e-mail:
password:
register
|
login
› CASTLE ROCK
SEARCH YOUR HUB:
GO
advanced search
Loading Ad
STORIES
EVENTS
BLOGS
FOR SALE
YELLOW PAGES
PHOTOS
Local Info ›
Home ›
Help ›
Visit Other Hubs:
YourHub.com
Arvada
Aurora
Boulder
Brighton
Broomfield
Castle Pines
Castle Rock
Centennial
Cherry Hills Village
Commerce City
Conifer
Denver
Denver North
Denver South
Edgewater
Englewood
Erie
Evergreen
Federal Heights
Franktown
Glendale
Golden
Green Valley Ranch
Greenwood Village
Highlands Ranch
Lafayette
Lakewood
Littleton
Lone Tree
Longmont
Louisville and Superior
Montbello
Morrison
nights
Niwot
Northglenn
Parker
Roxborough
Sheridan
Thornton
TriTowns
Westminster
Wheat Ridge
ADVERTISEMENT
Loading Tower
RECENT STORIES
Blotter: Man threatens neighbors with loaded gun
(
YourHub.com
)
Thanks to Sedalia on July 4 from CO Humane Soc.
(
Mandy Beavers
)
Rioja will leave your tastebuds delirious
(
Anthonette Klinkerman
)
Candice's weekly housing market update Castle Rock
(
Candice Ensign Remax Southeast
)
Proposed ordinance public hearing continues July 8
(
Town of Castle Rock
)
share a story
|
more postings
»
YourHub.com
\\
Castle Rock
\\
Stories
\\
Sound Off
\\
Write a Column
Real men aim for maximum gadgetude
e-mail to a friend
|
print this
|
link to this
Contributed by:
James LaRue
on 2/28/2008
I believe I know what most red-blooded American men want. It's not what you think.
And it isn't easy. There are many obstacles to be overcome to achieve the ultimate aim of maximum gadgetude.
First came my need for a computer. My first PC (a Kaypro II) was called "portable," in exactly the same way a sewing machine is portable. It folded up to a compact package weighing about 30 pounds.
I was, I now realize, obsessive. I didn't just go in and buy one. I researched countless magazines. I prowled computer stores. And because, back then, I was just starting out in life, I had to take out my first loan. For a gadget.
The next gadget that obsessed me was years later. I bought the second model of the Palm Pilot, which ran on two little batteries. It took me six weeks of use to cram my life into its modest dimensions.
Since then, I've upgraded twice. It's painful, when you realize that you have the oldest model in the meeting. The displays, the speed, the apps, are so much better these days. And that's bound to make you more productive, right?
A PocketPC? Please, I have my standards.
As time went on, I felt new stirrings. First, it was a laptop, although I persuaded myself that it was for my wife. Oh, the beauty of a MacBook!
When I tired of carrying a laptop around in my travels, I hit on a new strategy: an Internet Tablet. I settled on the Linux-based Nokia N800. And it was almost perfect, needing only an Igo Stowaway Bluetooth Keyboard to complete me as a man. For a while.
(Or, of course, there's the N810.)
I watched in amusement and sympathy as the drive for maximum gadgetude took root in my son, Max. He needed an iPod Touch. He needed it so bad.
His latent research skills (he is the child of two librarians, after all) wakened: he read every review, in paper and online. He was on a first name basis with the good people at the Apple Store, where he made biweekly pilgrimages.
Finally, Christmas!
Then, there was wii -- what passes for physical exercise these days, albeit in a virtual universe.
Just lately, my wife ran across an ad for something so brilliant I wish I'd thought of it first. It's called a MusicPad Pro. For just $899, you can have an electronic book capable of storing, displaying, and allowing notations on, all your sheet music. Pop it up on the piano or music stand, tap a button to turn the page. One device, tens of thousands of works.
I gotta have one. I gotta.
The Sony eBook: I felt pretty cool sitting there on the plane with 8 novels packed into a slim and elegant case. Until the flight attendant told me I had to turn off my book for landing.
So I was forced to pull out a science fiction magazine, picked up from one of our library booksales for pennies. And I thought, as I flipped through it, handled it, sniffed it, read it comfortably, then left it behind in my hotel room later for the next person... you know, this print stuff?
It might catch on.
Jamie LaRue is the Director at
Douglas County Libraries
. His views are his own.
[Report this as objectionable content.]
SUBMIT COMMENT
Rate the above story
Current Rating
Based on 2 user ratings.
Talk Back :
submit comments to the story
*Note: you need to
log-in
to add a comment or rating.
Thank you! Your comment has been updated.
*A comment must be between 1 and 1000 characters.
*Please refrain from using explicit language.
CONTRIBUTOR INFORMATION
James LaRue
Castle Rock
, CO
James LaRue has posted
210
stories and
0
comments since joining on
7/27/2007
. James LaRue 's average story rating is
4.97
.
view profile »
view other postings from James LaRue »
SAVE AND SHARE THIS STORY
digg
Google
del.icio.us
Yahoo!
reddit
Newsvine
What is this?
STORY RSS FEEDS
All stories
All stories in Castle Rock
All stories by James LaRue
WANT TO WRITE FOR YOURHUB.COM?
Want to see the stories you write and the photos you shoot featured in the YourHub.com Thursday print section available
all over the Front Range
and with home subscriptions of the
Rocky Mountain News
and
The Denver Post?
All you have to do is
register
, then post a
story or column
,
start a blog
or
tell everyone
what events are happening in town. We will print the best stories, columns, event listings, photos and blog entries in our print sections.
ADVERTISEMENT
Loading Ad
Loading Ad
ADVERTISEMENT
Loading Ad