I recently had a series of experiences which made me think of this post.
A few weeks ago my daughter was asking, “what is your earliest memory?” Then a few nights ago while I was listening to the radio the host said that he came from an analog generation and kids today are raised in a digital generation.
The two concepts merged in my mind and I thought about it musically. One of my memories from my childhood was of me getting up VERY early in the morning and going to the living room and listening to a record on my portable little turntable in the corner of the living room. (I liked a “story” record titled the ballad of Hector the stowaway dog.)
And then I thought about the way we have listened to music over the course of my life. I was listening to records when I was a child then when I was a youth Walkman’s were all the craze (and “boomboxes”) But there were also 8 tracks still floating around. Then in the ‘80s we started seeing C.D.’s coming into our awareness and now we have mp3’s and digital music.
I thought that it was interesting that within my lifetime there have been so MANY changes in the way we listen to music. (And watch movies and communicate.) But as I thought about it I realized that there has been more change in the past thirty years than there really has in the 100 years before that.
Think about it. When I was a child, things were a LOT different than they are now. Car seats were little more than an automotive booster seat, now they are practically self-encapsulated modules, which only need a little adjustment to be space fairer worthy. (They need to be enclosed the rest of the way and have an oxygen pack.)
The idea that you could tell what gender your baby was going to be was tantamount to witchcraft, and while people thought we would have flying cars by now they really didn’t consider how they might be fueled.
Nowadays we have “Eco friendly” cars like hybrids, we have sciences and arts that would be totally foreign in concept to any of us IF THEY WERE PRESENTED TO US BACK THEN.
We can download a song to our computer or I pod or I phone or whatever.
I remember the only way to get those songs individually as a young man was to hope the radio would play it and I could record it with a tape deck. Of course I could always go out and buy the tape in the music store.
And that’s another thing what about our shopping? I remember we had a few options for shopping when I was a kid. We could go to J.C. Penney or Sears or Montgomery wards, and if they didn’t have what we wanted… well maybe they could find it in a catalog to get it for you.
NOW??? Oh hey let me look at Amazon (or Ebay or …) and wham bam thank you… and here it is. You might have to wait a few days but there it is.
With digital it is even more instant. Want a song? Click it’s yours. How about a book? Well with your Kindle or nook (or other device) again click there you have it.
I know that in other post/s I have praised some of these devices but really there was something enjoyable in the wait, the anticipation would be almost as pleasurable as the owning.
With the old ways, even if they could order it, it still would take a few weeks to get to you. Weeks of dreaming what it would be like to open the box to take out the ____________ (fill in the blank), and then to use it. If it was clothes to wear it, if it was music to listen to it if it was a book to read it…!
So I really understand what the guy on the radio was saying. My dad, God rest his soul, Never had the chance to see a digital player. (But he did have quite the collection of 8 tracks once). And I have to wonder… there are entire generations of people who didn’t see any real significant changes in technology like this.
For a couple of generations the only real option people had for storing and archiving their music was records or phonographs. Another generation had the added potential in audiotape.
But in just MY own one generation we went from records and tape through to an mp3 small enough you could mistake it for a pack of gum. (Or smaller).
Now that is pretty amazing. But it does bring up a concern for me. Oh not a worry really but… well, My children will never remember what the world was like without Blue rays (let alone D.V.D.’s) they will never realize what a party line was, at least not like you would if you experienced it. And they will not get to know the ticklish anticipation of waiting for that special something you ordered to get there.
That last sentence reminds me of the scene in the Music man, where the whole town is crowded in the street singing “the Well’s Fargo wagon is a coming”. But really that is what we are leaving behind. Is it good? I don’t know for sure.
I miss records and the memories, which spring from the pops and hisses of the needle in the grooves. I would love to own a record player still today. And it kind of makes me sad to think that A LOT of my experiences are now only going to be “shared” by “history buffs” but on the other hand music has NEVER been so portable.
And it is really nice, as I get older and I want to use my time more wisely, to have the opportunity to get what I want to read or hear NOW instead of waiting for it.
Well Que sera sera. I suppose that the future will be just as amazing. I can’t wait.
Saturday, May 28, 2011
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
Kindle-icious
Relatively recently I got a Kindle.
At the time of the purchase I was a little bit leery but they enticed me with one simple statement; “you can store up to 3,000 books on it.”
That sounded like a good deal to me. See here is the thing I am a rapacious reader, I LOVE to read!
And the thought of having access to several books at once STRONGLY appeals to me.
I have been known to go through a book a day (literally) and some books only take me a couple of hours.
I must say I am very pleased with that aspect of the Kindle! I hear a lot of people complain about the idea. “oh I like the tactile sensation of a book, the paper the contrasts…” (My mom) or “who wants to read that many books at once? Besides it must be hard to read in the sun.” (a radio talk show host).
I want to address my mom’s point. I like the sensation of turning the pages and I will admit there is something very satisfying about closing the back cover on a book you just read. And yes these things are slightly lacking on a Kindle. BUT I do NOT like having to fight with a book because it was bound to tight and keeps trying to close on me. I do NOT like having to glue my paper back books together because the bindings break too easily. And I do not like how after a few hours my thumb starts to hurt trying to hold a book open while I am totally engrossed in it.
I also don’t like when I reach a point where I am really into the book and then I drop the book or I put my book down and the kids knock it down and lose my place.
All these points that I do NOT like are negated in the Kindle.
As for the, “who wants to read that many books at once…”
Let me use this scenario, I am going on vacation to visit my wife’s family in New Jersey… I want to take along something to read. What will I want to read for the week that we are there? I might want to read Sci-Fi or a western or a mystery. Do I want to carry 14 or 15 books in my luggage? NO!!! But with a Kindle I can carry all of these and more so I have some choice.
More than that I can find “hard to find” or “out of print” books easily, I can instantly find the sequel to the book I just read and I can do it all without having to wait an interminable time or wasting my gas trying to get to the bookstore.
I also like that I can receive newspaper subscriptions/magazines wherever I am.
It is lighter to carry and easier to deal with. It is just like reading a regular book in appearance and I have yet to find a really glaring problem.
The battery lasts a long time on a charge, and over all I think it is a great device to have handy. I would change a few things though…
(1) I would make it lighted/light-able for nighttime use.
(2) I would give people the option to customize the pictures that are on the screen when it is in standby mode.
(3) I would automatically include a protective cover. (It costs $140.00 give me something to protect my investment.)
(4) I would like to see the “5-way” buttons easier sized for someone like me who’s fingers are not the size of a molecule.
So there you go. That is how I feel about it.
At the time of the purchase I was a little bit leery but they enticed me with one simple statement; “you can store up to 3,000 books on it.”
That sounded like a good deal to me. See here is the thing I am a rapacious reader, I LOVE to read!
And the thought of having access to several books at once STRONGLY appeals to me.
I have been known to go through a book a day (literally) and some books only take me a couple of hours.
I must say I am very pleased with that aspect of the Kindle! I hear a lot of people complain about the idea. “oh I like the tactile sensation of a book, the paper the contrasts…” (My mom) or “who wants to read that many books at once? Besides it must be hard to read in the sun.” (a radio talk show host).
I want to address my mom’s point. I like the sensation of turning the pages and I will admit there is something very satisfying about closing the back cover on a book you just read. And yes these things are slightly lacking on a Kindle. BUT I do NOT like having to fight with a book because it was bound to tight and keeps trying to close on me. I do NOT like having to glue my paper back books together because the bindings break too easily. And I do not like how after a few hours my thumb starts to hurt trying to hold a book open while I am totally engrossed in it.
I also don’t like when I reach a point where I am really into the book and then I drop the book or I put my book down and the kids knock it down and lose my place.
All these points that I do NOT like are negated in the Kindle.
As for the, “who wants to read that many books at once…”
Let me use this scenario, I am going on vacation to visit my wife’s family in New Jersey… I want to take along something to read. What will I want to read for the week that we are there? I might want to read Sci-Fi or a western or a mystery. Do I want to carry 14 or 15 books in my luggage? NO!!! But with a Kindle I can carry all of these and more so I have some choice.
More than that I can find “hard to find” or “out of print” books easily, I can instantly find the sequel to the book I just read and I can do it all without having to wait an interminable time or wasting my gas trying to get to the bookstore.
I also like that I can receive newspaper subscriptions/magazines wherever I am.
It is lighter to carry and easier to deal with. It is just like reading a regular book in appearance and I have yet to find a really glaring problem.
The battery lasts a long time on a charge, and over all I think it is a great device to have handy. I would change a few things though…
(1) I would make it lighted/light-able for nighttime use.
(2) I would give people the option to customize the pictures that are on the screen when it is in standby mode.
(3) I would automatically include a protective cover. (It costs $140.00 give me something to protect my investment.)
(4) I would like to see the “5-way” buttons easier sized for someone like me who’s fingers are not the size of a molecule.
So there you go. That is how I feel about it.
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Ooopssie
I realize that there has been a hiatus from my blog/s of late.
I would like to apologize for that hiatus.
Really there were a number of contributing factors including the break down of all the computers in our house, and a lack of motivation on my part.
The good news is I am back; and while I may not be to strenuous about posting to my blogs for a while at least you know I am still here and I will be trying to get my words out there again.
I would like to apologize for that hiatus.
Really there were a number of contributing factors including the break down of all the computers in our house, and a lack of motivation on my part.
The good news is I am back; and while I may not be to strenuous about posting to my blogs for a while at least you know I am still here and I will be trying to get my words out there again.
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