When I was young, I would program the VCR for my family home. I don’t think this was a rare occurrence. Most kids I know were better than their parents at it. They were old and didn’t understand how these new machines work.
Years later, I realised that I didn’t know how to tune a VCR anymore. The technology passed me by. I would sit there holding a tune button on the player. But now it was on the remote. And little cousins of mine were better than it than me.
For years this thought has haunted me ever since.
What if technology passes me by completely? How do I stop it?
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The idea of “digital retirement” is taking, ironically, some strides in my life. Having just turned 30, many of my friends are wary and against Twitter. They just don’t ‘get’ it.
What is annoying is the arrogance of this statement. It’s almost as if they’re saying “Hmmm, I think the world is wrong on this one.” When the opposite is true. It is the point where you have retired from the digital world.
How does this happen?
There’s a Douglas Adams quote that is often used out of context:
– Anything that is in the world when you’re born is normal and ordinary and is just a natural part of the way the world works.
– Anything that’s invented between when you’re fifteen and thirty-five is new and exciting and revolutionary and you can probably get a career in it.
– Anything invented after you’re thirty-five is against the natural order of things.
Adams used this in a piece about technology, and the DANGERS of perceiving things as wrong or weird just because you happen to be born at the wrong time for it.
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But there is a deeper reason tied to another old quote.
You can’t teach an old dog new tricks.
My problem with the VCR came because I already learnt how to program a VCR. And it is harder to forget something than it is to learn something.
Most people I’ve spoken to will not get a different phone from an iPhone on their next upgrade. The main reason seems to be – I can’t go back. Regardless on where you stand on the iPhone, learning a whole new mobile operating system is a pain. I was once given a Sony Ericsson phone for free, with a camera. And kept my old two colour camera-less Nokia because it was too hard to learn a new thing.
This is an important side point. People can get stuck in their ways. Apple has gotten there first with the iPod, iPhone and iPad. Yet they struggled for decades against Windows because who could be bothered learning a whole new operating system? The digital world – although ever changing – is ruled by habit.
The other great example is when Facebook changes anything. Oh the complaints.
But the world is going to change with or without you. And pretty soon the technology and networks that support my old Nokia (let alone that sized sim card) will be gone completely. Do I rally against the future? Is it against the natural order of things?
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If there is such a thing as “digital retirement”, something I personally want to avoid at all costs, then it comes from “digital fatigue”. That all this new technology is getting too much. And technology just grows faster and faster.
So, the way to defeat it might be the thing that keeps normal retirement and fatigue at bay.
Exercise.
Try new things. Keep active in the digital space. Try out new things. Get the blood flowing in those muscles.
The people I’ve met who I think are the best thinkers, and are ahead of the game, are naturally curious. And they have dozens of logins to try out every new service they hear about. And they don’t always understand them, but who does.
You don’t have to love it – the general opinion of chatroulette was that it was crap and a fad. Most people agreed, but who actually tried it?
It’s that attitude I love – constant discovery.
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I am still excited by new technology all the time. I don’t always understand it, but I don’t understand all new music either.
What I am worried about, is if I ever get to the point where I say “I don’t get it”. If I hate it – fine. If I don’t even understand, that’s a worry.
Once again – take Twitter. We all knew that the first people to hop onto that would be those with the most free time and the least to say. We saw that with mIRC. Then with forums. Then on MySpace and Facebook. But those who never thought any of those things were worth their time were never going to ‘get’ Twitter.
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I wonder what Albert Einstein would make of an iPad. Would he “get” it? I know my parents are amazed I have a French dictionary on my phone. Maybe he wouldn’t understand it – but he would understand it’s usefulness – maybe? Or maybe it would be too much for him.
But that retirement is bound to happen to me. And in a way, I’m looking forward to that too. I love tech, digital and inventions. That in my lifetime there may be something so new, so different that my mind just gives up on it – that’s exciting.
Until then, there is so much to explore. And to explore FOR THE SAKE OF EXPLORING.
Travel keeps you young, they say. And adventures in new digital technology can keep digital retirement at bay too.
So I’ve just hit 30 too so hopefully my digital retirement wont start soon or my studies will be for nothing. The thing is I get Twitter but I really don’t see the point in it for me and more so for all these companies jumping on the TwitWagon. So have I already hit the start of my digital retirement?
well mythbusters proved that you can actually teach an old dog new tricks – so I wouldn’t worry about it too much – the real problem – which I think you touched on – was about a lack of curiousity…
Something I battle with in music – i’m not curious about new music as I’ve perceived that i’ve been burnt too many times… (as an example).
But you need to retain curiousity at all costs – otherwise you really are letting yourself retire yourself.
The problem is not “technology”. The problem is that people don´t do anything else nowadays apart from being with the nose on the computer. What a waste of life. The triumph of the nerds. Noy everybody wants to be one.