SOMETIMES IT'S JUST EASIER TO USE A PENCIL
I wonder sometimes how I got along without many of today's
technological marvels. The personal computer is the one that stands
out most to me but before I get into that, I decided to list some of
the technology items that I now take for granted, yet make my life
all the more sweeter.
The cell phone certainly is up near the top of the list. Used to be
when I left the house, I was pretty much incommunicado to my family,
friends and business associates until I got to the office where I
could be reached once again. Today, I can't imagine being so
inaccessible yet that's the way it was back then.
I can't watch TV anymore without a DVR. Not being able to pause and
rewind live TV when the phone rings or whatever distraction comes
along is simply intolerable. Being able to record TV programs
automatically or at the touch of a button has become as important as
the TV viewing experience itself.
And how did I tolerate film in my camera? I actually had to drive to
the local store to get my rolls of film developed and then had to
drive back another day to claim them. Today, I use my computer to
download the digital images I take with my camera and instantly
print them. Or if I have a large numbers of prints, I can simply
send them via the Internet and have them waiting for me at my local
drug store.
The list goes on and on but let me now focus in on the personal
computer. All the ways my computer makes my life easier is way too
expansive for me to write in a single column and quite frankly, I
wouldn't want to bore you with it. Suffice to say that my writing,
banking, accounting, shopping, music listening and searching for
anything all have been vastly improved over how I used to do them
before I owned a computer and had access to the Internet. But with
all of the countless ways technology makes our lives better, there
are some things that are just better done the old fashioned way.
I'll never forget my introduction to this revelation years ago when
I was managing a computer retail store. Back then, the trendy
computers being sold were the Apple II, the TRS-80 and the IBM PC.
An older gentleman walked into the store and began browsing through
all the available floppy disc software titles hanging on the wall.
Finally after some time had passed, he walked over to me and told me
he was thinking about buying a computer because he wanted to use it
to keep score while he and his friends played Gin Rummy at his
cabana. I looked at him for a moment and then I suggested that he
should just use a pencil and score pad.
Today I continue to see that same thinking. I just saw a bathroom
water faucet equipped with facial recognition technology. The idea
is that when you set the water temperature to how you like it, the
faucet remembers the temperature setting and associates it to your
face so that the next time you turn on the water, it's automatically
set to that temperature. It will actually do this for every member
of your family. Me, I like the water warmer when I shave than when I
brush my teeth so I'll just adjust the hot and cold spigot as I use
it thank you very much.
I'm not saying I don't like clever innovations because I really do
enjoy seeing clever applications of technology into our everyday
lives. But sometimes it just gets a bit too ridiculous. You have to
draw the line somewhere and all you really need to do that is a
pencil.
| Craig Crossman is
a McClatchy-Tribune newspaper columnist writing about computers and
technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on
computers and technology, Computer America, heard on both the Business TalkRadio
Network® and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network®, weeknights at 10PM Eastern
time. Visit his website at http://www.computeramerica.com |
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