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Archive for the 'Computer' Category

Why I Hate Computers, The Internet, and Mr. Bill

I have been meaning to write this column since the day I first bought a home computer in 1993. It probably was getting online that first prompted the desire to write this. What has been keeping me from writing this column until now is that every time I made an attempt, I would dissolve into a pool of tears and end up on the bed uttering vile profanities.

But here I am. I am bucking up. I am finally going to write this column. Maybe I should call it, “Why I hate computers, the Internet, and Bill ______!”

Let me first ask you something. If you spent a small fortune (and in 1993, computers cost a lot) to buy a high tech piece of equipment, wouldn’t you expect it to work? If you bought, let’s say, a brand-new Sony flat-screen television set, wouldn’t you expect to see The Guiding Light (or whatever program was your pleasure) when you hit the power switch?

What would you think if you hit the “on” button and the television just sat there doing nothing except making clicking sounds and scary humming noises? What would you think if you tried changing channels but only got a nicely-written message saying that the channel you selected is no longer in existence (and furthermore never had existed)? What would you think if you turned on the satellite only to get an error message telling you that you don’t have an account and if you ever had one, it has expired?

These are very legitimate questions. They get worse. What if you have been struggling with this wonderful, high-tech, never-before-has-the-world-seen-such-a-marvel television for years and years? What if you hit channel 4 but you get channel 4,450 instead? You call tech support and they tell you that your television isn’t programmed correctly. The geeks at Sony television lead you on a three-hour wild goose chase of fixes, after which they proudly announce that they have to be gods because they have miraculously cured your technical problem and your set will now work. Only, when you try it, it still does the same stupid thing.

Excuse me if I am wrong here, but when you pay a fortune for something that is supposed to do that for which it was designed, shouldn’t it do exactly that?

I about blew my flash memory when I read that Microsoft is releasing a new Windows Operating System.

ButbutMr. Bill _____, why doesn’t the one I have work? Why not make the one that currently exists and tortures everyone all around planet Earth work? Why not end my suffering with the one that presently sits on a desk in my house and works only when it wants to?

Here is a problem, one that is probably all too familiar to you readers. I have had this problem for years with all the computers I have owned. Upon occasion, but not always, when I attempt to download the Windows Updates (which should be called The Windows OS killer!), they download and install nicely. Then it gives me the fatal, murderous message, You now must restart your computer.

When I do this, it causes some kind of “feedback loop” that makes my computer recycle FOREVER in the start-up mode. It never does anything but make a lot of noise, then reboots forever and ever, Amen!

It sounds, acts, and looks like what I can only imagine what a hard drive must go through when it is having cardiac arrest or a stroke.

If Sony television sold TVs that pulled this sort of nonsense that Mr. Bill ______ and his wunderkind geeks pull, they would soon not be selling many TVs.

What are we, the consumers, to do? We keep buying and buying and buying PC’s with OS’s that consistently do not work!

I have owned many computers since my first one in 1993. I have friends, co-workers, and colleagues who have owned many PC’s since PC’s were first born to make human’s lives miserable. All, and I mean all, have conspired to torture me and my friends with what is touted as “The Mother of all Operating SystemsWindows!”

Why do they want to release another Operating System when the one they’ve presently got does not work? Now, all of you reading this know that what I am writing is true. I am most certainly preaching to the Windows OS choir.

Windows OS works when and if IT wants to.

Not only that, with every single new, off-the-shelf computer I have ever bought, I have had to spend an additional amount of money in software just to get the OS monster to work right. With the computer I bought in Mexico, I had to buy software for virus protection, firewalls, registry cleaners, file deletion, error nuking and fixing, defragging, and more.

You know this is so because you have had to do the same thing!

So, there, I have said it and do not feel one bit better. I do not know who to be madder atMr. Bill ____ of Microsoft or myself for my insistence in buying PC after PC.

I wonder if I can get a MAC in Mexico?

Now excuse me, please, while I start crying and fall on the bed.

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Computers Cannot Duplicate the Human Mind

Many say that man cannot build computers, which can duplicate the human brain, because the thoughts, memories and images in the brain are spiritual. Since God made man’s brain this way, there is no way that scientists, researchers or artificial intelligence gurus in academia can recreate that.

One recent think tanker, a biblical scholar and devout Christian wished to make a point on this issue and he stated: “Imagine something in your mind, imagine say, a chair, this chair that you’re a visualizing is not physical, it is your thought, it is spiritual.”

This was met with skepticism from another think tank member who tried to explain his point of view to the Christian Gentleman and stated:

“Well the chair in my mind would be a cache of memory or a “frame bursting” image in the memory, which was formed from a chemical reaction at a time it was imprinted. It is a representation of a chair. A digital picture is an image encoded by ones and zeroes, but it is not spiritual, yet there it is:

http://www.pitt.edu/~bookctr/giftsapparel/gradgifts/Chair.jpg

It is a representation of a chair in the virtual world. It exists, but it is not spiritual or any more spiritual than the chair in my mind. Of course mine is somewhat more detailed than this particular chair. And I can spin the chair in my head based on memories or “frame bursting” of images and angles I hath observed said chair. Additional thoughts on this, read about Eagles and sight, memory and observations:

http://www.worldthinktank.net/art125.shtml

We know that bees and other insects also use similar methods and memory, they can remember their Bee Keepers face and associate it with a positive or negative. As a matter of fact this is common through out all living species, some suspect bacteria, microbe colonies too. I am beginning to agree with them on that as well. Lots of proof, additionally this is why fractal camouflage works so well and there are issues to with Stealth if you think deep on it; another article of interest in this discussion:

http://worldthinktank.net/wttbbs/index.php?s=9b451ac4154de74b2c8f9107cec7bdec&showtopic=1597&st=0&#entry4128

What do you see when you look at the clouds? A chair? Could be or perhaps you see Jesus in your French Toast and wish to bid on it on Ebay? Have to each his own, but I am hungry for more that Toast with a French flare to it;”

http://worldthinktank.net/wttbbs/index.php?showtopic=304

Do you have thoughts on man’s mind and brain and god’s plan for it? Do you think that either of these think tankers made rational arguments pro or con the use of technology in duplicating the human brain? If you have thought about such things, then we would sure like to hear your point of view and perspective? Think on this in 2006.

Lance Winslow - Online Think Tank forum board. If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance; www.WorldThinkTank.net/wttbbs/

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A Computer and Internet Glossary

When you use computers and the Internet in your business, it’s all too easy to start feeling like you’re drowning in a sea of nonsense. Computer-related things tend to have a language all their own, and while you don’t need to know all of it, there are many confusing words and phrases that you’re going to come across sooner or later. Here’s a quick primer.

Bandwidth. Bandwidth is the amount of data that your website can send each second, as well as the amount of data that the visitor to your website can receive. If either one doesn’t have enough bandwidth, then the website will appear slowly. For this reason, you should choose a host with plenty of bandwidth, as well as testing that your site doesn’t take too long to download on slow connections.

Browser. A browser is the software (see below) that visitors to your site use to view it. The most popular browser is Microsoft’s Internet Explorer, which comes with Windows.

Cookie. Cookies are data files that your site can save on the computer of someone who visits that site, to allow it to remember who they are if they return. You will find that problems people have in ordering from you will almost inevitably be related to cookies — they will need to have them turned on.

Download. Transferring data from a website to a computer.

Favourite. A favourite is a website that a user has stored to look at again, by choosing ‘Add to Favourites’ in their browser’s menu.

FTP. File Transfer Protocol. This is a common method of uploading (see below) files to your website.

Javascript. A common language for writing ’scripts’ on websites, which are small programs that make the site more interactive. Another common cause of problems for visitors.

JPEG. Joint Photographic Experts Group. This is the name of the most popular format for pictures on the web, named after the group that came up with it. If you want to put pictures on your website, you should save them as JPEGs.

Hardware. Hardware is computer equipment that physically exists. It is the opposite of software.

Hosting. If you’ve got a website out there on the Internet, then you’ll be paying someone for hosting. It is the service of making your site available for people to see.

HTML. HyperText Markup Language. A kind of code used to indicate how web pages should be displayed, using a system of small ‘tags’. The ‘b’ tag, for example, causes text to appear in bold, and the ‘img’ tag displays a picture.

Hyperlink. A hyperlink is when a piece of text on a website can be clicked to take you to another site, or another page on the same site. For example, if clicking your email address on your website allows someone to email you, then your email address is a hyperlink.

Programming. This is when the computer is given instructions to tell it what to do, using one of many ‘programming languages’. Programming languages for the web include PHP and Perl.

Server. The server is where your website is stored, and it is the server that people are connecting to when they visit the site. If someone tells you, for example, that your server is ‘down’, it means that your website is inaccessible. Note that server refers both to the hardware and software of this system.

Software. Programs that run on the computer, or that make your website work. Microsoft Word is software, for example, as is Apache (the most popular web server software). Opposite of hardware.

Spider. Don’t be scared if a spider visits your website! Spiders are simply programs used by search engines to scan your site and help them decide where it should appear when people search. It is good to be visited by spiders, as it means you should start appearing in search engines soon.

Upload. Uploading is when you transfer data from your own computer to your website. For example, you might upload your logo, or an article you’ve written. Opposite of download.

URL. Uniform Resource Locator. This is just a short way of saying ‘web address’, meaning what you have to type in to get to your website. Sometimes pronounced as ‘Earl’.

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