Marta-

I went to grade school in Louisville. We all walked in those day, as they had no buses. The boys walked to school in the alleys, and the snooty girls used the sidewalks. In the spring we looked for little green snakes, which we put in our shirts, where they stayed until we got to class. Then the snakes went into the little girl's desks, or if we could not arrange that, we just pitched them into their laps when the teacher was not looking.

School was sometimes fun for little boys/

Neal Hammon



On Mar 419, 1120092007, at 4:49 PM, Marta Edie wrote:

Lee, you are so right with this fountain pen example. I do have some wonderful fountain pens, Parker and MontBlanc. And occasionally I want to us them. But then the ink in the tip has dried up and i need to dip in water and rub and blot until i get them to work. Then I again leave them lie around and after a few months when I get nostalgic again, the procedure needs to be repeated.

The young ones don't even know anymore when we sat in school, with ink pots built in to our desks and when every tablet had a blotting paper included. I saved dozen of them, any need? Some blottings I can still read when I hold them against the mirror. One leg in the past, the other in the future. So ist das Leben.
Marta




On Mar 19, 2009, at 12:08 pm, Lee Larson wrote:

On Mar 19, at 11:33 AM, Marta Edie wrote:

But what happens to us, who do like to stroke the book covers and delight in the feel of the linen and the print and the long rows on book cases. I grant the Kindle is marvellous for travelling, I am just reading Ovid's Metamorphoses on my iPhone, a free download. The Kindle sounds lovely -- with reservations.

I guess I'm more concerned with content and accessibility than form. As prices fall, interfaces improve and content migrates it won't be long until most people prefer the new way of reading.

Some examples come to mind.

My grandmother used to nostalgically recall the wonderful fountain pens she was given as a graduation present. I noticed she always used a ball point pen because it was cheap and easy. (The "wonderful" fountain pens needed to be filled with ink and cleaned. They sat in a drawer.)

I have several audiophile acquaintances who love their old LPs and fondly talk of the "warm" sound they give. Several researchers have pretty conclusively shown the "warm" sound comes from a combination of turntable rumble and manufacturing limitations inherent in vinyl pressing.



_______________________________________________
The next Louisville Computer Society meeting will
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_______________________________________________
The next Louisville Computer Society meeting will
be March 24 at MacAuthority, 128 Breckinridge Lane.
Posting address: [email protected]
Information: http://www.math.louisville.edu/mailman/listinfo/macgroup

_______________________________________________
The next Louisville Computer Society meeting will
be March 24 at MacAuthority, 128 Breckinridge Lane. 
Posting address: [email protected]
Information: http://www.math.louisville.edu/mailman/listinfo/macgroup

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