How many of us are lost in the machine world and the Blue Nowhere? I know I am a dreadful addict… 98% of my correspondance is via the computer. I keep track of everything on my computer and my palm pilot (which is dreadfully slow but at least it is able to go in my pocketbook!) and I use my mobile phone over land lines. I have been known to dream in code and yes I have been talking and used chat abbreviations. Nothing like saying “LOL” instead of actually laughing!
My start in the machine world was at a young age. Which doesn’t say much to people who don’t know me, but considering I am 29 and have had a computer for as long as I can remember… that does say something. My father always had at least one working computer. He would also tinker around in boxes so I learned the inner workings as well. I remember programming in basic and using dos. I remember writing my own games. My dad and I worked on a pizza delivery game. We should resurrect that. It was quite fun! OK, not really we would have to deliver pizza and well, it was text based. But we thought it was fun! At school I would fill the screen with words to piss off the teachers in the computer lab. And I hated playing Oregon Trail and found a way to complete the “journey” in under five minutes. Of course I’ve forgotten how I did that NOW because that was around fifth grade.
I remember logging onto BBS’s in the late 80s and posting messages and sending mail through the FidoNet. Of course back then I was just Ozma as no one else had ganked the name. I had hotmail in 1996 and I started my website in 1997 after getting a scanner. I tell you being military and poor put a real damper on my computing. But in 97 I opped in a chatroom about quilting of all things. Yes quilters are very high tech! HA!
When I write I type. I can’t stand to write on paper and then have to turn around and input it. It just seems so much easier to open a screen and hammer away at the keyboard than to write and then hammer. Drove my teachers up the wall in high school because I simply couldn’t stand to do all those funky little index cards and blah blah blah. Just seemed easier for me to log onto a BBS and cut and paste or to just key stuff into a txt file. Getting a laptop in 1993 helped out a lot with that, but of course that was the year I graduated. That laptop was a lifesaver at college though. Everyone else spent hours in the library and I just had to lay in bed. Excellent. People couldn’t believe I actually brought not only my own computer but a laptop. Of course I also had a cell phone then and I would think it’s fairly safe to say that I was one of the only people in my freshman class at college with one and most likely the only girl.
I’ve been thinking about all of this because I just read a book entitled “The Blue Nowhere”. The book involves a murderous hacker who somehow lost the distinction between reality and the machine world and basically went under the theory that “All the world is a MUD.” (Yup been there, done that as well!) The cops can’t track him down since he’s so elite that they spring another hacker from jail in order to bust the perp. So there’s tons of fiddling and hacking and zooming through the net. The story was great. And I was even surprised at the ending for who the “partner” was. That’s good! The book was indeed geek worthy. The only downfall is apparently the writer decided to write a book aimed at computer geeks but then dumbed it down so the most computer illiterate could read it. I mean there was actually a point where he defined “BRB”. I think that’s a little much considering the audience this book plays to.
Would I recommend it? Sure, but only with a warning of the constant explanations. Up to the end. Argh! But of course it was all men. Well there was this one woman and she was chubby and ugly and yadda yadda. But even she admitted to how “rare” she was… a woman in the true computer world. I suppose we are rare. Generally I give my email address out to my female friends and they are like “Well I barely know how to use email” and they think I’m odd since I do everything online. I am the general tech help girl for just about everyone I know, even today. People from Church call me up and say “Hey I need some help and heard you know about…” But I think there are more of us “geek gurls” than people know about. And we aren’t all fat and ugly and alone. Hey look at Kate from the original Screensavers back when it was ZDTV. Megan and Cat and Sarah are my icons. Girls in geekdom who are proud of it.
Anyway, this book… very fascinating. And of course it was great to take a walk down memory lane as the author fleshed out the characters. I’ve never hacked big government stuff or anything like that, but the rest of it… yup… the talk about BBS and take apart computers and how young these guys started computering, and MUDs and all of that… Was kind of fun.
loadhan said:
Heh. It’s my primary form of communication now too. Especially since it doesn’t cost per minute to talk to my friends long distance. 😀
I also love it because I can do other stuff and have multiple conversations at once – unlike on a phone. Mom thought I was on the phone too much when I was in high school before I got a modern computer. 😉
I first got one in when I was pretty young. Got one for Christmas. Commodore 128 (yes, not a 64; a 128 – it even had a color monitor, back in the 80’s!!!). The following year I got a new game for it – Railroad Works – that involved me making railways and driving trains around. Could also make landscape.
I didn’t open another Christmas present until the December 26th I was too busy with that game, heh. And I think I still had presents left to open a few days after. I started a tradition that year of spacing them out over days. 🙂
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Lady Ozma said:
HAHA..
I don’t think I’d open any other gift either. My family knows better… if you give me gadgets give them last. LOL
We didn’t even have namebrand computers. Commodore? What’s that? Nope not in our house. We had funky stuff. The first one I remember that actually had something on it like a name said “Eagle”. My dad bought way way way way off the shelf or he bought the parts and assembled them.
At one point we had a computer that used tapes. I remember not realizing (because my father did not label it) that a tape was for the computer and I put it in my tape deck and recorded on it thinking it was blank. Ouch. I don’t think I sat for a week. Which made the no computer punishment harder to take since I couldn’t sit down!!
But yup, between message boards, email, LJ, and jazz… I don’t talk to people over the phone anymore. I almost never make phone calls. I need to ring people and it takes me weeks. LOL I tell everyone “Just email me, it is way easier to get a hold of me!” Even now I check my email at least twice a day. Once in the morning and once in the evening. I tend to leave it open so that I can just click “refresh”. (I like gmail no need to refresh as it does it automatically) Of course my computer neesd to be on and not hibernating and I need to be home to do this… LOL
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xmichra said:
lol, I can see what you mean, I use my computer all the time. I ‘talk’ all the time on it and tell people to e-mail me for faster responces aswell! My mother always barks at me that she can never get a hold of me unless I am on-line. She’s a phone person.. so we clash a bit.
I don’t think anyone in college had a cell phone where I was. It wasn’t until I think two years after that the cell phone craze really busted out. I remember a friend of mine who had a managing job at a bar had a cell phone way back in 1998 and we thought he was being a show off with his new found cash for investing in the darned thing!!lol… I just can’t believe how much that has changed now!
I unfortunately had no type of computer in my house, infact I didn’t even know how to use one until I was 17 years old. Then it was the starting point of internet where we were (way up in the arctic) and I was hooked from then on. I loved this typing tutor game I had played on a roommates computer, and I haven’t a clue what it was now… but I just thought it was fun to type. It was more fun in college when I had a computer class and during a presentation the instructor was making he was assembling a computer with it’s basic components, and he couldn’t get the cpu to go onto the mother board and I had to show him that he was trying to put it in upside down…
so ya, I am in the blue Nowhere as well, a geeky girl with on-line banking. Sounds good to me!
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Lady Ozma said:
Yup, me too
People think I’m crazy. It’s hard being a girl sometimes and be so techie. All my girl friends in Ohio were like “Why on earth are you always on the computer?” These people check their email like once a month. I’m scared to contemplate only reading email once a month!! As if!
Yeah I had my phone in 93 so just imagine how weird THAT was. I hated it. I kept it hidden under the seat of my car so no one would know I had it! I only put the antenna on top of my car for better reception if I was going someplace outside of town. And even then I didn’t do it a whole lot. Figured if something happend I could put it on top of the car, get the better reception, make the call, and then dump it again. LOL.
Of course now people look at you funny if you DO NOT have a cell!
Wow, you didn’t use a computer until you were 17? You were deprived!!!!
Was the typing tutor mavis beacon? I loved that one. It was fun to type in. I remember using that one and there was this story it would have you type to about some girl and a shiek and the shiek wanted to marry the girl and brought over a camel! Bwahahahaha.
LOL putting in the cpu upside down… that’s good. Classic!
Yay geek gurls!
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xmichra said:
Re: Yup, me too
OMGoodness! That is so the typing tutor!! lol… well there goes the mystery!! And yes I was deorived, we was “po” and didn’t have the fancy gadgets that are all over the place now-a-days. But now I have my own puter, and so does my husband, and we don’t share them well at all. So it payed off in the long run! People look at me funny sometimes when I direct them to my computer room.. and it is the largest room in the house and has three computers and lots of game packages on the shelf!! Ah.. the PC world indeed!
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Lady Ozma said:
Re: Yup, me too
LOL, somewhere I might have a copy of that typing tutor. Funny thing was that it didn’t help my typing any. What got me typing was bloody bbs and other chat things. LOL Typing email and posts and chat back in the early 90s!
Oh dad and I’d run the phone bill sky high. My mum would go postal!! “What’s this two hour call to Nebraska????” Dad and I would look all innocent and turn off Duke Nukem that we’d spent all that time downloading. HEHE (Back when DN wasn’t a full on first person shooter. Bwahaha)
Yeah I dont’ share well at all. It’s why I have two and he has one. LOL I got pissy because he kept swiping my computer to game on. So I got the laptop and he’s not allowed to touch it! HAHA
HEHE… see we didn’t even bother with a computer room. Now people did look at me funny because we had two computers in the living room which is the room you’d walk into. Then I’d tour them the house and we’d get to the spare room and there were two more computers there! HAHA Actually for a while there were three! People would come visit and I’d say “You get your own room complete with internet access! I’m better than most hotels!”
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