All this work had me feeling a little blue, and after my weekend of hockey and overnight data center upgrades I decided to treat myself. Well, honestly, gravity scored an assist. I've had a standard clamshell cell phone with, shall I say, minimal functionality. It performed all the necessary functions of a cell phone: dial in, accept calls, text, voice mail, caller id. It even had a camera, but there was no way to get the pictures off the camera without paying for a picture text and my inner miser couldn't handle that. This phone has also withstood some heavy beatings, lots of drops, and general misuse. I actually had it long enough to necessitate replacing the battery as it could no longer hold enough charge to facilitate a fifteen minute phone call. I'm used to it. It's familiar.

I found that I could use the phone with it attached to a headset with mic boom. I spent the next couple days walking around with a wire in my phone holding "stumpy" and dialing out to people who had numbers I remembered. And then I got the hook up.
Romeo helped me out with some discount action on a brand new iPhone. Quite a leap from stumpy clamshell. The interface is excellent although it's taken a little work to get familiar with the touch screen. I've experienced one glitch in operating it so far, but I'll spare you the details. The moral of that side story is that I couldn't be bothered to get upset with the error. In fact this product is so cool I found myself being quite patient in wanting to figure out what the matter was. Anyone who has ever seen me in front of a fussy electronic device has been treated to a colorful spew of expletives. I've spent the last couple days consoling my over worked self with the colorful glow illuminating the crystal clear images on this incredible toy.
Major toy purchases always make me a little elated and edgy followed by some sort of techno-purchase afterglow crash. When I first heard of technology addiction I dismissed the notion as absurd alarmism from a group of sanctimonious busy bodies. What's wrong with being connected at all times? What's wrong with having a device that makes that experience better? What's wrong with pursuing better? Of course, it's that pursuit of better and a search for the external that rests at the core of addiction. I've read that a person is considered to have a technology problem if one spends more time with the technology than with people. I find that to be a facile explanation. People drive technology. We haven't figured out a way to create self-replicating data boards yet. So at the end of every interaction with a piece of technology there is a person who created it.
To me a problem exists when an individual has trouble connecting with oneself, and that is hard for an external observer to quantify. I'd like to sit with a corporate psychologist and ask her how that makes her feel.
I'm going to let that be the end of my rambling. I think working all these hours is making me a tidge punchy.
1 comment:
Yay, iPhone!! I hope you love it! It's pretty. :-)
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