I just had an aha moment as to why my parents refuse to get cable TV... the remotes are too complicated. Even I get baffled and I am usually good at figuring things out. Back when my Dad worked at GE he designed one of the first remotes.. it was so simple.... TV on or off... volume up or down.... change channels [of course back then we had a grand total of 3 to 4 channels]. Now look at today's remotes.
Last year Mom got a new washing machine... whatever happened to just ON/OFF,Hot, Cold, Heavy Load, Light Load, Delicate... and that was it. This machine was so complicated even Dad, who is an engineer, wasn't sure how to do a simple load of wash... plus the letter on the machine was in light blue which looked pretty but it was tough for aging eyes to read.
When we get into our 90's, I wonder what technology will be like then... will we need to sit in the dark because we can't figure out how to turn on the lights in the living room using our telephone???
Technology is getting overwhelming. Personally I am cell-phone... er mobile device-challenged. We're supposed to be able to talk on the phone and do computer stuff all at the same time. I end up just hanging up on people if I try to do anything else besides talk. And doing anything except a simple text? Forget about it! I'm too dumb for my smart phone.
Even new cars are getting too complicated. My S/O was on a trip and he rented a car, he wanted something simple.... turn it on, put it in gear and go... this thing had a computer panel that he had no clue how to work... he never got to listen to the radio, or open the windows, and always got to the hotel before dark because he couldn't find how to turn the headlights on. We both grew up in the era of the hand crank for windows, pull knob for the headlights, and if lucky AM radio :)
I think some of the wired and wireless connectedness was pushed by people who weren't particularly adept at inter-personal social skills (Jobs, Zuckerberg, Bezos) and found new ways to communicate which didn't involve face-to-face contact. They found ways to be successful and routed communication around and through devices, although they still had to deal with their employees, and sometimes in a dysfunctional manner.
There have always been people who don't have good inter-personal skills, but the technology wasn't there to afford them alternative opportunities. Now it is.
Haven't quite figured out how this phenomenon caught the attention (if not addiction) of users young and old, but it did, and they embraced it wholeheartedly.
Also happening was a trend away from doing things naturally, of being outside instead of playing with devices, of growing one's own food instead of getting gourmet takeout, of learning and cultivating various home arts and crafts such as sewing clothes for the family, baking bread, making ice cream, and a variety of activities which are probably unknown to a lot of tekkie users.
I remember being shocked when I read that some people glue buttons back onto clothing because they don't know how to sew. People post on DIY forums with such basic questions that it's clear they don't know the first thing about gardening, growing their own food or processing it.
I've read that a Nature Deficit Syndrome has actually been identified - it can affect children who spend too much time playing with technological devices and too little time in real life. Seriously. I always thought that too much tekkie activities would be harmful one way or the other.
I think devices have gotten too complex, not to be used and/or understood, but for the basic purposes intended.
They're also not what I consider to be ecologically friendly. They either require electricity or batteries, both of which cost me more money and which eventually, directly or indirectly, consume energy in manufacturing and use. I don't even need to address the issue of nonrenewable resources.
For what? How have all these devices really enhanced our lives? Computers definitely have, and have made my life a lot easier and well as provided an opportunity to connect with people I wouldn't otherwise have met. But I don't need a phone that takes photos (often not very good ones at that), has a dozen functions, sings when it's turned on, and still in my mind hasn't been proven to be safe close to one's brain.
Size is an issue as well. Keypads are smaller, harder to read. They can be dropped more easily. There are too many sequences just to do something simple. I've always thought that KISS is a good philosphy but these devices are the antithesis of that.
Even computers can cause backaches and eye strain if not used properly. An arm specialist doctor told me he was seeing a lot more young people with tenosynovitis and carpal tunnel syndrome, caused by texting.
I compare today's cyberbarons to the (robber)barons of the Industrial and early post Industrial Age, who were instrumental in providing services, financial products and transportation which I believe benefited most members of society, and improved the quality of life.
Which of the contemporary techno devices can compare with the discovery of electricity? Of indoor lighting and indoor plumbing? Of labor saving devices such as vacuum cleaners and washing machines? Of refrigerators vs. ice chests? Of advances in medicine, medical treatments, and robotic assisted surgery?
Can an X-box, I-Pod, I-Pad, Google glasses, smart phones or similar devices even hold a candle to sweeping changes brought about by industrialization? I think not.
Who needs to take pictures with a phone when it's used primarily for emergencies? When you see the end of your life approaching, you want quality time, not fuss-with-gadgets time.
When I die, I want to look back on my gardens, creations, and special moments with family oo friends, not on my variety of SmartPhone.
My phone kept ringing from my aunt to ask if I had let sisters know. But, naturally I could not figure out how to answer the darn thing! Finally it rang when a young nurse was in the room and I asked him "how in the world do you answer this d*mn thing?" Finally starting to get used to it, have a long, long way to go. I need "the Idiot's Guide to the Samsung S4 Mini!" LOL
Another post to jump on Garden Artist's bandwagon!
I wish that appliances came with simpler displays too, Too many options on many of them.
I remember holiday gatherings (there used to be some relatively pleasant ones), where when sisters hosted, their sons would disappear to the basement at one of their houses, or the family room at narc sisters house to play computer games on the tv that others would watch the football games, or just plain talk. But the noise of the kids while playing made any type of conversation nearly impossible.
It is almost as if we need another classification for seniors, those of us that are young or motivated enough to learn new technologies. In fact, my Mom was very computer proficient, spreadsheets, even had a website for her business. Then it got to the point she could not remember how to turn the computer on.
Crow doesn't taste very good.
The computer social side and websites like Aging Care has become the back fence when women use to talk to other women across the fence... but now that fence stretches worldwide.
E-mail has been great... I use to like the idea of sending a letter at midnight, but now I don't do that because too many cellphones get emails and ring the recipient. My Dad use to teach DOS language code after he retired but now that code technology has gotten away from him... how he enjoyed looking things up on the computer.... he tries now but his dial-up is like molasses when it comes to speed. He rarely does e-mail anymore.
I know I spend waaaaaay too much time on the computer.... but it's become my TV substitute because there aren't enough really good fun shows.... how I miss Carol Burnett.
On those very rare occasions of eating out, I see families with the children glued to their SmartPhones. Even 3 years old with some type of electronic devices. Hope those children get a chance to play in the dirt like I did, I had a great childhood where one had to use their imagination :)
I am not too high tech myself i have an old cd player with headphones have no idea about ipods and an crap mobile phone thats only because ive no money to get all this new stuff. My sister (b*tch) was astonished i didnt have ipod? oh youre soooooooooooooooooo not with it. Yep shes the one with thousands in the bank!!
I guess what I need is a hard working device, not one that's really smart.
If you want to see this video, google:
OpenStreetMap - Project Haiti
It is absolutely amazing to see the public response to requests for data to assist responders.
My father was a cartographer in WW II - and loved maps, as do I , trouble is how do you learn to work maps on a cellphone... aaah, maybe tomorrow... In the meantime I travel with the huge Walmart Rand McNally Road Atlas all over the country and Canada... get to all the places I need with it o.k. ! On my last trip to Lexington, KY I tried to buy an updated map of Lexington in 3 different stores, only to be told " we are out and we can't get them anymore " - is that not a shame !!!
One day the doctor across the hall from my office dropped by.... here was my boss at his desk and me at mine both having local map books opened looking for a certain street... my boss was using a magnifying glass. The doctor just stopped and looked and said "why don't you just Google the address".... I told him it's quicker this way, otherwise by the time I turn on the computer wait for the computer to wake up and go to the browser then type in what I want, I have already found the street I was looking for :)
My boss [who is in his late 70's] and I always have a race as to who will find a telephone number first... he will use his SmartPhone, and I will use an old fashioned telephone book... I usually win.
Consumer Cellular has cheap plans if you're an AARP member.
And well said about the choice of being with people vs. reading a manual - especially one that's written by someone who's not a native speaker! I used to buy and assemble furniture kits and could always tell when the instructions weren't prepared by a native English speaker or writer.
I sure do miss DOS - had a lot of fun with that.
What I resent is the all encompassing operating software that takes almost all control away from the user. I feel as if I'm battling with the operating system. But I don't really have the desire to spend time studying it to figure out how to trick it.
DOS was difficult for word processing though; the ability to name files without length constraint was a giant step forward.
I understand from SmartPhone users that the autocorrect function is a real nuisance. It's not intuitive and makes "corrections" that make no sense.
hey, anyone wanna start a listserv...no really, I'm going to hush up and go to bed now.
My Mom had beautiful handwriting and use to write letters to all her relatives. I did the same thing. Back when I was married in the 1970's-1990's, I use to write once a week to my parents. If they didn't get a letter, they would call to make sure everything was alright.... yes, Mom, everything is ok, otherwise we would have called you. This was back when long distance calls meant something bad had happened.
Mom then learned to use e-mail but any time there was a new and improved changed to the e-mail system, or Dad bought a new computer, it was too complex for her to learn. Then Dad had the task of writing and sending e-mails, but all he felt like writing was about the weather and some flood 500 miles from the house.... oh well.
If I try the instructional Help program I get a college course again from WIN, instead of just click here +here + here.... I have to google the terms used to understand the sentence... the time I waste to correct it's automated actions...!!! shriek !!!... by the time I will have learned this program - it'll be out of date again....do I wish I had XP back,,, ? yesyesyes,,, but of course many of the so-called "improvements" are coming down the pike mainly to " improve " company profits ... ! Results: Seniors are left in the dust ... we can't all be PC +Tech- whizzes, + we are often looked at as stupid !... O.k., vstefans, now I got to google... what's a "batchfile"? and what's a GUI? ....... shriek... aaah, maybe tomorrow........ Could MS not compromise and have the instructional college course for the geeks online, +have a simple, click here, +here +here... instructional section online for someone who is not stupid, but knows a lot more about nursing + sewing, etc. than PCs...!!!???... or maybe it's in there somewhere, + I just have not found it...! In the early 90s I had 2 computing courses while in NSG-school, all else is self-learned since... so, no Seniors are not stupid ! but with decreasing memory - it's harder to memorize new stuff !