Are you using technology rudely at work? The continual introduction of new personal devices can make it difficult for even those with the best of intentions to know. According to Barbara Pachter, ...
In today's Miss Manners column, advice columnist Judith Martin responds to when automated responses are acceptable and why ...
Of all the various etiquette guides to emerge with prescriptions for the inaugural class of Glassholes, there has been one recurring piece of advice that probably won't please Google: The most polite ...
First, let me start by saying I'm no "Emily Post" or "Dear Abby." But it's often said that one of the biggest problems people have is communicating with each other. My experience is that face-to-face ...
It's been more than two days since The New York Times's Nick Bilton typed his tirade on digital etiquette, effectively declaring the end of nice when it comes to voicemails and emails and more, and ...
Here's the scene: You're out for lunch or dinner with three or four others, sitting at your table, chatting away. But then you notice that suddenly you've lost Brad. His head droops. His hands are in ...
Carol Newbauer can't live without her cell phone. Actually, it's two cell phones -- one for work and one for personal calls -- which are both with her almost every second of the day, and in ...
From call answering to voicemails, smartphones have created a whole new sort of etiquette. WSJ’s Joanna Stern enlisted 89-year-old artist Burt Silverman to get perspective on how things have changed.
NEW YORK, Feb 25 (Reuters Life!) - Whether is it texting during dinner, talking on a cellphone in a public restroom or using a laptop while driving, most people think mobile etiquette is getting worse ...
NEW YORK, Jan 8 (Reuters Life!) - Thank you notes, once feared a dying form of correspondence, are making a comeback via e-mail and text messaging but etiquette experts are reluctant to endorse ...