Posts Tagged tech sucks
New realities
I was at a conference last month.
I’ve spent many hours of the last decade in conferences of one sort or another. Mostly as a journalist where sometimes I was there to get a story and sometimes just there to learn about what the next story might be. I remember spending a day at a conference at the Wharton School of Business and coming home feeling like my head had literally expanded because I had learned so much there.
Other times I’ve sat in conferences and let the spoken words wash over me as I used the time to do other things. Sort ideas, plan logistics, imagine romantic conversations, scan the room for familiar faces.
But at this last conference I went to, I realized those days are gone. I sat in the back with my laptop, catching up on some email, grateful for the wi-fi access. When I finally looked up, I marveled at all the bent heads. Was anyone paying attention to the lecture? Doing more than glancing at the images on the screen between squinting at the one on their Blackberry?
Even during the break it seemed different than the, well, old days. Sure there was still glad-handing, still obligatory hello’s when you bumped into someone at the coffee urn. But smart phones are also wielded like security blankets: Don’t talk to me right now, please, I’m picking up an urgent message, I’m needed elsewhere. I actually had a guy sit next to me at lunch chiming in boisterously on a conference call while he polished off his salad and started in on the chicken.
It strikes me as odd.
Then something else happened. My husband was laid off from his job. It was a wrenching event for our family but nothing unusual. All of us are staring down economic uncertainty in one way or another.
But the upheaval has introduced a certain amount of uncertainty — which, I have to admit, I find ridiculously exciting in some ways. For example, there is a job possibility for M. in an exotic, far-away city and me, being the change junkie, I’m all for it.
So I of course get all ahead of myself and start poking around online and find the blog of a mother of a toddler who has moved to that city from the Western United States for her husband’s job.
And I start reading. And I keep going until I have read all of the posts. And I’ve developed strong opinions about this person. I have agreed with her and disagreed. I have met her friends and gotten to know intimate details about her family. I have judged her adaptation to this new life and considered how I might do things differently. I have conjured up advice I might give her (but never left a comment on her pages) and considered whether we might be friends if we became neighbors despite our many differences.
While the potential job has receded into the rear view mirror as a crazy idea we once tossed around. I still find myself checking this woman’s blog. I feel sad that one day I’ll probably stop reading. I think I might miss her.
And that strikes me as odd.
Obsolescence
chirp
The first time you hear it, you’re never sure. Is that what I think it is? I am, of course awake, listening to the winter wind and rain pound the side of the house, wishing I could sleep. My mind, wanders aimlessly as I wait.
chirp
Yes. Yes it is. The smoke alarm. The one in the hallway. That ridiculous relic of 1970’s-era technology. Why do we still need smoke alarms?
I remember my childhood best friend, a spunky redhead named Sharon Sue, solemnly showing me a a collapsible ladder she kept under the bed of her second-floor room. Its box had a picture of a blond woman in her quilted bathrobe, clutching a toddler and climbing down the ladder from a window with flames shooting out of it, a fireman with sideburns waiting for her on the ground below.
The danger of fire somehow seemed real then in a way it doesn’t now. Especially in soggy Portland where everyone in my house (except occasionally the dog) sleeps on the ground floor within inches of a window.
chirp
Nice. Not quite loud enough to wake my sleeping husband but just enough to keep me from drifting off, back to sleep.
I know. One is supposed to replace the batteries of these ridiculous smoke alarms every year. But it seems wasteful to change out a battery before it’s done and, frankly, I’m lazy.
It’s only a matter of time before smoke alarms will seem quaint. Soon we’ll all live in smart houses with brilliant appliances and high-speed everything. The house won’t need a fire alarm because it will know better than to actually catch on fire.
chirp
I mean, I downloaded the new Firefox today and found the whole process rather cumbersome even though the download was snappy and the install painless. I mean shouldn’t my laptop just know there’s a new version of my browser and do all that on it’s own?
Then I start thinking about shrink-wrapped boxes of software on the shelves of stores like CompUSA. Yes, smoke detectors are going the way of shrink wrap. Yes, the way, as they say, of the poor, flightless Dodo.
chirp!
Is it getting more insistent. And annoying.
I picture getting up, dragging a chair over to the floor beneath my bane and reaching up to wrench it off the ceiling, opening the back door and tossing it outside. Yes, I suppose I could just replace the battery, but the chances of me figuring out how to take out the old one, let alone locating the proper replacement battery somewhere in the house are about equal with the odds of me, oh I don’t know, becoming a celebrated opera singer.
But I have to do something. So I wake up Mike. He gets up, pees, and stands listening in the middle of the room. For at least a minute.
The chirping, it seems, has stopped on its own.