(Video)
Anyone can learn to meditate this way.
And it’s good for us all. Who doesn’t have stress?
“because here we were dealing with the
pit and prune juice of poor beat life itself
in the god awful streets of man.”
Kerouac
In my heart, I have come back to
San Francisco, which sprang up
on the edge like a condemned man’s
last meal, where patience and action
are futile. I have come to kneel
where only prayer is valid.
In the Steinhart Aquarium, my brother
longed to swim in the cool peace.
In a dream I saw him on the BART,
plunge beneath the bay, searching
for water. But he rose up,
finding Oakland. He stepped
from the train, saying “we are
like men who have lost their legs.”
In a dream I saw him walking
south on Mission Street, turning
into an alley and a dark pawnshop.
Like poor Raskolnikov, the price
was just too high. The fog
lingered about the hills, anointing
the housetops, hanging from street lights.
Then Jesus rose up through the steam
in the street, parting the traffic,
leveling light on everything.
Dragging the curtain torn in two.
An army of angels marched
down from Bolinas,
swinging the broken chains.
I’ve come to care less about the pretty skin of a system and more about how it helps me communicate and get things done. I was an early adopter of Office 2010 Beta, which as it turned out doesn’t really do anything that Office 2003 can’t do. It’s just prettier with its ribbons.
A computer is for computing. The operating system should facilitate computing, or you may as well give your devices to the baby to play with. Or the cat.
In the case of Windows 8, little of the week’s conversation, within my hearing, has been about computing. It’s been about set dressing. Metro and Aero. And a lot has been written about getting back features and functions of Windows 7.
Here we have a very nice page on the How To Geek site, about how to get the start menu back in Windows 8.
Why would you put a new operating system on your computer, if you’re planning on struggling to get back the features of the old operating system? If the new differences aren’t what you need and want, why not keep the system you have?
Eventually, everyone who is installing the 8 preview is going to have to pay for the retail version, or go back to 7. It’s not free. So before I installed it, I would be asking some serious questions, for example:
If I don’t decide to pay for Windows 8, how much of a hassle is it to get my Windows 7 back?
How much is it finally going to cost?
What does it do that Windows 7 can’t do? And I mean distinct operations, not cool methods or little convenience tricks.
Is the file management system an improvement over the Libraries in Windows 7?
Will it come with Office 2010 installed? Or will it just be one of those evil 60 day trials? (I know the answer to this.)
You may be wondering, “But Kyle, don’t you want to play with it, try it out? Look, it’s got gestures instead of just clicks and drags and stuff.”
Sure I do. I’m curious, I like gadgets. But when the day is done we’ve either got stuff done or we haven’t. Our devices have either helped us or not. We should try to be practical about our electronics needs, and keep in mind that Microsoft and companies like it are constantly innovating to take our money, not to improve our lives. That’s as it should be, so judging the value is up to us, not them.
Here’s a great video for folks who like birds, like my Dad.