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It’s reasonable to order a meal for five cents with a paper menu.

Recently, when Ms. Chen, a Shanghai citizen, was told to eat at the restaurant, she was told that the paper menu would cost an additional 0.5 yuan. Ms. Chen believes that this is an unreasonable charge and expressed dissatisfaction with the behavior of the restaurant. The person in charge of the restaurant said that the restaurant recommends using mobile phone orders, and it has been clearly told before the order to use the paper menu that there is an extra charge, not a secret charge at checkout. At the same time, the popularity of mobile phone orders is a trend. The cost of paper menus is more than 5 hairs per paper, which is the same as the cost of paper towels and disinfection tableware. This incident triggered a heated discussion among netizens. Some netizens believed that mobile phone ordering was a trend, saving labor costs and paper. Some netizens believe that the paper menu is still the mainstream and should not be charged.
 

In fact, although Internet + catering is a trend, it should not be charged for the original service in order to comply with the trend. Regardless of whether the future mobile phone order will completely replace the paper menu, the extra charge for the paper menu is unreasonable.

 

In the past two years, we have stopped emphasizing the label of "Internet addiction teenagers". It is not that this problem has been cured. Instead, the whole people are all on the Internet. Every day, everyone has more or less Internet addiction.
 

And what is the change that will make our brains continue to be “online” with mobile phones, computers, and the Internet? Games and social networks are the main culprit in causing mental illness in adolescents? The discussion of temperature and depth in "Hijacking" is based on a 20-year clinical experience of a Ph.D. in psychology and his "brain-electricity" research as a neurocognitive scientific researcher.
 

The author examines the impact of digital media, online communities on real social life, and the madness, depression, group loneliness, compulsive search, and so on. From the perspective of neurocognitive science and psychoanalysis, the author strongly proves the relationship between digital media and brain and human behavior, and explores how mobile phones can hijack or manipulate human brains and give their own practical experience as practitioners. Suggest.