For two days I suffered from NCSD (No Computer Stress
Disorder). Fortunately it was just a
mild case since it involved only my desktop computer which was being
repaired. I still had a functioning
iPhone, iPad and netbook otherwise I don’t know how I could have gotten through
48 hours without email. It made me
realize just how critical electronic devices have become to my daily life. I have a few friends who refuse to use a
computer, have no email, no smart phone, do not participate in social media and
one, incredibly, has no answering machine.
I sometimes envy them for their electronic isolation but I cannot
imagine myself returning to the days of typewriters, letters requiring stamped
envelopes and telephones wired to the wall.
But I feel I am in a technological wasteland. I am stuck somewhere between the analogue and
the digital, embracing a bit of each, comfortable with the former and trying to
fully understand and participate in the latter.
Yes, I confess I use facebook, (mainly to keep track of my
grandchildren’s sometimes appalling behavior and it’s also relatively
easy). I have no idea how to use
twitter, linkedin, flickr, chrome, cloud, pinterest, google+ and all the other
things I am constantly being invited to join by giving them my email address,
sex, birth date, marital status and establishing yet another password.
However, all this has made me realize the future is rushing
by me and I can’t seem to catch up with it. My two-year-old granddaughter, like all
two-year-olds, is learning how to say words.
Among her first pronouncement were:
“mommy,” “daddy,” “more,” “all done,” “no” and “iPad.” She is quite capable of turning on the device,
touching the icons for Elmo, Cookie Monster, The Wheels on the Bus and her
other favorite videos. She’s takes pictures
on her mother’s iPhone and once called me on mine by accident.
Kids today find it incomprehensible that we older people feel
that so-called “intuitive” apps are confusing and intimidating. When visiting my ten-year-old grandson, he amuses
himself by watching my ineptitude at playing the video games he tries to teach
me. Once we downloaded a game he wanted
to try on my iPad and within five minutes he knew exactly how to do it. After we both played it several times he
pointed out that his highest recorded score was 11,508 and mine was six. I must also confess my 16-year-old granddaughter
taught me how to text.
There could be a perfectly good reason why my grandchildren
catch on to these e-things and I don’t. Perhaps Richard Dawkins, noted British
evolutionary biologist (and famous atheist) was on to something when he coined
the word “meme” in his book The Selfish
Gene. A meme is like a gene in that
it passes ideas and cultural phenomena from one generation to the next. The most useful intellectual traits evolve by
natural selection much like biological evolution.
Obviously, I do not have the video game meme and quite
possibly my grandson, who has certainly got it, will pass it on to his
offspring who will be even better at wielding the X-Box, playing Wii’s and understanding
the latest iPhone apps.
According to some meme theory proponents, memes that are no
longer useful will become extinct. It is
conceivable then, that Google’s current
successful experiments will lead to the day somewhere in the distant future
when no one will know how to drive a car.
But, without doubt, future generations will be unbelievably good
at playing video games.
1 comment:
Surely it goes further back than programming VCRs to record your favorite tv program you would otherwise miss, but one was generally advised to get a 16 year old to do that for you. The younger crowd is unaware of the consequences of pushing the wrong button. We older ones are paralyzed by that fear. The computer world has made it so there are almost no such consequences. The 'undo' button is one of my favorites. I wonder how the digital generation will learn there are?
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