How to determine if technology has taken over your life


1  Your stationery is more cluttered than Warren Beatty's address
   book.  The letterhead lists a fax number, e-mail addresses, and 
   printers.

2  You think of the gadgets in your office as "friends," but you 
   forget to send your father a birthday card.

3  You disdain people who use low Baud rates.

4  When you go into a computer store, you eavesdrop on a salesperson 
   talking with customers -- and you butt in to correct him and spend 
   the next twenty minutes answering the customers' questions, while 
   the salesperson stands by silently, nodding his head.

5  You use the phrase "digital compression" in a conversation without
   thinking how strange your mouth feels when you say it.

6  You constantly find yourself in groups of people to whom you say the 
   phrase "digital compression."  Everyone understands what you mean, 
   and you are not surprised or disappointed that you don't have to 
   explain it.

7  You know Bill Gates' e-mail address, but you have to look up your
   own social security number.

8  You stop saying "phone number" and replace it with "voice number," 
   since we all know the majority of phone lines in any house are 
   plugged into contraptions that talk to other contraptions.

9  You sign Christmas cards by putting :-) next to your signature.

10  Off the top of your head, you can think of nineteen keystroke 
    symbols that are far more clever than :-).

11  You back up your data every day.

12  Your wife asks you to pick up some minipads for her at the store
    and you return with a rest for your mouse.

13  You think jokes about being unable to program a VCR are stupid.

14  On vacation, you are reading a computer manual and turning the
    pages faster than everyone else who is reading John Grisham novels.

15  The thought that a CD could refer to finance or music rarely enters
    your mind.

16  You are able to argue persuasively that Ross Perot's phrase
    "electronic town hall" makes more sense than the term "information 
    superhighway, " but you don't because, after all, the man still uses 
    hand-drawn pie charts.

17  You go to computer trade shows and map out your path of the
    exhibit hall in advance.  But you cannot give someone directions to 
    your house without looking up the street names.

18  You would rather get more dots per inch than miles per gallon.

19  You become upset when a person calls you on the phone to sell you
    something, but you think it's okay for a computer to call and demand
    that you start pushing buttons on your telephone to receive more 
    information about the product it is selling.

20  You know without a doubt that disks come in five-and-a-quarter and
    three-and-a-half-inch sizes.

21  Al Gore strikes you as an "intriguing" fellow.

22  You own a set of itty-bitty screw-drivers and you actually know
    where they are.

23  While contemporaries swap stories about their recent hernia
    surgeries, you compare mouse-induced index-finger strain with a 
    nine-year-old.

24  You are so knowledgeable about technology that you feel secure
    enough to say "I don't know" when someone asks you a technology 
    question instead of feeling compelled to make something up.

25  You rotate your screen savers more frequently than your automobile
    tires.

26  You have a functioning home copier machine, but every toaster you
    own turns bread into charcoal.

27  You have ended friendships because of irreconcilably different
    opinions about which is better -- the track ball or the track *pad*.

28  You email this message to your friends over the net. You'd never
    get around to showing it to them in person or reading it to them 
    on the phone.  In fact, you have probably never met most of these
    people face-to-face.

29. You understand all the jokes in this message.  If so, my friend,
    technology has taken over your life.  We suggest, for your own
    good, that you go lie under a tree and write a haiku.  And don't 
    use a laptop.



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Nothing but Jokes by Nauman Faridi
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