A man is telling a simpleton that a thermos bottle keeps hot things hot, and cold things cold.
“But how,” asked the puzzled listener, “does it know what’s supposed to be hot, and what’s supposed to be cold?”
As for me, I’ve got this swell company-owned cell phone that I also use as an alarm clock. It has a setting to go off just on weekday mornings.
How does it know which day is which? Like the simpleton, I haven’t a clue.
It’s not just that my rapidly encroaching decrepitude is leaving me unfit to function in a computer-dominated world.
Nah.
I never needed computers to be confused. I was dumbfounded long before the first mating of cable wire and modem.
For instance, I don’t know how the toilet works.
Curiously enough, during casual conversation I am occasionally asked to expound on any theories I might have pertaining to the creation of the universe.
These questions _ by the way _ are almost always asked by people who have their own theories, and really couldn’t care less about any I might have as long as they can tell me theirs.
So, there I am, a guy who can’t even discern how the toilet works, being expected to know what the Almighty really had in mind before the Big Bang.
I’m one of those fellows whose knowledge of car engines is limited to being reassured by the start-up sounds they make after I turn the ignition key.
When it comes to the do-it-yourself toolbox stuff they tried to teach me in “shop” class, I’m an ignoramus who should always be kept a prudent distance away from any power tool. I’m in awe when some guy tells me he personally built an addition to his house or “put in a deck.”
But more than anything else, computers are to blame for me so often feeling like Fred Flintstone in a George Jetson world.
During the course of my working day, despite my finest efforts to avoid them, I am far too often drawn into episodes in which I must be present when complex computer issues are discussed.
These are all apparently matters of great importance. I really wouldn’t know. Still, one must never let on that one has no idea what everyone is talking about.
So, I have learned to employ a suitable strategy. I appear very serious, my arms crossed and my lower lip curled downward.
If the conversation lasts for more than a few minutes, I am apt to be seen pensively tapping my chin with fore and middle fingers while looking judgmentally at whoever happens to be talking at the time.
The key to this gambit is to make certain that my eyes do not actually glass over while my mind scoots over to the topic of who might be pitching for the Yankees that night.
Sooner or later, someone will come up with the brilliant idea of contacting the geniuses at “tech services” to solve the computer problem.
I nod sagely, mutter something about making sure someone gets that done quickly or we’re all in big trouble, and walk away slowly as if I had the weight of the world on my shoulders.
That sort of tactic does not, of course, work with my four adult children, or, for that matter, their mother.
While I’m pretty good at surfing (why it’s called that is just one of the many computer mysteries I shall never unravel) the Internet, everybody in my immediate family knows far more technical stuff than I do.
This, for some reason, is cause for great mirth among them, especially my 21-year-old son, the only one of the offspring still living under my roof.
Any arm-crossing, chin-tapping and judgmental-expressioning I might attempt is useless.
“Poor old guy” or something similar is what is usually uttered after I plead for help with a computer question that is always apparently ridiculously simple.
“How could you not know that?” Even if not spoken, it is shouted by my son’s pitying eyes.
It’s enough to give a fellow a real crisis of confidence.
Come to think of it, how does a thermos know what it should keep cold and what it should keep hot?
___
Sam Pollak is editor of The Daily Star. He can be reached at spollak@thedailystar.com or at (607) 432-1000, ext. 208.
Columns
What I don't know can really hurt
- Big Chuck D'Imperio
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George Wallace gives us the 'one-finger salute'
This is Black History Month. I regret that I was never involved in the Civil Rights movement.
Continued ... - When delivering papers was all in a day's work
- Readers who write get a little feedback
- I Was Just Thinking: Inventors, writers and others pass on in 2011
- I Was Just Thinking: Stella turned me into a pet person
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George Wallace gives us the 'one-finger salute'
- Cary Brunswick
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Santorum, Obama both got it wrong on Honduras
In one of the recent GOP presidential debates in Florida, candidate Rick Santorum ripped President Barack Obama for his policies on Latin and Central America in general and Honduras in particular.
Continued ... - Pumpkin seeds and the problem of China imports
- Unrest, energy, economy were big news in 2011
- Trading freedom for security isn't American
- Occupy Wall Street protests changed the conversation
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Santorum, Obama both got it wrong on Honduras
- Chuck Pinkey
- Guest Column
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Home rule laws aren't a radical idea
A lot of discussion and debate has occurred in our area lately over the issue of 'home rule' as it would apply to natural gas drilling. Let me offer some thoughts and my perspective on the issue and on the legislation I have sponsored (S. 5830) to enable local governments to treat natural gas drilling the way zoned communities treat any other commercial, industrial or residential use.
Continued ... - Sustainable shouldn't be a dirty word
- Fracking fears are based on facts
- Tea goes well with 'Occupy'
- City charter deserves support
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Home rule laws aren't a radical idea
- Lisa Miller
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Being a parent is a constant learning process
I am sitting cross-legged on the floor in the dressing room, waiting for Allie's dance number to be called. The cave girl costume has been donned, the jazz shoes double-tied, the hair pulled back, the requisite dab of lipstick applied.
Continued ... - Healthy doesn't have to mean expensive
- A family era ends with close of Potter series
- Independent stores make up for loss of Borders
- Untethered from the cable box
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Being a parent is a constant learning process
- Mark Simonson
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Oneonta reacted to John Glenn's historic space flight in 1962
"Boy, that was a real fireball of a ride!"
Continued ... - Our area began to discover radio 90 years ago this month
- Illness brings an unexpected school vacation in February 1952
- Railroad a steady newsmaker during January 1912
- Oasis, Town House motels new to Oneonta in 1962
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Oneonta reacted to John Glenn's historic space flight in 1962
- Rick Brockway
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If you're going on a winter hike this year, be prepared for the worst
OUTDOORS COLUMN BY RICK BROCKWAY ... On Wednesday, we went skiing at Belleayre Mountain once again. As my friend Rich and I crossed over the hill on Route 28 below Andes, we looked at the mountains in the distance. There wasn't a drop of snow to be seen. Rich made the comment, "Maybe we should have brought our hiking boots instead of our skis."
- Ski trips are easier to remember when something odd happens
- Dr. Stalter lived life to the fullest
- Alaskan Sketchbook is very cool
- Things change all the time, so start scouting for the next deer season now
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If you're going on a winter hike this year, be prepared for the worst
- Sam Pollak
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Runners-up get no respect in today's America
This will surely come as rather a nasty shock to those who know me today, but I have several impeccable sources who insist without the least fear of contradiction that I was an annoying child.
Continued ... - To err is human; to make good on corrections, divine
- Sammies celebrate the naughty, the nice and the just plain odd
- Worrying about religion can be a real shame
- A fountain of wisdom gushes forth
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Runners-up get no respect in today's America
- William Masters
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Playing Left Field: Meaning of 'liberty' lost in GOP's translation
COLUMN BY WILLIAM MASTERS .... Now, during the Republican presidential primaries, we hear a lot about liberty. It is a leave-me-alone type of liberty, suggesting the license to do what one may choose in the sacred call of business activity. Much is sought in the name of freedom.
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Government no longer about power of people
In my time, the idea of conservatism has been turned upside down. Men in my family wore neckties even when just reading the paper at home.
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Americans should respect right to bear arms
Early one morning a while back, I answered a phone call from Wayne LaPierre, head of the NRA, warning that the sky is falling _ no worse: that the U.S. is participating in a U.N. treaty effort to deal with the irresponsible international transfers of small arms.
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Inequalities breed social dysfunction
In my most-recent column, I presented recent epidemiological evidence that the inequality built into a society underlies the sense many of us have that the country is going in the wrong direction.
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Inequalities breed discontent in our modern society
So many Americans feel a dispirited sense of complaint. The conservative ranks have gravitated to Tea Party anger, while more lately, a less-defined segment has turned out to "occupy" public areas for mutual support as the amorphous "99 percent" is filled with discontent about the elite 1 percent reaping the lion's share of wealth.
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Freedom should not belong to the rich alone
"I pledge allegiance to the flag ... " intones every first-grade kid, in unison and sincerity. When I was in the first grade, we faced the mortal crises of Pearl Harbor and fascism in Europe.
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There's no such thing as completely clean energy
Some local people cry "Drill, Baby, Drill," reminding us of our nation's need to be freed from dependency on foreign oil. And we are regularly treated to TV ads praising "clean coal" in generating electricity.
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Consider competence, congeniality when voting
NetSummary
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'People are scared, angry' that the country is going down the drain
There is a widespread discontent among most of us that the country is going down the drain. People are scared and angry. Too many people can find no work at all, and unemployment is not going down.
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'We are all dependent: Both upon the Earth, and on an economy'
If we don't change, change will bury us. That will be because of the changes we ourselves inflict so causally upon this one and only Earth.
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'Corporations are not people; they are tools that entrepreneurs use'
"Corporations are people, my friend," quipped Mitt Romney, in rebuttal to a crowd shouting that corporations should be a source of revenue instead of taxing people.
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Thoughts of a 'bleeding-heart' liberal
This is the beginning of a biweekly column, as The Daily Star strives to remain fair and balanced in relation to the opinions of the day.
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Playing Left Field: Meaning of 'liberty' lost in GOP's translation





