Traverse City Record-Eagle

Columns

October 18, 2009

Ed Hungness: Dinosaur likes voice

I can't imagine writing this column every two weeks without the use of my computer. My handwriting has never won any blue ribbons, and so I usually print more than I write cursive. I like to blame my poor handwriting on the fact that I'm left-handed but in all honesty that's just a convenient excuse.

Some writers I know still like to use pencil and paper to express their thoughts. They claim that using the computer disrupts their creativity. Maybe I'm just lazy. In writing, there are always corrections to be made in content, grammar and spelling. I'm afraid I would go through a small fortune buying legal pads and erasers with all my revisions. With the computer, I simply hit the backspace or delete key. I am also thankful for tools such as spell check and grammar check.

I started using a computer in the '80s. Up until a few years ago I kept up with advances in new technology. I can still hold my own, but I feel like I'm being left behind in a wasteland of outdated programs and equipment.

Maybe it is common among seniors but I don't have the desire or the need to keep up. I am quite satisfied with what I have and its ability to do the job at hand. I have a theory that the never-ending advancements of computer equipment and programs are nothing more than efforts to create sales for Apple and Microsoft but I can't blame them for that.

I was getting along quite nicely, I thought. I've stayed in touch with friends and relatives and enjoy being greeted each morning with "You've Got Mail!" It was great to hear from everyone.

Then along came Facebook, Twitter, and SMS (Short Message Service) otherwise known as "texting."

My kids all said, "Dad, you need to set up your Facebook page!" I started receiving e-mails telling me how there were eight "friends" inviting me to join them on Facebook. I told everyone who asked me that I didn't want to be on Facebook. I also don't want to Twitter or send text messages. My plate is already too full.

Over time, I noticed a drop in the number of e-mails I was receiving except for the never-ending flood of advertising, which I immediately send off to spam world. Now, I am marooned on what might be considered a desert island in the sea of technology -- abandoned by my own children and loved ones in my world of solitary e-mail neglect. Oh woe is me!

My dear wife, a proud owner of an iPhone, tells me to ditch my "old" cell phone, which I purchased less than two years ago. She, like the rest of the clan, has happily joined the millions of other souls who are sending over 75 billion text messages each month. This number has grown by 250 percent each year for the past two years. It's no wonder the various phone companies spend so much on advertising. The latest statistics that I could muster up indicate that there are 265 million mobile phone users in the U.S. and half of them are exercising their thumbs sending text messages.

Statistics indicate that people now send more text messages than make regular phone calls. The "typical" user sends or receives 300 messages per month compared to 200 phone calls where the human voice is heard. Texting has become popular across all age groups, including grandparents! Among aficionados, the claim is that it saves time and is more efficient than making a phone call.

Recently, I was talking to an acquaintance about his summer. He was bringing me up to date on all of the company they had during the season. I was expecting to hear stories of great fish caught, kayak adventures and wienie roasts over the campfire followed by gooey s'mores. Instead, he related how two of his visiting grandchildren sat on opposite ends of their couch, mutely conversing with each other via cell phone text messages. Finally he handed each one of them a fishing pole and told them to go outside and get some fresh air.

Technology is a wonderful thing. Maybe at some point I will adapt to the latest in communication gadgetry. For now, I won't be telling anyone that they are my "BFF" or texting "UR 2 good 2 B real." Call me a dinosaur but I still enjoy the sound of my children's voices as well as my friends and relatives whether it be on the telephone or in person.

Ed Hungness and his wife owned their cottage on Fife Lake for six years before moving there after his retirement in 2005. He can be reached at edhungness@yahoo.com. For more of Ed's columns, log on to record-eagle.com/edhungness.

Text Only
  • Kathy Gibbons: Not 'just a cat'

    I started a new job Monday after being laid off from my last one. That night, I had to write this column to make this week's deadline. But I was having a hard time concentrating on any of it. All I could think about was my cat.

    Continued ...
    Feb 12, 2012 7:14 am 1 Photo
  • Jack Lessenberry: State's prison problem

    Someone once said society needed to decide whether it could afford to lock up those it was mad at, or just those we are legitimately afraid of. What seems bizarre is that given Michigan's financial situation, its leaders seem unwilling to make the rational choice.

    Continued ...
    Feb 12, 2012 7:14 am
  • George Weeks: Snyder and state rebound

    Continued ...
    Feb 12, 2012 7:14 am
  • Adapted in TC: Relationship's strength is at its core

    In the beginning when we take our vows, few of us think "in sickness" applies right then. Perhaps we'll have to deal with that when we're really old or maybe everything will stay right until we die. In this moment, such matters are not in our reality.

    Continued ...
    Feb 11, 2012 7:14 am 1 Photo
  • Foodie With Family: Feeding joy

    The other day, after a protracted conversation about food, my little brother observed that my purpose in life is to make people hungry. As a food writer, there is something to that, but that's not the whole story ... I also feed them.

    Continued ...
    Feb 9, 2012 7:34 am 2 Photos
  • Amish Cook: Warmth helps stove breaks

    The sun is shining and it almost seems like spring with the unusual warmth we are experiencing.

    Continued ...
    Feb 9, 2012 7:30 am
  • Op-Ed: Reform falls on deaf ears

    Surprise! Would you believe that political systems are stacked in favor of those with money? That's probably been true since the days of the Pharaohs. But these days, two things make the normal much worse in our country.

    Continued ...
    Feb 9, 2012 7:24 am 1 Photo
  • Monday, February 6, 2012
  • Garret Leiva: This could change your life

    We live in a world where schemers, dreamers and spammers stuff our email inbox with can’t-miss deals and Nigerian bank windfalls. I, for one, can earn $50,000 in the next 90 days or enter to win a free iPad2. The best part is these wishful dreams can come true without any effort.

    Continued ...
    Feb 6, 2012 7:38 am 1 Photo
  • Sunday, February 5, 2012
  • Giants on Cruz control

    Once again, the Giants come in as the underdog and once again I think they leave with the Vince Lombardi trophy.

    Continued ...
    Feb 5, 2012 7:14 am
  • Northern People: Hay in Texas in nick of time

    Hay donated by Dick Olds of Olds' Paradise Farms in Kingsley arrived at Rick Petersen's farm in the northeast Texas town of Wills Point in the nick of time.

    Continued ...
    Feb 5, 2012 7:14 am 1 Photo
  • On Poetry: Knitting, like love, has a fringe

    Even if this winter's been mild, we've had plenty of chances to appreciate our knitted scarves, shawls, and sweaters. I think the hand-knitted ones are the warmest, holding all that personal care and attention in their fibers.

    Continued ...
    Feb 5, 2012 7:14 am 1 Photo
  • Jack Lessenberry: Overcoming the Morouns

    Americans are justifiably outraged whenever a lawmaker is caught taking bribes or misusing public funds. But what do you suppose the voters' reaction would be if it were discovered that one very rich family was trying to buy off the Legislature solely for their own financial gain? What if that family spent millions on what amounted to legalized bribes to successfully block a project that virtually every corporation in the state agreed was essential to Michigan's economic future? We are talking about the family of Manuel J. "Matty" Moroun, the 84-year-old billionaire who owns the aging Ambassador Bridge.

    Continued ...
    Feb 5, 2012 7:14 am
  • James Cook: Bet against Belichick?

    There's one big reason the pick is New England. Remember 2008?

    Continued ...
    Feb 5, 2012 7:14 am
  • George Weeks: Granholm has new gig

    Over the last half-century, most Michigan governors upon leaving office have gone into or sought another form of public service. The last one, Democrat Jeniffer Granholm, is blazing into the public light with a sprightly talk show gig on California-based national cable TV.

    Continued ...
    Feb 5, 2012 7:14 am 1 Photo
  • Reflections: Images on the pond

    With the cat asleep on my lap, I stared at the flames dancing in the fireplace and my mind drifted back to a long-ago summer afternoon spent with my father.

    Continued ...
    Feb 5, 2012 7:14 am 1 Photo
  • Saturday, February 4, 2012
  • Ask Evelyn: Everybody's doing it?

    Q: My "tween" is always saying "Everybody does it" or "Everybody says it." I know this is an excuse to try to get her own way or get things she wants, but I'm really getting tired of hearing it. Where does this end? — Frustrated Mom

    Continued ...
    Feb 4, 2012 7:14 am 1 Photo
  • Thursday, February 2, 2012
  • Avid cook teaches in Beulah

    Winter can be kind of quiet in downtown Beulah. So Sally Berlin and Jackleen Carmack decided to spice it up a little with "“ what else? "“ food.

    Continued ...
    Feb 2, 2012 8:07 am 1 Photo
  • Amish Cook: Feverish boy still dervish

    Kevin, 6, is home from school today. He has been running a fever since yesterday morning.

    Continued ...
    Updated Feb 7, 2012 10:38 am
  • Op-Ed: 'Turnaround plan' for Michigan

    Business Leaders for Michigan, a group of some of the state's most progressive, far-seeing corporate chiefs, has released a new 2012 Michigan Turnaround Plan — and it's worth checking out.

    Continued ...
    Feb 2, 2012 7:54 am 1 Photo
  • Wednesday, February 1, 2012
  • Dennis Chase: Family tradition continues

    College football recruiting has changed dramatically since Shane Bullough went through the process nearly 30 years ago.

    Continued ...
    Feb 1, 2012 7:28 am 1 Photo
  • Monday, January 30, 2012
  • Terry Wooten: A time of big snow

    The winter of 1957-58 was a doozie. I was in fourth grade. Snowbanks were higher than school bus windows along sections of the back roads.

    Continued ...
    Jan 30, 2012 7:19 am 1 Photo
  • Garret Leiva: Electrifying Super Bowl

    Fans in NFL jerseys and power-suit ad executives will all be abuzz Sunday over the Roman numeral spectacle Super Bowl XLVI. I hope to score the electrical outlet plug-in version.

    Continued ...
    Jan 30, 2012 7:18 am 1 Photo
  • Sunday, January 29, 2012
  • Jack Lessenberry: Health care here, abroad

    For nine months of each year, Dr. Richard Keidan is an elite physician in an upscale Detroit suburb, a surgeon who specializes in removing cancer. But every three months or so, he flies across the globe to Nepal, lands in Katmandu, and then trudges into the interior.

    Continued ...
    Jan 29, 2012 7:14 am 1 Photo
  • For water features, think small

    Water features can bring interest, beauty and wildlife to a garden, but they also can be work.

    Continued ...
    Jan 29, 2012 7:14 am 1 Photo
  • George Weeks: Camp takes leadership role

    Periodically in its 175 years of statehood, which was marked last week, Michigan has had politicians prominent in crafting federal policy.

    Continued ...
    Jan 29, 2012 7:14 am 1 Photo