Leading the Revolution, Again

apple-tablet-patent-5As you read this, Apple has already changed the world.

As I write this, we are still a day away from that monumental shift in the computer/communications world.

Okay, maybe that is a bit of an exaggeration, and in the pre-event world in which I am writing from, many of the tech blogs have begun to mock the mind-numbing hype that has preceded Apple’s newest product. Jokes about letting users walk on water or access the Internet through demonic powers have become more prevalent than speculation over built-in cameras and size.

This is not to say that those mocking the hype are completely in the wrong. There has been a deluge of rumors, fake spy pictures and boding on Apple’s tablet computer. I think I even read a story linking it to one of Nostradamus’ prophecies.

However, there is some good reason for this excitement. Apple has repeatedly revolutionized the computer and gadget industry over the last few decades.

Turning the way-back machine to the 80s, Apple brought the first “personal computer” into our homes. My 16th birthday gift was an Apple IIc. That was in 86, and the home pc revolution was already kicking with IBM PC Jrs and Commodore 64s, but it was Apple that spearheaded that moment.

With the spread of beige-boxed IBM clones, Apple near faded away, but in 1998, they did it again. Introducing the iMac in 5 brilliant colors, with screen and computer built in one unit, Apple changed the rules on what a computer looked like. They also killed off the floppy disc, when they went CD only with the iMac.

Now, at this time, I wasn’t a Mac fan. The Apple IIc was a nice toy, but lack of support, software and the fact that my high school was all IBM had left me with little love for the rainbow apple. In college, I had to work with both Mac’s OS and Windows, and firmly determined that Macs were just as crappy as Windows, but Windows had more games. I didn’t buy another Mac again until I picked up a PowerPC at a garage sale for $200 that included a HP laser printer and monitor. I was more interested in the laser printer, and the Mac became just another toy, albeit with less games than my IIc had.

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Burning Desire – Fired up by the Kindle

The Kindle 2 is as thin as a pencil, but can hold thousands of books, blogs and several other document types.

The Kindle 2 is as thin as a pencil, but can hold thousands of books, blogs and several other document types.

As a geek, and particularly a sci-fi/fantasy geek, there are two things that I really love: gadgets and reading.

I am a voracious reader. Back in high school, I was known to go through two to three novels a day. Sadly, I have to admit that I have slowed down on my novel consumption since then, but I still have a stack of reading materials on my nightstand and at my desk, jumping from one subject to another as the mood takes me. (more…)

Despite losing their home, the glow of the HDTV still warmed their hearts…and allowed them to keep up with the latest in local news and weather.

While working on my novel, I had turned on some stupid sitcom for background noise. It was on a local affiliate station (I won’t Name anyBody speCifically), and I almost spilled diet Coke all over my keyboard when I heard the local news promo for the evening newscast.

(I paraphrase because I might not have the exact wording here, but it is 90 percent close to exact)

“It’s cold out there tonight. If you don’t have a place to go, tune in for our 11 p.m. broadcast and we’ll tell you what shelters are open.”

What!?! What the heck were they thinking? That the homeless are all standing around in front of a TV and some burning barrels in post-apocalyptic cityscape; A tangled web of wires jury-rigging the box to a lamppost? Or there was a family of 10 crammed into a Honda, burning gas so they could watch Friends repeats on their mini-TV that plugs into the cigarette lighter? Has their demographics collapse to the point where only the homeless are tuning in (somehow)?

And while their logic skills were a systemic failure, this was obviously a failure of the people involved, too. Where where the editors and producers who were to think about this? Where were the over-the-top PC executives that worry about the American Flag or “Merry Christmas” might offend someone?

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