Originally posted by Anna
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How much do we need?
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI worry about techological "advances" making everyday practicalities impossible for those unwilling or unable to afford regular equipment updates. What happens if one day the whole system goes pearshaped as a result of hackers?
I have Windows 7 and only got that because support for XP was about to expire; do I want Windows 8 just because it's there? No. I got MS Office 2000 when it was relatively new and only changed it for Office 2010 in 2011. Do I feel deprived or left out of it? No.
...usw...
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI worry about techological "advances" making everyday practicalities impossible for those unwilling or unable to afford regular equipment updates. What happens if one day the whole system goes pearshaped as a result of hackers?
And, to boot, it all going pearshaped might happen deliberately as well as accidentally.
Any road, I like Anna's philosophy, and am impressed at an economically repairable washing machine.
i think we had a " I'm more low tech than you" discussion before, from which I am now excluded on the grounds of my new stereo. (well in my eyes, anyway.)
Late adopters of the world , unite.
(Edit: our old toaster died yesterday, trying , and happily failing,to take the house electrical system with it.
I expect to find the current rage of 2 slice toasters digitised, minitutised, and needing regular firmware updates.).I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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The thermostat on my fridge isn't functioning properly, but my local supplier said they don't repair fridges because the cost is as much a new fridge. Just at the moment I have the setting so low it almost switches the fridge off - but according to the independent thermometer the temperature is about right. When it starts heating up again and I can't turn it down any further, I suppose I'll have to have a new fridge ...It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View Post
(Edit: our old toaster died yesterday, trying , and happily failing,to take the house electrical system with it.
I expect to find the current rage of 2 slice toasters digitised, minitutised, and needing regular firmware updates.).
Haven't you got a cooker ?
They are all shite
(like electric kettles....... total waste of money)
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostWhat's a toaster ?
Haven't you got a cooker ?
They are all shite
(like electric kettles....... total waste of money)
But , although you can toast things on it very well, sometimes time (including clean up time) dictates that the humble toaster is the thing to use, in a cost/benefit kind of way.
Do you only have one kind of recording equipment?I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostI have an Everhot, as it goes.
But , although you can toast things on it very well, sometimes time (including clean up time) dictates that the humble toaster is the thing to use, in a cost/benefit kind of way.
Do you only have one kind of recording equipment?
But i've never met a toaster that does that well
and if I did the money would be better spent on a Schoeps Microphone
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Anna
Originally posted by french frank View PostThe thermostat on my fridge isn't functioning properly, but my local supplier said they don't repair fridges because the cost is as much a new fridge.
As to being left behind digitally, it is a worry as so much now, including banking, seems to depend on apps and scanning the squares with the phone. A very stupid example of this is our local buses which basically trundle around three routes. Apart from the main departure point all the timetable boards at the individual bus stops have been removed and replaced by a notice saying "scan this square doofer for timetables"! <banned steam from ears emoticon> So, if you're not local, have decided to go for a trek in the countryside or along the river but think a bus back woud be nice ..............
As to small kitchen appliances, now some charity shops sell tested and certified small electricals you can furnish a kitchen at hardly any expense. Our local Red Cross this morning has: slow cookers; breadmakers; coffee makers; three-tier steamers; handwhisks and toasters.
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Originally posted by Anna View Post
As to being left behind digitally, it is a worry as so much now, including banking, seems to depend on apps and scanning the squares with the phone. A very stupid example of this is our local buses which basically trundle around three routes. Apart from the main departure point all the timetable boards at the individual bus stops have been removed and replaced by a notice saying "scan this square doofer for timetables"! <banned steam from ears emoticon> So, if you're not local, have decided to go for a trek in the countryside or along the river but think a bus back woud be nice ..............
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post"DOCUMENTARY OF THE WEEK New series Fancy an upgrade to your mobile handset? Thinking of getting a new sofa? Oh, you capitalist patsy, you! Jacques Peretti knows exactly why you're locked into a consumerist cycle of shopping and throwing away, and he tells us in another of his crisply argued series.
"The gist of it is that, once we bought stuff that lasted, and only replaced it when it was knackered, now consumer goods are designed to become obsolete, to be thrown away and regularly replaced in favour of something newer, shinier and more fashionable.
"This hasn't happened by accident but as a result of antiheroes whom Peretti names and shames, froM the 1920s light-bulb-makers' cartel to Swatch watches to Steve Jobs at Apple. The programme is full of striking images, too: one look at a post-festival field strewn with new tents that have been used once then discarded, and you see Peretti's point. DAVID BUTCHER".
Not one to be missed!
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Anna
S_A, to briefly go back to the sign at the bus stop, the square is called a QR Code which is a matrix barcode that a smartphone scans and converts to the URL of a website - I just couldn't remember what it was called yesterday. You find them now on your bank statements, etc., so you can do banking via your phone rather than a computer or face to face. The last time I went into my bank to do a transaction the girl behind the counter asked why I didn't use my phone and save myself a trip, so I asked her if she really wanted to do herself out of a job?
Back to the programme, who would have thought of inventing screws that no screwdriver known to man could unscrew in order to change a battery! <horror> The XBox, new iphone etc., launches are nothing short of mass hysteria, bit like old fashioned Evangelism isn't it? As to IKEA, fashions in interiors are constantly changing so I'm not sure that's so worrying.
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Originally posted by Anna View PostS_A, to briefly go back to the sign at the bus stop, the square is called a QR Code which is a matrix barcode that a smartphone scans and converts to the URL of a website - I just couldn't remember what it was called yesterday. You find them now on your bank statements, etc., so you can do banking via your phone rather than a computer or face to face. The last time I went into my bank to do a transaction the girl behind the counter asked why I didn't use my phone and save myself a trip, so I asked her if she really wanted to do herself out of a job?
Back to the programme, who would have thought of inventing screws that no screwdriver known to man could unscrew in order to change a battery! <horror> The XBox, new iphone etc., launches are nothing short of mass hysteria, bit like old fashioned Evangelism isn't it? As to IKEA, fashions in interiors are constantly changing so I'm not sure that's so worrying.
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Anna
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI wasn't aware Ikea stuff isn't made to last. Just as well I've never bought any!
Of course you mentioned you had inherited antique furniture - so you don't have to worry about not being cool - your home is furnished with Timeless Classics!! :-)
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