Teams around the NBA have been encouraging the use of “phone buckets” or “phone bags” in hopes to incite players to have real interactions instead of spending their meals merely looking at a screen, according to Tom Haberstroh of Bleacher Report.

The modern era and ever-evolving technology has left the NBA locker room and practice facilities full of faces glued to their phones. This has become somewhat problematic, even in places like an NBA team, where chemistry between players is of utmost necessity. The Philadelphia 76ers have been one of the first franchises to take the initiative and implement this strategy in hopes to maximize the human interaction.

This is the digital home of #TheProcess—perhaps the most viral unofficial battle cry in sports. But there are limits. The 76ers are one of several teams in the NBA that have tried to implement “phone buckets” or “phone bags” on occasion during team meals. Put the phone in the bag and, you know, have real conversations. “I’ve been on teams where you literally don’t talk to each other at dinner,” shooting guard J.J. Redick says. “Just six guys on their phones.”

Training camp chemistry has become a necessity for most NBA teams, given the usual changes on the roster and the implementation of new coaches or personnel.

Having several faces paying attention to their phones instead of developing those friendship ties could prove a deterrent to the team’s overall goal, making this a small but important adjustment heading into the regular season.