Technology - Medieval style

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jamman_98

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 6, 2005
Messages
791
Location
Columbia, SC
In my state our teachers have to be technology proficient but I have one teacher that needs to replace her PC with an Apple IIe with a Monk and Feather. I emailed my frustration to my district's tech person and he showed me this video. It made my day.

Joe
jamman_9

 
Cute.

And so true!

I told my students yesterday and the day before that I needed their term papers not later than the deadline both as hard-copy and non-locked, revisable PDF/E with hyperlinks to the TOC and Index.

Holy bat-shit, I swear a few of them fell on the floor foaming at the mouth...the audacity of me, at a university of the natural sciences, to ask them to move beyond PDF/A.

I mean, 1993 was really only still like, last week, no?
 
I have one teacher that needs to replace her PC with an Appl

I don't get it. Is she replacing the PC with an Apple IIe? Or replacing the PC with a monk and feather? Or, does the PC have an Apple IIe and she needs to replace that with a monk and a feather??

Chuck
 
LOL

What I ment was she is way over her head with technology and an Apple IIe is so simple to use. She has the worst luck with printers too so that's what I ment about the Monk and Feather - the way books were copied long ago.

Joe
jamman_98
 
?LOL? Didn't realize I wrote anything funny!!

However, it seems you can see where my confusion came from. I wonder if those are the same kinds of instructions she's been receiving on how to use her computer or printer! Tech people generally tend to assume non-techies know more than they really know and get frustrated when they don't understand. I'm no idiot, yet I couldn't make heads nor tails of what you posted. Looks like lots of stuff was left out, though you knew what you were saying. I see this a lot, and have been guilty of it enough to now recognize it.

And, though Apples might be "user friendly," IIRC, they're still only used by about 10% of the population. The rest of us are much more proficient in PC, whatever anyone's feelings about PC may be. When I rescued an iMac from our transfer station (to sell on eBay) I couldn't make heads nor tails of it for a bit. After playing around a little, I learned enough about it to put something in the description, but that was it.

Still, if SC requires tech proficiency of its teachers (though tempting, I won't go there), how did she get a job in the first place, and, secondly, why does she still have one?

Chuck
 
"When I rescued an iMac from our transfer station (to sell on eBay) I couldn't make heads nor tails of it for a bit. After playing around a little, I learned enough about it to put something in the description, but that was it. "

Now THIS makes me "LOL"!!!!!
 
Much of the problem

with new technologies is that there is a very strong culture of distaste between engineering and the "fine arts", not to mention a genuine loathing between the "fine arts" and the business studies at every university I have ever attended, whether in the US or Europe. It is no accident that I teach at school of natural sciences...

I know from my students that this holds true for China, as well.

The people responsible for creating, designing, realizing, producing, marketing and selling all this technology barely speak with each other, much less sleep with each other (a phrase borrowed from Iaccoca, who does know something about interdisciplinary engineering-design-art-business-sales).

Why should we be surprised that the use of the product (through the Human Interface Device!) turns out to be something only an engineer could love?

Sometimes, things do work - my mother held onto her Apple IIe until a house fire melted it. Most reliable computer in the whole house for many, many years. When push came to shove, that computer never failed her. Not once.

Usually, they don't - remember programming VHS VCRs?

panthera++11-22-2009-08-24-49.jpg.gif
 
Mention the word typewriter to a kid and see what kind of lo

Hey, Jim, check out our website (link below)!!

We had a display of some of ours in the local library, and a couple of questions that came from kids were, "Where's the enter key," and "Where does the monitor plug in?"

Chuck

 

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