Advances in
Electronics in the 1980s allowed us to increase productivity and resulted in a
revolution in product development. Much
of this has resulted in products and services that allowed us to do things more
efficiently. But there have also been “unintended consequences”.
We started with office
connected and home-based PCs in the 1980s. Microprocessors were too small and
weak to allow internet access until the 1990s. We connected our PCs at work
through “servers” and were able to access files on the server. All of our
company information was accessible. Office productivity improved.
We then moved to
expanding the capability of our telephones. First with wireless home phones and
then with cell phones. Then we developed
the cell phones to access the internet and GPS and take photographs with what
we called “Smartphones”. We were able to establish websites and blogsites.
Facebook became a way to share photographs with friends and relatives by simply
uploading our photographs to Facebook.
Books became available
for download on Kindle and encyclopedias appeared on Wikipedia and we no longer
had to go to the public library to find information, because it was all
accessible.
The advances made in
flat-screen technology allowed us to replace our old, heavy TV sets with light
weight, large flat-screen TVs.
On the downside, we
fought our way through the virus plagues on our home PCs and replaced them with
new PCs that had bigger microprocessors. We bought 3 terabyte hard drives and
download software to replace floppy discs. Then came “the cloud”. We had
already been through the transition from LP records to 8 track tapes to
cassette tapes to CDs, so we knew the drill.
Surround-Sound came and went.
Lap-top PCs and their
smaller counterparts flooded into offices and homes. Now kids play games on
their pin-pads and no longer need to hook up their X-Boxes to the TV. APPs for
everything are now available on “Smartphones”.
Kids who use Facebook
to comment are wasting time in a desperate effort to be attacked by their
peers. Kids who are obsessed with
game-boards are isolating and putting their mental health at risk.
Hackers are routinely
attacking corporate and government websites. Our credit cards and debit cards
pose a threat to our finances. We will stop using them as soon as we hear about
our bank accounts being emptied. We are
not crazy about “identity theft” and therefore are not happy with illegal
immigrants. We are not crazy about having our internet use used to create
annoying pop-up ads on our PCs. We don’t like listening to 3 minutes of TV ads
every 30 minutes. It is a chore to find anything worth watching on TV. We don’t
believe the liberal propaganda in our newspapers.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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