I have been accused of having to be dragged,
kicking and screaming, into the 21st century. This, I believe, is
not only untrue, but also an unfair assessment of who I am.
People assume that, because I don’t have the
latest model of something, I’m somehow not modern.
Not so.
I like gadgets as much as the next person. But
frequently I find myself saying, “That’s really cool. What do I do with it?”
Despite having a laptop and a Surface, I wanted
an iPad – or I thought I did.
When I got my smartphone, my phone company was
running a special deal on iPads, so I got one.
Cool.
Except the only keyboard is on-screen.
I’m a tactile kind of person who prefers the
feel of a real keyboard. But I can deal, except that I tend to make a lot more
mistakes with an on-screen keyboard. Like the phone keyboard, it tends not to
be whole hand, much less two-hand friendly.
And then there’s the fact that the iPad has no
thumb drive compatibility, so anything on the iPad is non-transferrable to any
other device unless I send my work via email. What a hassle!
So, my iPad is basically only used for an Irish
language app that I use because the iPad screen is better for that than a phone
screen.
Oh, but you can take pictures with it!
Yeah. There’s nothing dorkier, in my humble
opinion, than using something that cumbersome to take pictures. That’s what seniors do to try to prove
they’ve come into the digital age to so they don’t have to use their reading
glasses.
Oh, but games!
Do I look like I’m 10? I have no desire to get
roped into Fortnite.
I spent several months once playing Diablo in
my free time instead of doing something useful. I couldn’t get past a certain
level in that, and realized, eventually, that all I was doing was raising my
cortisol level for no very good reason. I can do that driving to work every
day.
And most of the game apps seem to be the same
game in different colors.
Having to wait through commercials is annoying,
and I don’t like any of the games enough to pay a monthly fee for them just to
skip the commercials.
Of course, I can use it for answering emails or
social media. But I prefer my laptop for that, since it has that nice clicky
keyboard that has room for two hands typing.
The only thing I hate about my laptop is the
more modern thing on it: the touchpad. No matter how I try, I can’t get the
cursor to cooperate, so I have to use a mouse, instead. I’m good with a mouse.
I just wish the mouse disabled the touchpad the way it did on my previous
laptop.
“Why don’t you just use the touch screen?”
I don’t mainly because I usually forget it has
one. I find the mouse faster, anyway. And, since it’s already connected –
So I get called a Luddite.
The first time someone called me that I had
never heard the word before. Someone had to explain it to me.
But that’s not who I am.
I also have a Surface, for no better reason
than I thought it was cool.
What I like about the Surface is that it’s
lightweight, dual voltage, and has a detachable keyboard for those of us who prefer
tactile keyboards. And, I can attach a mouse and use it just like a laptop. I
mainly use it for travel.
What I don’t like about it is it’s slow on the
internet. I don’t spend much time answering emails or going on social media
when I’m using it because the slowness is so frustrating.
Of course, that’s a good thing on vacations.
I’m not distracted by the internet. The main reason I bring it with me is to
download my pictures and title them daily so I don’t forget which castle or
cathedral I have a picture of.
Yes, I can feel your eye roll. Yes, I use a
digital camera. A DSLR. One of those big things.
Why?
It was an upgrade from my 35 mm camera that I
still have but seldom use. It takes much better pictures than the phone or a
point-and-shoot, and I can do a lot more creatively with it. I don’t have to
limit my photos because of the expense of film, and I don’t have to worry that an entire vacation’s worth of pictures didn’t come out. On my honeymoon, I lost
an entire roll of film somewhere between England and Ireland.
I still prefer the ease and the feel of the
35mm over any other camera I’ve ever used.
But you have an iPhone, you say.
Yes, I do. It’s a phone. I use it as a phone and to send texts.
True, it has a camera, which, in my opinion,
takes so-so pictures. It’s good for that in a pinch, but not for real photos.
As for the keyboard, it’s slightly better than
the one on my old flip phone, but hardly something I could comfortably type
emails, much less a blog on.
And as for reading, in a pinch, for brief periods,
I can use it in place of my Kindle.
Yes, I have a Kindle. I got it for reading when
I travel. It’s probably 10 years old by now, ancient by tech standards. But it
works. And it’s smaller than the Surface, so even though I have the Kindle app
on all of my tech appliances, it’s more convenient on a plane than pulling out
the Surface, and easier to read than using the phone. And it still works, so I
don’t need an upgrade. And I can read it outside, which I can't with other devices.
But I do prefer real books.
Even my iPhone is now two years old. It’s a 6s
that I got a few days before the iPhone X was released. Why didn’t I get the X?
Who would spend over $1,000 on a phone in the first place, much less one that
will be considered obsolete in two years? And then, there are “improvements”
that I don’t want or like. My 6s works, and is a convenient size. It will meet
my needs until it no longer works.
I’m not opposed to new things. I was raised to
take care of my things. When I was a child, if I broke something, I didn’t get
another one. Now, if I have something that works and meets my needs, I see no
reason to get another one. It rankles to have to replace something that works
because the internet companies have rendered it redundant.
I will say that I like the GPS on my phone much
better than the independent GPS that I had. That was difficult to program and
didn’t work in other countries.
But I will never be attached at the hip to a
phone.
I originally got a mobile phone because the
powers that be had done away with pay phones. Because I travel long distances
for work, my husband thought it was necessary in case of emergency.
Even Superman had to make adjustments.
So, although I have a variety of gadgets, they’re
not necessarily the most up-to-date ones. And that doesn’t bother me. Call me
what you will, but I’ve never been one to cave in to peer pressure, whether it
was to smoke cigarettes or buy an iPhone X.
And as for my blogs, I write them by hand in
cursive before they ever make it to the computer. Call me old-fashioned if you
wish, but I do what works best for me.
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