I saw this article a while back: "According to the Consumer Electronics Association, the average home has 26 consumer electronics devices — anything ranging from a radio to a PDA." The writer decides the cellphone is the most important item he owns and would be the leasst likely to give up. Also, I read in Parade magazine this article in which the cellphone is on the Top 10 of the Most UNWanted Inventions.
So what devices do you have? What do you need? What would you give up? What would you couldn't live without?
I have no cellphone, but I do have a phone that I can remove from the base, something my wise parents-in-law bought for us just after Lydia was born. Its best feature, though, is the homing device at the base which I push to find it. (I 'd love that for the remote on the DVR.)
Have a DVR. Don't NEED the DVR. I do like the DVR, a lot actually. Still have the VCR, which is good because I still have a bunch of VHS tapes, which the child watches on occasion.
I have a stereo with a turntable that's in need of repair. The turntable operates only when I spin it manually, then it catches. I also have a 78 player in the attic in need of a cartridge. (Yes, I have 78s. No, I'm not THAT old. I was living in an apartment building, and the nice old ladies who lived upstairs gave them to me when we all got thrown out of the building so the landlords could renovate and go upscale.)
For me, I suppose, my technology keeper has become the computer. I communicate with it (e-mail and blog), I watch stuff on it (videos, though rarely), I listen to music on it (well, the one at work), I keep track of my schedule with those Windows pop-ups. I could watch TV on it, and did, a little, for college basketball.
What says you?
ROG
Implementation
16 hours ago
1 comment:
Without question, I need my laptop computer. If I didn't have that, I couldn't do my work (with my lack of spelling skills, for instance, most people would think that I am functionally illiterate). My ipod is also pretty important to keep boredom at bay in the gym or using public transport.
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