It used to be that email was the main way of staying in touch with people. Except for a few clueless technophobe friends, many of the people with whom I want to stay in contact are on Facebook. It's a much more participatory way of staying in touch. The folks on my friends list are forever in my peripheral vision and a part of my everyday existence. Email as a method of communication seems like a jarring and unwanted intrusion. Thankfully, at least as far as I'm concerned, email as means of personal contact is rapidly going the way of the dinosaur. (You're headed for extinction: E&S, DR and others!)I still open my email but the content is now quite different. I usually read through op-in mail from companies. It's not really spam as I like getting the information. These include marketing messages from businesses such as ticketmaster.ca, videomatica.ca, ncix.com, petcetera.ca, as well as various cruise ship and other travel companies. I also get status announcements for some online sites and although they could be eliminated, I prefer to keep them. For example if someone comments on any Flickr photo, I get a message. Even this type of correspondence may in the not too distant future disappear too, being replaced by RSS feeds and Twitter-type implementation. Electronic mail is the application that really kick-started the Internet but, in a relative short time, will be of little use at all.
For me, email is already, for the most part, just a way to communicate with people whom I do not know.




I talked to my father on the phone yesterday. I must remember to stick to some kind of schedule for these calls or weeks can go by without a conversation. He now relies entirely on me to initiate them. We talked for only about twenty minutes. I know where some of those idea espoused in yesterday's entry came from. Although loath to admit it for many years, I share a lot of ideas about life with my dad.








The little photo was taken a half hour ago. Right now, when I look outside I would not be able to see my own nose.
I think Windows 7 is going to zip right along. My Gateway notebook was dreadfully slow when running XP Pro. It was to the point where it was nearly unusable. I had even made use of Google's Chrome just to boost the browser experience at bit. Yet, this install has breathed a bit of new life into this old gal. The IE 8 beta which is included seems pretty snappy and, at least, allows for add-ons unlike Chrome.
Installation went swimmingly, whereas the machine's configuration prevented me from ever being able to load Microsoft Visa on it. The only problem at the moment is Windows 7 couldn't find drivers for the wireless controller. I'm going to have to search around to see if I can find something which will work. If not, then the usefulness of the installation will be nil. I think the beta will expire in August anyway. This isn't really fun, is it?

It's not an age thing either. 
It's exciting to have a classroom full of new students. Actually, due to a scheduling snafu, I am not exactly sure where we'll meet this afternoon. Yet, I'm sure it will be relatively easy to find a free classroom for my apparently eager men and women. 



