technology

Facebook: Making Educated People Seem Idiotic

Monday, November 17th, 2008

Second grade English teachers wince at texting shorthand’s butchering of the English language, but even the staunchest of linguistic purists recognize the convenience it offers. When it comes to Facebook status messages, however, there is no good excuse for such mangling of the English language.

“_________ is relaxes after a bout of house work.”

See, the default for a Facebook status message is “name is gerund something something.” Chris is walking his dog. Not too complicated. To call the rampant, blatant disregard of the most generic of all verbs irreverent would give these rogue grammarians much too much credit.

“_________ is has a big headache and playing hookie from school tonight.”

What these lazy bastards don’t realize is that by choosing not to double-click and hit delete before offering an inane description of their momentary state of being to the world, they are essentially defining themselves as their inane, momentary state of being.

“_________ is go see slumdog millionaire.”

So that’s what you are, eh? That is your essence, the fiber of your being? Danny Boyle is a great director, but I’ve never been so exuberant about his work as to tell someone “I am go watch Trainspotting!” Unless, of course, he was willing to give me five percent of net box office. (psst, ten percent will get you a forehead tattoo).

For the record, I am the guy that insists on spelling everything out and fully punctuating, whether I am on email, IM, my iPod touch, or my cell phone. That probably makes me more technologically OCD than it makes all of my friends inept when they don’t diagram their Facebook statuses before posting.

But just as the spell-checker has undone much of the meticulous work Dr. Huyler did in ninth grade honors English, this small, seemingly insignificant oversight by thousands on a daily basis serves to degrade our perception of each other as intelligent human beings.

Chris is why does cyberspace make him so grumpy.

President-Elect Obama May Have To Lose His Crackberry Addiction

Monday, November 17th, 2008

President-elect Barack Obama is hip and technology savvy. In fact, many political analysts contend that his use of technology and email during his presidential campaign contributed significantly to his win in the age of Web 2.0. Yet according to a recent New York Times article, as president, Obama may be forced to lose his favorite campaign device: his BlackBerry.

Because of the Presidential Records Act, Obama’s BlackBerry (a hacker liability) poses a national security risk. It also allows the president’s location to be trackable via GPS and cell networks. And the law makes all of his correspondence available for the public to review should they be subpoenaed by Congress. There is no “work only” clause either; his personal emails to his daughters, wife and friends would be combed through as well.

Unlike his self-proclaimed technophobic contender from the general election, Obama will definitely feel the loss. Like most of us (including this author), Obama’s BlackBerry has become a part of his life. For him, the device may have been one of his few escapes to the real world and a much needed lifeline to his friends and family.

“Given how important it is for him to get unfiltered information from as many sources as possible, I can imagine he will miss that freedom,” said Linda Douglass, a senior adviser who traveled with the campaign to the NYT.

In the transition days ahead, our president-elect may have to wean himself off his BlackBerry like he did cigarettes. The former may be harder than the latter.

Thinking Differently: Sometimes Wish the Apple Would Fall Far From the Tree…of Life

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

I feel like every time Steve Jobs gives the world another Apple product, his many disciples, and even the MSM, get their panties up in a bunch.

As someone who had to carefully monitor the advent of the iPhone 3G, for example, I’ve had to witness the impressive display of toady-like behavior a Jobsian device can elicit in many.

Yesterday was no different. The company announced a newer five pound aluminum version of the MacBook Pro.

Though I’m a musician who loves photography and is obsessed with iTunes, I’m one of the few people I know who doesn’t own a Mac.

That’s right. I’m writing about a Mac on a PC. Touche!

But I’m surrounded.

My classes present an array of black, white and silver company pieces. Cafes—in LA and especially in San Francisco are riddled with jasmine-green drinking, ardent Mac users.

I once had one of my favorite professors, an awe inspiring photographer, take one look at my Compaq baby and say, voice thick with amused disgust, “just scrap it.”

Sigh.

But that’s it. I can’t do it. I’m morally opposed! My dad taught me to question Macs. Frankly, I don’t even know why. But he’s my dad and a computer whiz, so I trust him. Now that I’ve developed some of my own opinions (uh…hopefully), I don’t want to cave in out of sheer stubbornness. Apple says “think different”? Well ok, I will. Won’t get one. Nope.

But…my abashed admission: they’re elegant, light, functional, sleek, practical, fast, maintain long battery lives and are perfect for any Web-based musical or artistic activities. I kinda want one (blush).