Computers -- not for everyone
Published: Sunday, March 14th, 2004
I am not good with computers. For heaven’s sake, the only web I know anything about is Charlotte’s.
I admit it. I am not computer literate. I’m still trying to figure out how to work the little paddles in Pong. When it comes to using my fingers on a keyboard, my wife says I am digitally challenged. which to me sounds as if I have a finger or toe missing. But my wife assures me that it merely means I’m an idiot in things like typing (somehow that doesn’t sound a great deal better than my original misinterpretation, but at least I have all my fingers...and toes).
I think everyone knows we are in an increasingly computer-oriented society today, and I’m not overly happy about it.
For instance, the other day, I noticed that the guy checking the gas meter in back of my house had a little electronic looking gadget on his hip, and I asked him about it.
(Isn’t “The Net” something you use after you’ve hooked a fish?)
“It’s a computer uplink to a satellite feed to the home office,” he said.
Take into consideration that this was a young man that I happen to know flunked ‘Stove’ when he was in Home Ec. class in high school and now he is talking about uplinks to satellite feeds? How did I get left so far behind?
Granted, they wouldn’t even let me near the stove while I was in high school.
My wife contends there were no stoves when I was in high school. She says back then everyone in Home Ec. class cooked woolly mammoth meat over campfires. Which I think is a mean-spirited exaggeration (although I will say woolly mammoth is really good when grilled).
Cars have long been intellectually out of my league (not to mention financially) but recently they have gone completely high tech.
I was looking at an SUV the other day and the salesman made it a point to tell me the car had a Global Positioning Device installed. (Isn’t “RAM” the Colorado State University mascot or is it a Dodge pickup?)
Yes, I know I get lost easily, but a Global Positioning Device? Let me get this straight, I am going to buy this car so I can bounce a signal off a billion dollar device hovering hundreds of miles above the earth so It can in turn call up a complex electronic map and bounce a message back to me to tell me I am stuck in a ditch in a cow pasture near Franklin McCasland’s place? or that I just hit a moose somewhere south of House?
The only thing such a device could do for me would be to settle my arguments with my wife, which is the last thing I need.
Now, when I am lost, I drive around in circles until: (A.) I find myself and thus I can claim I knew where I was all along, or (B.) my wife falls asleep, and I flag down any approaching vehicle or go to any nearby house and get directions and thus when my wife wakes up, I claim I knew where we were all along.
“Look at the GPD,” she would say if we had the device. “We’re lost!”
“No, No,” I would say trying to look knowledgeable. “That’s sunspot interference. It often happens this time of day.”
“It’s the middle of the night!” she would respond.
“Oh,” I would riposte. “Then that’s really dangerous. Yep, obviously we’ve established contact with an extra terrestrial, a UFO. We had better keep driving in circles, it will probably confuse them.”
(I do know that “hard drive” is any trip to visit my wife’s family.)
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