelihood, could have used such a service in nights past.
One night she called an ex-boyfriend while she was out and didn't remember it.
"I was surprised to find him at my house when I got home," Tabes said. "I didn't realize that I texted him until the next day."
She's also had accidental texting mixups.
"I've texted something about someone to the person I was talking about accidentally," she said.
According to the survey, cell phones are beginning to replace everyday items. More than seven out of 10 women have ditched the traditional paper address book in favor of cell phones and nearly 75 percent of women surveyed said that they look at their cell phones rather than a watch to get the time.
Eighty-two percent of single Southern women store all their contacts in their cell phones, compared with 64 percent of Midwesterners, 70 percent of Westerners and 71 percent of Northeasterners.
By MICHAEL WARGO
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