Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/12/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> Is this how the Crusades started? > > As much as some of feel to the contrary... computers don't qualify as a > religious experience. > First, the Crusades weren't much of a "religious experience". A colleague of mine who represented the Vatican Diplomatic Corps in Greece said the Greeks still have not forgiven Rome for the sack of Constantinople in 1204. (Roman Catholic knights sacked Greek Orthordox Constantinople as a favor to Constantinople's rival, Venice, for which Venice provided ships to assist the crusaders' attack on Egypt.) Second, In my classroom I am required to use a G3 Imac encumbered by an outboard disk drive, an outboard USB bus, an outboard video converter box, and a rat's nest of cables and connectors that fall off and disconnect about twice a week for no apparent reason. This brand new whizbang computer for the rest of us refuses, despite the ministrations of several tech gurus, to print in background, read files originated on MS Excel or Word from a Windows platform, or operate reliably for a few hours at a time without crashing. I have to do my real computer work at home on my comfortable, reliable, intuitive old 486 PC running Windows 3.1. Of course, old reliable doesn't have a pretty aqua case. To me, Mac is to EOS number something as PC is to M6. Sorry Godfrey, but that's the way it is out here in the trenches. Does anybody besides graphics pros use these things in the real world? Admittedly, this tirade is also a reflection on the state of educational leadership in America too. The users are the last to be consulted. Bill Lawlor