Well, I certainly agree that there's a place for 'computerization', I never said I want to go back to having a team of secretaries to file customer data, ie, these are the type of mundane, monotonous things the computer is made for--besides it's my livelyhood. But there are things where it has no place, in my opinion. Cooking--sure, production bakeries already benefit from some of these things, and I'm not railing against this where it makes sense--but I don't see burnt toast as chaos.<br>
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I agree with those ISP adds (I think it's Prodigy) that depict the 'over computerized, internet slaves' as zombies squinting in the sun when coming outside after doing everything via computer. While you may feel that the opposite will be true if things are computerized--that people can be outside even more--I predict that will not be the case; you'll hear: "Sorry, I can't come to the basketball game tonight, I have to reconfigure the autoexec.bat file on my toaster" or "I just got done turning away the semi-truck outside that wanted to drop off 60 pallets of Cling Peaches to my pantry--it seems my AutoGrocer 3.0 was incompatible with ver. 2.0, and it moved a decimal point a few spaces over"... you get the picture.<br>
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There are things where we just need the 'real thing'. Have you tried lying on the couch or in bed reading a good book on a laptop, or even one of those 'electronic books'? Or take, say, skiing. How about a computerized ski that carves the turns for you? Let's go further, how about you don't even have to leave home, just strap into a virtual reality ski program, a fan blows cold air on you, you see video of the mountain going by--a perfect run, every time! Now there's more time for other stuff, like, virtual baseball, etc. I prefer the real thing, imperfect as my skiing can be, a real book to read--dog-earred pages and all, etc.<br>
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--Jim<br>