Night Sky
I try to keep luddite posts to a minimum, but the new phone is making this difficult. To begin with, I'm intimidated by the thing. When I do slide it out of its special pocket in my purse, I hold it like a Ming dynasty vase. This is making it difficult to familiarize myself with its amazing features.
My children are horrified that I continue to use it like a 2005 flip phone: "Have you tried the GPS yet?" ... "Have you bought any apps?" ... "You don't have any contacts, Mom."
Well, that's not entirely true. For some reason I have the email address of a high school counselor from 2009 but no numbers for people I actually need to reach.
And then there's the way that the phone completes my words and sentences. I'm a writer; I'd rather do this myself.
But there is hope. Last night a satisfied user I met at a party told me what made him buy his iPhone — an app called Night Sky. "The phone knows where you are and it shows you all the constellations and their names," he said.
Then he whipped out his iPhone — and the roof flew away and the people, too. And it reminded me of once when Tom and I were driving in Wyoming late at night and stopped to put oil in the car and looked up, almost accidentally, and could not believe our eyes.
A phone that brings the heavens into view. I'll buy that.
My children are horrified that I continue to use it like a 2005 flip phone: "Have you tried the GPS yet?" ... "Have you bought any apps?" ... "You don't have any contacts, Mom."
Well, that's not entirely true. For some reason I have the email address of a high school counselor from 2009 but no numbers for people I actually need to reach.
And then there's the way that the phone completes my words and sentences. I'm a writer; I'd rather do this myself.
But there is hope. Last night a satisfied user I met at a party told me what made him buy his iPhone — an app called Night Sky. "The phone knows where you are and it shows you all the constellations and their names," he said.
Then he whipped out his iPhone — and the roof flew away and the people, too. And it reminded me of once when Tom and I were driving in Wyoming late at night and stopped to put oil in the car and looked up, almost accidentally, and could not believe our eyes.
A phone that brings the heavens into view. I'll buy that.
Labels: stars, technology
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