ppppppppppsmileyfacepppppppptonguefacepppppp…

 
My son continued my “Generation Text” edumacation today. If you just came in, he explained earlier this week that his contemporaries think he’s a weirdo because his phone folds in the middle and he talks into it.

-A fellow in my blog comments says he just turns his iPhone on with a simple swipe. Easy peasy.
-Yeah, just don’t get it wrong or your phone puts you in Time Out.
-What does that mean?
– If your phone doesn’t like the way you swipe your fingers, or if you’ve forgotten what you’re supposed to do exactly, the phone refuses to talk to you.
-You’re making that up. That sounds like kindergarten.
– No, dad. Really. The phone locks you out with a big sign that tells you when you’ll be allowed to use it again.
– There is no way that’s true.
– Google it, dad.
– Hmmm. “iPhone is disabled.” Thirty-three million, five-hundred thousand results. Dear God.
– That’s not the good part.
– There’s a “good” part?
– Depending on how mad you make the phone by stabbing your fingers at it in some way it doesn’t like, the longer it locks you out. It tells you in big letters on the screen how bad you’ve been.
-There is no way this can be true. What adult would ever consent to that?
– My friends are not adults, dad.
– My bad.
-Go ahead, Google it.
-Hmm. Image search this time. Oh, dear savior. “iPhone is disabled. Try again in 520410 minutes.“Holy merde! That’s … (lots of arithmetic later) … like a year. A year!
-Dad, you left out a zero. It’s 5200410 minutes.
-Ten ****ing years?
– My ears are not a toilet, dad.
– Sorry, Moss. You must be able to reset the thing.
– You can, but it erases everything in the phone.
– How… therapeutic. But your friends must do something insane to the phones to do that.
– The phones do what they want, dad.
– Yeah, sure.
– No, really. They do all sorts of things by themselves.
– Honestly. The dog ate my homework isn’t good enough anymore? The phone did it! Please.
– Dad, we were in McDonald’s and one of my friend’s phones started vibrating in his pocket so he put it on the table and said, “Watch this,” and the screen slowly filled up with: pppppppppppppppp, then added some smiley faces, then went back to all pppppppp with tongue faces mixed in, then texted it all to the kid’s dad. He thinks he got a drop of water or something on the phone once.
– If I was his dad and got two of those in a row, I imagine I’d smash your friend’s phone with a hammer a bit. Nothing serious, just with all my might.
– It only sent one text. After the pppppppp-smiley face thing, the phone went to Wikipedia by itself and looked up “Fairy Tales,” and then “Fairy Tales, disambiguation…”
– And it did all this with no one touching it?
– Yeah, it was lying in the middle of the table while we all watched it, laughing like hyenas. Although he turned it off when it started in on “Germanic Fairy Tales.”
– Too –ahem –Grimm?
– You’re funny dad. Not funny haha, though.

Kitchen Stories

Three Years Ago I Invented Blogging And Wrote This
 

[Author’s Note: Four seven years ago all I had was dial-up Internet access, but started an Internet cottage furniture business anyway. Like with everything else, I was a cranky autodidact, and painfully taught myself HTML by fooling around with FrontPage, toggling back and forth in the WYSIWYG window to compare the code to the appearance of the page. I had no idea there was anything like a community of blogs, and just started writing essays on my What’s New page. Here’s one from 2005 I’m not ashamed of.]

[Author’s Note: There is no editor}

Now, I’m going to forgo maundering on about the good old days, because this is thirty years before I was in the game, so to speak, and I don’t have a dog in that fight.

But look at that room. It’s glorious. You’d kill for a kitchen that pleasant to be in, and we’d get you to sign the closing papers before you noticed there isn’t a dishwasher, unless you count the girls in the chairs. Please keep in mind, this is not the rich folk’s house, or it wouldn’t be here. They were just regular people, like you and me, or maybe just me; you might be an Admiral or Rock Star or somesuch; I don’t know.

Let’s go over what they knew about a kitchen then, that they don’t know now.

First of all, look at the light. I’m referring to the light emanating from the yellow orb in the sky, which rarely gets into houses these days. The big girl on the right is reading, and that looks like a great place to do it. Two things bring in that light. First, the ceiling is high enough, but not vaulted. Designers vault rooms willy-nilly now, and make gloomy, echoey, medieval caverns out of rooms that should be close and homey. Kitchens get it a lot these days. You generally need four or five hundred thousand million watts of lighting in a vaulted ceiling kitchen to approach what they’ve got here, streaming right in. ( I might be a little off with my calculations on footcandles there, but I stand by the gist of it.)

That ceiling looks nine feet high. You can get a fairly airy ceiling by simply specifying full eight foot studs for the first floor wall framing of your house, and gain 4 inches for a few bucks. You’ll save people like me from getting cracked in the head by your inexplicable ceiling fans on a 7′-8″ ceiling that way.

The ceiling would undoubtedly have been white calcimined plaster, to reflect the light. Calcimine was a form of paste used in lieu of paint on ceilings, that you had to wash off before recoating. Everyone forgot that eventually, and painted over it, and it peeled forever. Your recollection of endlessly peeling Victorian and WWI vintage house ceilings generally traces back to calcimine. In the fifties, peopled stapled asbestos and cardboard tiles over the flaking paint, in the sixties they tried acoustic drop ceilings, the seventies tried swirled sand textured paint over the mess, and the eighties tried the judicious use of the wrecking ball.

But everyone’s forgotten to make the ceiling high enough to make the room proportionate to its length and width, allow the windows to be tall and stately, and let in extra air and light. Your present kitchen is almost undoubtedly larger than this, and I ask you, could you fit those four children into yours while you worked at the sink? (Count the shoes, there’s four, trust me) The designer knew enough to put windows on two walls in the room, and not just one. It’s possible to get natural light into a room with the windows ganged on one wall, but its hard to do, and unlikely you’ll manage it. Lighting your face from one side alone makes for interesting Beatles album covers, but it’s no way to live.

Look at the pantry cabinet on the facing wall. it’s in a niche, to allow you to get around the room, with a nice flat counter to display what is obviously a prized possession, with room to spare for day to day use as a work surface. Lovely. Even expensive kitchen cabinets are really crummy these days. They’re more often than not made from particle board covered with plastic woodgrain paper with a design imprint that looks like someone who liked Lawrence Welk a lot drew it originally. The only real wood on cabinets now is the doors, and they always are overlaid on the face, not inset like the picture. They are overlaid to save the manufacturer trouble, not give you a better looking thing; these cabinets have the doors inset into the frame, which is fussy, and looks terrific, and is not like most modern cabinets. The modern version looks more like the box a cabinet comes in than a cabinet itself.

The cabinets here are painted, probably glossy white, looked spiffy, reflected the glorious light some more, cleaned easily, and could be refurbished when they got to worn by a conscientious homeowner. Nowadays, since you’ve ponied up all that money for your cabinets, they’re probably solid hardwood faces, with uninteresting grain, dark enough to soak too much of the light up, and make you add still more lightbulbs to try to see in there. They’re sprayed with a thin couple of coats of nitrocellulose lacquer, which is tough as nails, at least until it isn’t, which is fairly soon, and can’t be rejuvenated by hand, and end up in the trash every ten years, no matter what you paid for them.

That fridge is really small, but the homeowners probably had spent their childhood with an icebox, or some without even that, and thought it was a marvel, no doubt. And it has the supple streamlined corners and clean white metal baked enamel glaze that says “clean” to me. You wouldn’t feel the need to put wood panels on the front of your refrigerator if it looked that, well, cool.

The simple checked floor is terrific. Really underrated, that kind of simple decoration. The photographer is probably standing in the door that leads to a dining room, or a hallway or parlor if the house is small. The homeowner has hung a pretty little mirror on the wall, canted just so, so she can see behind her when she’s at the sink, or alternately look out the window. People still make the mistake of making the sink a sad, lonely place to be, and occasionally make it even worse than bad, by running the cabinets right across with no window, and doom the user to hours of staring at nothing, their back to everyone, whether you have a dishwasher or not. For shame!

You all know me by now, and know full well that I’m going to steal the design for that gate leg table in the middle of the room. Oh yes. It’s the perfect work island for food prep, and presto, open it up and you’re eating the finest meal in the world, which is placed on the table direct from the oven or stove, by Mother’s hand, surrounded by your loved ones, the clink of glass and china and cutlery a domestic symphony, the beaming faces of the children arrayed around the round table, with the late afternoon sun beaming in and the family beaming out.

Get some of that lost kitchen, as much as you can find, fit, or afford, and I’ll bless it for you, right here and now.

They Call Me Captain Kirk

I had a fascinating and edifying conversation with my teenage son recently. He’s homeschooled. None of his friends are.

He had been tentatively hired to play and sing at a public function. I would ask him, from time to time, about the particulars of the job. He’d shrug and say he was waiting for information. When there was less than a day left before the scheduled date, I got a little peeved when I got the same answer — waiting to be told what to do; who to see; when to go. I received a little education while sorting it out with him.

The person in charge was ostensibly an adult but is more like a teenager running in place on the calendar. I asked him how he was communicating with her.

-I left a lot of messages on her Facebook wall.
-Facebook! Facebook? Why don’t you email her?
-No one has an email address, dad.
-Really?
-Well, they might, but they wouldn’t look in their inbox and answer you. There’s a part of Facebook that takes the place of email, though.
-Well, why don’t you leave one there for her?
-I left a half-dozen there. There’s no way to tell if anyone is looking at that.
-Why don’t you call her on the phone?
-She’s like my friends. She doesn’t know how to answer a phone.
-What do you mean? They all have $500 phones.
-They don’t know how to answer them.
-How can that be?
-They all are iPhone type slabs and they have to lock them so they don’t butt-dial 911 and their mother twenty-five times a day. They can’t unlock them fast enough to answer them.
-Well, why don’t you leave them a voicemail and tell them to call you back?
-Dad, they have no idea how to use voicemail. All their mailboxes are full and have never been listened to.
-You’re making that up.
-I’m not.
-Let’s find the phone number for the girl…er, woman that you need to talk to and call it.
    …the voice mailbox you’re trying to reach is full. Disconnecting.
-No one answers the phone?
-Dad, they text everything.
-But you’ve left “text” messages everywhere for your contact person.
-Texting isn’t for information, really.
-What does that mean?
-Dad, no one says much of anything when they text. It’s like a really elaborate handshake that goes on for a while.
-How so?
-A friend texts “hi.” You’re supposed to say “hi” back, but it’s bad manners to say more than hi, so that they can ask you how you are in little words without vowels in the next text, and keep the thing going for as long as possible. That’s why they don’t answer the phone, too, you can’t break the string of texting. Nothing really ever gets said.
-Well if all they do is text, why do they need iPhones? What can they do with them?
-Well, you could Google something, I guess, or watch a video, but they don’t.
-Why not?
-Watching even half a 240p video will put them over their data limit, so they won’t do it.
-Well they must do something with the screen.
-The girls all use it to look at Facebook, where they leave little text messages and ducklips phone photos for each other to look at while they text each other directly. 
-Someone must be using the phone to talk on the phone.
-No, if you want to talk on the phone you use Skype.
-Now we’re getting somewhere.
-My friends all get laptops given to them at school, and use them to Skype one another.
-They Skype in school?
-No, the boys play flash video games during class in school, and the girls…
-No, don’t tell me — they look at Facebook all day.
-Now you’re getting it dad.
-They must use them for something to do with school.
-Well, they’re Apples, dad. They’re pretty much useless.
-Well, don’t they use them to read books or Wikipedia or something?
-No one in school reads the books, dad.
-Come on.
-Well, a couple of kids read all the books that get assigned. The kid that was homeschooled until last year does, I think.
-You’d flunk if you didn’t read any books.
-There’s a website they use their laptops for that tells you what a book says without reading it. I don’t know the name of it.
-Cliff Notes?
-I think that’s it.
-The teachers would catch them.
-I think the teachers know but don’t care because it’s no skin off their nose.
-So the kids just plagiarize Wikipedia for their work?
-I think the teachers have a thing about Wikipedia so they’ve found some other place to copy and paste from.
-Doesn’t the school block that sort of thing?
-Are you serious, dad?
-Yes, I guess.
– I guess they try that sort of thing here and there but it’s a joke. They tried blocking something at YouTube once, and the kids just erased the backslash on the URL and it went right through. The technical ability of the school is strictly Wayne Newton-fan level.
-What do your friends think about you?
-They call me Captain Kirk because my phone folds in the middle and I talk into it.

Month: May 2012

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