Posts Tagged ‘technology’

Don’t Let Your Parents Grow Up To Be Technophobes

I love my Dad. I do.

But I think he’s afraid of technology.

This past weekend my Dad and I went on an epic golf trip (81 holes in 52 hours) in mid-Michigan with 14 other guys, but we almost screwed up the format right from the start, thanks to my Dad’s refusal to embrace technology.

Two days before we left, we had a brief conversation on the phone:

“I’ll pick you up around 9 and I’ll plug directions to Pilgrim’s Run into my phone,” I said.

“No – I’ll print out the directions. It will be easier that way,” he answered.

“Fine. I’ll see you on Friday.”

On Friday morning I arrived, as promised, and we proceeded to figure out the puzzle that was fitting two sets of golf clubs and suitcases into my tiny Pontiac G6. As we backed out of the driveway, I tried again (unsuccessfully) to handle the directions.

“We just hop on 96 and take it to 131, right?” I asked.

“No, I have a different way to go,” my Dad replied, and pulled out hard copies of the directions.

Sighing, I gave up and let him guide us.

When we were five minutes from the golf course, he told me to keep an eye open for Chippewa Rd.

After we passed the green sign telling us Chippewa Road was the next light, I saw another sign for Buck’s Run golf club, which was the course where we would end our trip.

“I didn’t know we were so close to Buck’s Run,” I said as we passed the sign.

“Neither did I,” my Dad answered.

It took me three seconds to figure out what happened.

“You directed us to the wrong golf course, didn’t you?”

My Dad look down at the paper directions in his hand, then flipped over the top page to see the name of the golf course.

“Shit.”

***
Like a lot of parental units, mine, for the most part, steadfastly refuse technology.

Save for a Bluetooth headset that my Dad wears 24/7 (kidding. sort of.) and the bare bones cell phone they use to — GASP! — make phone calls with, they don’t own any of the consumer gadgets that are ubiquitous in the modern world.

I will never see my Mom curl up on the couch with a Kindle.

They won’t text message back-and-forth with me to learn which new words my one-year-old daughter is saying.

And, as we’ve seen, I will collect Social Security before I ever see them use a smartphone to get directions to a golf course.

While I respect the fact that they haven’t succumbed to the timesuck that is Facebook, there is room for some technology. After all, technology is what we use to make our lives easier.

***

Thankfully we made it to the correct golf course in plenty of time, so now we can laugh about that time we almost ruined a golf outing.

On the way home on Sunday night, I tried one last time to get my Dad to embrace a little technology.

“Next year if we go on this golf trip again, I’ll be the one who gets the directions.”

“No you won’t,” he said. “I’ll print them, but I’ll make sure we go to the right course.”

I sighed again.

Complain all I want about his stubbornness when it comes to technology, but he’s still my Dad, and I’m still his son.

I’ll defer to him for directions next time.

Image courtesy of Chokola.

18

08 2011

Weekly Grab Bag – August 20, 2010

For any new readers, let me break down how the Weekly Grab Bag works.

Every Friday, I share links to stories, blog posts, etc. that have captured my interest throughout the week. While there is no set-in-stone subject matter, I try to keep it in the technology/PR/media realm. Occasionally, like the last link in today’s edition, I’ll stray outside of those topics, just to keep you on your toes.

Make sense? Good. Check out the links.

Studying the Brain Off the Grid, Professors Find Clarity (New York Times) - This is actually one part of the New York Times’ series on how technology affects our brains, and it’s fascinating with a capital “F”. I’ve always had an inkling that the 24/7 influx of information affected the way I operate, but this confirms it. I find that staying focused is a skill I need to sharpen.

Take Control Of Your Stream (Becky Johns) – This is a great post for those who are overwhelmed with the amount of information they glean from their social media network on a daily basis. The best piece of advice is that it’s your stream. Don’t be afraid to limit what you’re taking in.

How Positive Thinking Re-Wires Your Brain (Steve Aitchison) – Another brainy link, and this might be the best thing I’ve read all week. What daily trips to the gym are for our muscles, daily positive affirmation can be used to “exercise” our brains. Feeling anxious? Depressed? Sometimes, just thinking positively can help. Yay, science.

Mount Puckmore: The Four Faces Of The Detroit Red Wings (Puck Daddy) – The Puck Daddy blog has been posting the four faces of each NHL franchise while waiting for the season to start. Earlier this week, it was the Red Wings turn. Gordie How, Ted Lindsay, Steve Yzerman and Nicklas Lidstrom got their faces on Detroit’s Mount Puckmore. Can’t say that I disagree.

That’s all for this week. Let me know what captured your interest in the comments.

20

08 2010

A Dispatch From the Year 2000

During my junior year of college, way back in 2000, I wrote an article for a short-lived e-mag named ReWired. It was our English program's take on the more-popular magazine, Wired. For one of my submissions, I interviewed my friend's roommate to illustrate the pull of online chat rooms, which were probably at the height of their popularity. 

This is one of the better things I've written in my lifetime, so I wanted to share. I won't be offended if you stop halfway through.

It is funny, though, how our view of technology — and what is now commonplace — can change so drastically in a decade.

(If you get to the end and wonder where I am going with the quote from Thomas Laudal…yeah, I don't know, either.)

***

Pimpin: Hey, a/s/l check.

stargirl111: Yeah, I got a pic to trade. And I'm a hottie.

bowl_4_u: This room is whack. I'm outtie 5000.

cute_and_single: hi pimpin

jocksport456: u e-mail it first

pimpin394: Hi

In a typical chat room, like the one shown above, there are numerous conversations going on at once. People throw caution to the wind and take on personalities that sometimes are the complete opposite of their real life personas. For example, "stargirl111" is quite possibly not a "hottie" as she claims to be, but will say she is because she yearns to find that special someone in this virtual world. If the guy, or so he says, doesn't find her attractive, he will most likely ignore her the rest of the time or leave the chat room. "Stargirl111" will move on. And so the cycle begins for the upteenth time and certainly not the last time.

In a personal conversation, the body acts as a barometer for what the person really feels. The shuffling of feet could mean nervousness, shyness, or it could mean the person wants to get the hell out of that conversation. It would be considered rude to just walk away, especially if you know the person and will likely see them again. In a chat room, the body is taken out of the conversation.

The disappearance of the body is part of a new school of thought called "Virtual Reality Theory." Professors at colleges around the country are starting to believe in chat rooms as a new tool of teaching while some of us still see it as a way of flirting with the opposite sex. Either way we look at it, the two sides converge at one crucial point: The Body. After looking at the the issue from two different angles, we begin to see how.

What About Bob?

Bob is a twenty-year old Sales and Marketing Director for a manufacturing company in Michigan. Bob has some college education since he was going to school to study mechanical engineering before taking this job. He is single and shares a condominium with a friend he used to work with. Bob spends a lot of his free time in chat room.

Since discovering America Online, Bob is somewhat addicted to these rooms. As he logs on, I notice that his Buddy List contains over 80 "friends," ninety-five percent of whom he has never met. "I basically see the Internet as a way to meet new people," Bob says. As he sits down, a friend from the "real world" sends him an instant message (IM). "THis is my friend Frank from Germany. I communicate with him on-line because I'm too cheap to call him," Bob explains.

Only 10-15 "friends" on his Buddy List are guys. The majority are girls that he has met on-line. They are mostly local girls since he considers talking to non-locals a waste of time. "I don't like talking to people from, say, Utah. And, I'm not very fond of Mormons." As we are talking and chatting, one of his "friends" comes on-line. "Oh look, it's Dana!" Bob has never met Dana in real life even though they have been chatting for nearly two years now. "She's fun to talk to and her birthday is October 31st and I thought that was interesting," he says. "Besides, she has had a boyfriend the whole time."

Out of all the girls that Bob has met online, he has only met five of them in real life. He even dated one of them (Sarah) for six months, and he had the pictures to prove it. He told me that all five acted the same way in real life than they did in the chat rooms. I was curious about this, so I asked Bob if we would have gone up and started talking to Sarah if she just happened to be walking by. "I would want to," said Bob. "But would you?" I asked. "No."

Bob has been on-line 20 minutes and he already has six conversations going at one time. He has spoken with a few of these before but most of them he just met. "Gotta find a common link to start a conversation," Bob explains as he IMs a girl asking where she is from. Once he finds out she went to high school fifteen minutes away, the conversation begins. As they chat, I pursue the issue further about the difference between chat room conversations and a real life conversation. "The bluntness is beautiful because you can be (blunt)," he says. "You don't have to worry about being smacked." I think it is safe to say that there is a different persona on-line than there is off-line. To back his statement up, Bob says: "I would never approach a girl in real life because out of pure shyness. It is more difficult to approach a girl in person. The Internet is easier. If I don't like the conversation, I can click 'Cancel'."

Bob goes into a Detroit chat room to try and meet some more girls. After only a few minutes of trying, he meets a girl named "Sunnflower." She has a picture to send but only if Bob sends his first. They swap photos, and Bob likes what he sees. He tels her that she is "a definite cutie." "I like to see if there is a picture before I waste my time talking to them," he says. While he is talking to "Sunnflower", Bob starts looking through profiles of other users who are online. Thanks to the freedom of chat rooms, Bob doesn't have to talk to anyone he doesn't want to. Hiding behind the veil of a computer screen in the comfort of his own home, Bob is able to pick and choose the ones he shall talk to. If he doesn't want to talk to them, they won't know the difference. It's not like they see him staring at them from across the room, either.

He reads the profile of "JodyGirl0213" and it says that she is an administrative assistant. "That means she is boring," he says, referring to her job, "but let's see if she's hot."

Chat Rooms in the Classroom

At the University of Detroit-Mercy, Sister Christian Koontz is taking a giant step in making these chat rooms, once thought of as strictly a recreational tool, a part of Academia. She teaches a class in English called "The Journal." Her class can meet her in a chat room and discuss or ask her questions. The chat rooms are provided by a listserv service called Egroups. Although hesitant to talk about the advantages and disadvantages of chat rooms, due to the fact that she herself is still learning, Sister Koontz thinks that there is a gigantic upside to this idea. "I do think chat rooms have significant, and as far as I am aware, largely untapped, value to academic discourse," she explained through an e-mail. "I see the chat room as a fertile intermediary space, bridging personal journaling and formal academic writing, a space where students can write, to a certain extent, out of an atmosphere, attitudes, and orientation similar to that[sic] I believe to be the most conducive to effective journal work and begin to give rhetorical form to their writing, almost without realizing it because audience presence is real to them yet not so intimidating as a physically present audience is," Koontz added.

The last part of her statement can be directly connected to what our friend Bob said about talking on-line. Sister Koontz's students find it easier to talk when they can't see anyone or don't know who they are talking to, and there is no body to deal with in these conversations.

Toward the end of the e-mail message, Sister Koontz said that she advocates a "considerable application" of Harrison Owen's theories on "Open Space Technology." Open Space Technology is one way to enable all kinds of people, in any kind of organization, to create inspired meetings and events. Over the last 15 years, it has also become clear that opening space, as an intentional leadership practice, can create inspired organizations, where ordinary people work together to create extraordinary results with regularity. Sister Koonts is trying to get her students to reach this goal through the power of virtual reality.

We once thought of online classes as something that would happen in the future. Five years ago, we imagined a world where we could get out of bed, turn on the computer, and attend classes in our underwear. Well, now we can. Students don't have to be worried about making a dumb comment or walking into class late and being stared at; with on-line classes, we lose the human element that comes with "regular" classes. Chances are, no student knows what any of the other students look like, and therefore, that have no reservations about participating in class. The potential for embarrassment is just nonexistent.

The Fate of the "Real World"

In the real world, there is something us humans like to call "fate." We have no power over it and it controls every move we make. In a virtual world, would fate be a possibility? If we programmed these worlds, wouldn't we be playing God and thus, determining fate? To quote Thomas Laudal on this issue, he says: "People make VWs (virtual worlds) while God, or something/something quite different than people, created the real world. Does this distinguish the real world from the virtual worlds? Hardly. The truth is that we don't have a clue who — or what — created our real world. But even if we knew for a fact that people like ourselves did NOT create the real world, this would not be a significant difference between virtual and real worlds…"

The significant issue here is that most people in chat rooms, like Bob and Sister Koontz'[sic] students, view it as a "fake" world. Quite the opposite of the real world, they can do things in this "fake" world that they wouldn't normally do. The students, who would be terrified of public speaking in real life, can speak in front of a large number of people while sitting at home in a robe.

These chat rooms are, in a sense, small virtual worlds where the "citizens" leave their bodies at home and explore unknown territories. The "souls" come and go as they please and there are no repercussions. Anyone can get away with anything. At least anything they say can be dismissed since actions do not speak louder than words.

01

03 2010

The Weekly Grab Bag – February 26, 2010

It's baaaaaaaaaack.

For those of you not aware of its existence, "The Weekly Grab Bag" — formerly called "The Weekly Grab Bag of Links," "The Week in Links" and "The Leek in Winks" — is a repository for the interesting stuff I read during the week.

While the topics will vary, you'll notice most of the content revolves around all forms of media (digital, print, social), productivity, public relations, technology and writing.  (But I'm not afraid to throw in something from The Onion to keep you guys honest.)

I'm not exactly sure what the reception was like in its previous incarnations, but I want to share with you what I'm reading, and this is the place to do it.

Enjoy!

  • What is a 21st Century Career? (WorkAwesome) - I agree with everything here, but it alludes to the idea that we must now work outside of work. Scary.
  • Rules for Writing Fiction – Part 1 & 2 (The Guardian) – I don't write fiction. But if I did, I imagine these rules would inspire me to keep going.

That's all I've got. I hope you enjoy these links.

As always, you can find most all of my links on my Delicious page.

  • 26

    02 2010

    Trying to Rage Against the Machines

    Smartphones.

    The scourge of humanity; the destroyer of work/life balances the world over.

    For all of the ways technology has improved our lives, these guys are not one of them.

    Thanks to their "always on" capability, we can now work from, literally, anywhere.

    In fact, I am convinced that these seemingly harmless mini-computers were invented by evil managers to trick their employees into unknowingly adopting a tech tethered lifestyle.

    "Here's your smartphone. You can check e-mail, surf the Web and be available to me 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Isn't that grand?"

    And now, everybody has them. (Except for my Dad, of course. He's still learning how to check his voicemail.) They are so vital to our success that we must carry them wherever we go — meetings, the bathroom, church. You never know when an e-mail with a bright red exclamation mark will hit your inbox.  But when it does? God forbid it takes you two hours to respond to that email. (Ironically, these devices invented — and cornered — the urgency market. We are all a little less patient now.)

    The only time I yearn for one is when I step off an airplane and want to check my e-mail to see what I missed while traveling 500 miles per hour at 30,000 feet, and even then the world continues to spin on its axis as I travel to my hotel.

    When I'm working, I have my computer open in front of me. When I'm not working, I'm not working.

    The first time you respond to an e-mail at 9 p.m. on a Tuesday night, you destroy that oh-so-precious work/life balance. You might as well tell your client that your personal time means nothing. Sleep? Relaxion? Who needs it. I am here to serve you. And do nothing else. 

    I have successfully avoided this tether for five years, but like a convict on death row, I realize my time is nearly up.

    But until it is, I'm going to rebel.

    Not sent from my smartphone. Please excuse all typos.

    Tags:

    15

    02 2010