[elky] Re: Got a smart phone

  • From: STILLFRANKSFAULT@xxxxxxx
  • To: elky@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sun, 28 Mar 2010 09:23:24 EDT

Well, if you get sucked into a black hole, use your phone and  see if you 
can get a pizza delivered. I bet it can do that.  LOL 
 
-Smoky Mt Frank-


In a message dated 3/28/2010 3:06:08 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
rbuck@xxxxxxxxxxxx writes:

Well, I guess misery loves company.  But it's nice  to know that I'm not 
out there hangin from the event horizon all by  myself.  If we both get sucked 
into the black hole will time cease to  exist for us?  I'd wager that that 
damned phone knows the answer, but  won't tell me.  :)

r

Sent from my Dreadnought using that barely tolerable Thunderbird email 
program

On  3/28/2010 12:48 AM, Jim wrote:  
 
You, are not  alone..  ;( 
j 
 
  
____________________________________
 
From: _elky-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx (mailto:elky-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx)  
[_mailto:elky-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx (mailto:elky-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx) ]  On 
Behalf Of Ray  Buck
Sent: Sunday, March  28, 2010 12:58 AM
To: _elky@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx (mailto:elky@xxxxxxxxxxxxx) 
Subject: [elky] Got a smart  phone
As I wrote a while  back, I decided to get a "smart phone."  I 
dunno...maybe it wasn't such  a smart idea.  The learning curve is 
approximately  
vertical.  It's a Motorola Cliq.  It's an "Android" phone which  means that it 
1) 
isn't a Mac (good thing,) 2) runs an OS based on a Linux  kernel and for 
numbers three thru forty-eleven, has a bunch of applications  available for it, 
many of which are open-source (this makes a big difference  to me over an 
iPhone) and this one has a discrete keyboard, but much of the  control is 
done with touchpad control on the LCD screen and there's a lot  more.

The main reason I decided to buy it is to have a way of showing  my 
photography to prospective customers and to use as a tether, in essence a  
cellular 
or 3G modem for my laptop instead of that awful thing I used last  year on 
the salt that required a reboot every 2 hours, generally when a real  fast 
car or bike was making a run.  I've been working on slide shows  and screen 
savers and I'd like to be able to show those as well.   

I don't need the GPS (I just bought a Garmin for the Burb) or the  camera 
(who needs a 5 megapixel camera when ya got one camera with 10 and  another 
with 18?)  

After messing with it most of the evening, I  was able to make an update to 
my FaceBook account from the phone, through  the laptop, via my local wifi 
net, through the linux server, and over the  DSL line.  I think I forgot 
"over the river and through the  woods."  

And, strangely enough, I can make phone calls with  it.  

But the rest of the stuff...holy shit.  I've been  able to connect it as a 
USB device and copy files to it, but once they're  "there"...well, I have 
yet to figure out how to access 'em from the phone's  touch screen controls.

Here's where I find myself in a  quandary.  For most of my adult life, I've 
been relatively close to the  bleeding edge of technology...not exactly out 
in front, but well-acquainted  enough to help other folks who seem to have 
trouble with technology...one of  my friends refers to himself as a 
"technotard."  I've always told  myself that I'd never allow said self to get 
to 
that  "technologically-disadvantaged" state.  But this frikkin phone makes me  
wonder.  

I didn't grow up playing Nintendo games.  Hell, I  was writing simple games 
on a TI-99 when they first came out, then on a  Commodore-64 and had one of 
the first 286 chip/hard drive-based PCs  available.  But my "learning 
experience" came from the top down rather  than the bottom up like the kids who 
can handle a remote controller before  they can walk.  Well, maybe not that 
much, but you get the point.   It's like the "dub wheels" thing.  It's my 
opinion that they became  popular because they looked (in the beginning) like 
Hot Wheels cars, which  became popular shortly befor my children were born.  
I guess you could  say that I wasn't "socialized with  advanced technology" 
at the root  level.

So here I sit with a whole buncha highly technical stuff (an  old 
acquaintance once called me a "technophile" and I countered by calling  him a 
Luddite), but still I feel like I'm just on the event horizon of  losing touch 
with 
current stuff.  I have this fear that once I lose  touch, I'll be sucked 
into the black hole of old-fogey-itis.  Then I'll  never get back.  But is is 
worth it?  I think it is to me at this  time, because I need to use 
technology to further the photography and web  development stuff, since I have 
no 
idea if I'll have an income when I hit  the age of 65, 2.5 years from now.  I 
guess this old dog's gotta learn  new tricks.  

However, this whole concept was shaken when a  friend of mine (nearing the 
age of 80) said that he could no longer read  instruction manuals; he 
couldn't even enjoy reading a novel because by the  time he got to chapter 3, 
he 
couldn't remember what had happened in chapter  1.  Now this guy has a very 
good education, worked in a field that  required him to stay current with 
advances in many fields and in general is  a very sharp dude.  But this 
statement was like a kick to the  gut.  Is this what lies ahead for me?  A 
complete 
loss of  something that's been an underlying theme for virtually my entire  
life?  That scares me much more than death.  Hell, I've been  terrified of 
Alzheimer's Disease for a long time (as has my sister, who just  turned 60) 
and I'm even trying some new "supplements" in hopes of either  staving off 
or reversing the memory problems I already have as the result of  heart 
disease.  So not only do I have the fear of AD, but now the  statement that my 
friend made has added another brick in the wall, so to  speak. 

I guess the only thing that can be done is to keep on keepin  on.  Maybe 
I'll wander away from my house one day and never come  back...except for the 
fact that I now have 2 GPS devices.  :)  I  may not know where I am, but I'll 
never be lost...or  vice-versa.

Ok.  I need something to soothe me into blissful  slumber.  I think a 
NASCAR race on my DVR will act very nicely as a  soporific.  But even that's 
high 
tech: satellite HDTV, digital video  recorder on a 48" screen with stereo 
sound routed through an amp to external  speakers.  Maybe I otta pick up 
those drum sticks Rick D mentioned the  other day and go find an animal skin to 
stretch over a wooden frame and  return to the stone age through percussion.

I give  up.

r


-- 
Sent from my Dreadnought using that barely tolerable Thunderbird email 
program




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