Segments: Slices from the Macintosh Life
Electricity: What Is It Good For?
We have two Macs and a year-old Compaq, routed up to a cable Internet connection through AT&T.
Last month, our power went out as a result of weather. Yes, there were downed power lines—not near us—but they were down, etc. I heard the same story from every power company customer service representative each time I called to report that our power was still out! Power was back on all around us. We just happened to be one of the many “small pockets” still without electricity.
I live in downtown Salt Lake City, Utah, and our power was out for over 40 hours. For heavens sake—the world came here for the Olympics. What would the world have thought if the power had gone out while we were playing hostess to the mostest? A few years back, Utah Power and Light was up for sale. It was merged with Pacificorp, which is owned by foreign (Scottish) investors (if my sources are right; please correct me if I am wrong). The Utah Power and Light trucks that were a common sight during my childhood were replaced by sub-contracted electricity trucks.
I could go on and on about big corporate mergers and lack of true customer service, but the real reason I was upset is that the power went out a half hour after we had cable TV installed! Have you ever had to deal with a 17-year-old male who for years has begged for cable TV—and when he finally has the cable remote in his hot adolescent hands, the power goes out and stays out for 40 plus hours? I am here to let you know: that is something you do not want to experience. Then he realized that he would not be able to get on battle.net and play StarCraft. Well, you don’t want to go there either.
But that was not the real problem. The real problem, in our household, was that my 15-year-old daughter, who has grown up with a computer always there, had started a lengthy report for school. All her notes were on the suddenly powerless computer! When the power went out she was in her room watching a video that she needed to watch in order to finish her report. Mom was forced to call the power company outage number almost every hour on the hour for her own sanity—as if a mother with teenagers has any sanity. (Oh, but they were cute as little babies—let’s have another one!)
So, the night before the report was due, we packed up her TV and VCR and drove her four blocks north to sit in the basement at her grandmother’s house to finish the video, so she could rewrite her report. All the time we were hoping that the power would be back on when we got home. It wasn’t, and it was 10:30 PM, so we packed all her scribbled notes and headed for Kinko’s, which is only four blocks south, and spend 20 cents a minute for computer time plus printing. Total cost: $17.82. So I am forced to ask: we have two Macs and a year old Compaq, routed up to a cable Internet connection. Without electricity, what are they good for?
Also in This Series
- Macworld 2008 Keynote Impressions · February 2008
- Grandma’s Life as a Video Star · January 2008
- What’s Your Mac’s Subjective Speed? · October 2007
- About This Particular Upgrade · July 2007
- The Hunt for an iPhone · July 2007
- Takeaway Lessons From Billy Madison · April 2007
- My Life With Automator: How I Spent My Summer Vacation · August 2006
- Promises and Pitfalls of the Digital Media Revolution · June 2006
- Building a Web Site · April 2006
- Complete Archive
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