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Objects In Mirror Are Closer Than They Appear

I just entered my 37th year of life this past Sunday and I’ve been reflecting a lot on technology and how it has shaped and changed my life and world over the past 36 years.

I love technology and I also happen to be a very nostalgic person. A few recent experiences have made me consider how our age shapes our relationship with technology and our very concept of the future, the present and the past. It is the intersection of a person’s age and their relationship with technology that particularly intrigues me as I reflect on my own life.

My parents are not technical people at all. My mother spoke for years about learning “the computer” and has in the past few years started using email to keep in touch and using the internet to research our families’ genealogy, but that is about the extent of it. I’m proud of how far she’s come but my expectations for her ever truly entering the digital age are slim. It is also only in the past few years that she began to leave her cell phone on all the time and bring it with her, rather than leave it in the car “for emergencies only.”

I was totally surprised recently to find out that my father has a laptop! I’ve received one email from him, ever, and I know that the two lines he sent me were written under the careful supervision of my mother. I was tipped off by the fact that the email started, Dear Timothy and ended with Sincerely, Dad.

My parents are great people, but will always need to keep my number nearby, just in case they can’t figure out what button they hit on one of the two remote controls in their bedroom that made the picture on the TV disappear or “broke the cable.”

On the opposite end of the spectrum are today’s teens. I was at a local taco stand recently and sat at a table next to three teenaged girls. Each of them was busily texting on their cell phones and I asked them, jokingly if they were texting each other. They paused only long enough to laugh, give me a quick, curious glance and mutter, “NO” simultaneously and in a tone that could only be described as incredulous. That one word “NO” was the only word that I heard any of them say the entire time they were eating and texting.

So, where does that leave me, a 37 year old working in technology for the past decade? I am in awe of what technology brings to our world and how it advances ceaselessly, creating an ongoing stream of new and improved products and applications. I am a bit disappointed that Blu-ray seems to have taken the upper hand in the High Definition video format race, but only because my fiancĂ© gave me a Toshiba HD DVD player for Christmas. I guess that I can file that in my collection of goods from the technology graveyard. As I said before, I am a bit nostalgic and so I guess I also feel bad for those three teenaged girls, who will never know some of the experiences that I have during my lifetime. I’ve catalogued a small list in the hopes that one of them comes across this blog, DIGGS it or posts the link on their Facebook page and they can experience a small piece of my past as we trudge off into the future together.

Selected highlights in technology from my past:

  • Growing up in Philadelphia, my TV channels were 3, 6 and 10 (VHF) and 17, 29 and later 57 (UHF). The TV had two dials for tuning the channels 2-12 on the VHF dial and 13+ on the UHF. If the picture got a little strange, you could try adjusting the rabbit ears or playing with the Horizontal and Vertical hold buttons.
  • Writing papers on our Macintosh computer and having to leave the house while the dot matrix printer was cranking out my handy work, the end of the cacophony signaling that my paper was done and it was time to tear off the perforated edges of the paper.
  • A monumental break-through occurred during my sophomore year (1990) when Penn did away with waiting in line to register for classes and launched their new telephone registration system. It was, at the time, truly revolutionary.
  • Printing out documents in Word Perfect at my first real job from my PC with no mouse, I had to hit Shift F7 and then 1.
  • The joy of using IMDB when I finally did get a PC with a mouse and an internet connection. I no longer needed to memorize any actor or actresses credits. Gone too was the need to memorize any phone numbers for my contacts or use a Rolodex. I could store all of the info right there and email or IM them whenever I wanted.
  • My first cell phone, a Motorola flip phone! (My favorite phone, however is my Motorola “brick” phone that I bought on e-bay a few years ago. In particular I like the 3 buttons that make up the phone book.) No more checking the land line to see if anyone was on the phone or asking my sisters to let me know when they were off the phone.
  • Playing Pong and Breakout on our first video game console and later playing Zaxxon, Qbert and Donkey Kong on our CollecoVision and then Mike Tyson’s Punchout on our Nintendo NES.

I love that I got to experience all of these things. They are part of what makes me who I am and have helped mold my life experiences. I suppose one day in my future, I’ll be the one reaching out to my kids to explain some new technology that I can’t even imagine yet. For now, I am just happy to play my part in the unpredictable journey and ever changing digital world that we all live in, where things fade into the past at an ever more rapid pace. It’s always good to remember that as those things do fade away, we should be ever mindful that objects in the mirror are closer than they appear.

Fax me if you have any questions about any of this, Dad.

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7 Responses to “Objects In Mirror Are Closer Than They Appear”

  1. Jo Jo Says:

    Who doesn’t get nostalgic for Qbert sometimes.

  2. Jennifer Says:

    One of my memorable technology milestones was an early Sony Walkman knockoff that only had a fastforward button, but NO rewind button. That’s right – just one button to move the tape forward, nothing to rewind it. To hear a song again, you had to flip the tape over, take your best guess at fast forwarding, flip it back over to check, rinse and repeat until you got the tape to the right place.Sometimes when I look at the ipod nano I get flashbacks to my Sanyo Strollman or whatever it was called.

    Oh well…regardless of the pain it took to rewind, it was still awesome to be able to be in your own personal little world of music, indoors outdoors, where ever.

  3. Mike Says:

    I could be wrong here if Jennifer had a really cheap knock off, but I think Tim’s dad could have explained that while there was not a rewind button, there was probably a reverse button. The reverse button would let you play the tape in either direction without flipping it over and it meant you could rewind by hitting reverse and then fast forward.

  4. Phil Says:

    Great pic! My girlfriend’s mom says “tex mex” instead of texting. Oh great is that! She’s practically Kayne with her wordsmithing. Tim, looking forward to your next tex mex!

  5. The Mo Says:

    I often think back fondly of my first computer in 1981 or so…a TRS-80 CoCo (color computer) which used a TV for a monitor (in color!) and a cassete tape recorder as file storage. Yes, I still have it; yes, it does still work; and yes, I can still write in Basic [5 Print "Mo Is Cool!" 10 Goto 5]. Mo Is Cool! Mo Is Cool! Mo Is Cool! Mo Is Cool! Mo Is Cool! Mo Is Cool! Mo Is Cool! Mo Is Cool!

  6. Alex Says:

    I’m younger than you all, but, I have a good one.

    In elementary/middle school, my parents didn’t want to spend money on a mysterious “computer”… so we used to get some really fancy typewriters from Sears.

    While my friends were using file->save and edit->undo, I was literally using 100 sheets of paper to get a 1/2 page typing assignment done… no joke. The best day ever was when my dad came home with one that had this new key called “backspace”… and when you hit it, it would paint over your mistake.

  7. Shawn Fumo Says:

    I have a lot of good memories, too. Isn’t it funny that as things speed up, people can seemingly be nostalgic at younger and younger ages?

    I feel really lucky that my Mom figured computers were going to be important and saved up for a Tandy 1000SL. Lots of memories of GW-Basic, Deskmate, Learning Company games (Rocky’s Boots and Robot Odyssey) and games like King’s Quest IV and Martian Memorandum.

    My first console was Intellivision (they later had an awesome special cartridge that’d let games have limited spoken speech in them), then Nintendo (Zelda!) and Genesis. Later milestones like Wolf3D and Doom would appear. There was also a mainframe at one school where I got to play Adventure, hooking me on Interactive Fiction.

    I was on a local BBS for many years, chatting with locals, playing MUDs, downloading files. Here’s something to wrap your head around: I remember distinctly the first time I downloaded an image viewer and a photo from the BBS and how cool it was. Imagine a world with no digital cameras, scanners are a rarity and dot matrix printers the norm. It makes sense that photos on a computer in that world would be uncommon, but it seems so strange now.

    Eventually e-mail would appear on the BBS (I did FTP by e-mail for a while!) and then a shell, then the internet itself. Netscape only supported a grey background. I remember making my first home page with rainbow dividers. Listening to MOD files and trying to use a tracker…

    It’s been quite an evolution of everything these last years hasn’t it?


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