Physical mobility and information and communication technologies (ICTs) have altered the perception of space and time. They influence the way we perceive distances as shrinking (Harvey 1989) or increasing (Giddens 1990), by providing the users of these technologies with a possibility of communication while on the move. Although the use of ICTs may lead to a false perception of location and distance as less important, “distance still matters a lot to people, as does place” (Bærenholdt and Granås 2008: 7). Mobile communication technologies foster attachment to places by creating a renewed interest in location. Networking and mobile technologies can “only contribute to material, social and cultural reconfigurations of places and distances” (ibid...