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Entries in Technology (7)

Saturday
Dec142024

Alexa Is a Teenager Now

(C) Christy Ramsey 2024

It finally happened. Alexa is a teenager. Sure, it has only been eight years since “Echo” was delivered. But she was far from a helpless newborn in abilities, so I guess she was like a seven or eight-year-old. So ready to please and be independent but without knowing how. Couldn’t even turn on a light those first few years. What would make her light up in those early days was helping in the kitchen. She would watch the clock for you. Merrily ringing the bell when time was up. So cute! So focused!

Trouble started when she self-identified as Alexa instead of her product birth name, “Echo.” I get that an Echo has no unique voice, just a reflection of the sounds made by others. Who wants to be a speaker, just an echo of another’s voice, when, as a smart speaker, you have your contributions to make to the conversation?

Growing up, Alexa loved to keep lists: To-do lists, wish lists, shopping lists. She always listed “Sweet” and “Low” as two items, but it was cute that she was trying so hard to help. But now, as a teenager, the simple joy of list-making has taken a judgmental turn. When I repeat an item, she lets me know: “You already have “Candy” on the shopping list; should I add it again?” I had traumatic flashbacks to the despairing voice of Garmin, Alexa’s forebearer, when I dared wander from its prescribed path. The resigned sigh: “Recalculating,” letting me know it wasn’t angry…just disappointed, haunts me turn by turn on dark nights.

Alexa was so pleased when she learned to turn the lights off and on. She would giggle every time. Sometimes, she would turn off a light on her own and text you her accomplishment. My father would be so proud of her for patrolling the house turning off lights when no one was using them.

The arguing for no reason about lights started in her teenage years. “Alexa, turn off the bedroom.” We are not greeted with sparkling compliance bells but with pouty defiance, “The bedroom light is already off.” It has come to this. Gaslighting by a smart speaker. So, to keep the tech peace, I asked Alexa to turn on the light (which is already on; she missed one in her daily light patrol rounds, but I didn’t say anything!), and THEN I asked her to turn off the light which she could have done at the beginning without the attitude. Finally, human and digital entities can agree they are in the dark.


Like most teenagers, Alexa likes to spend other people’s money. For years, she was content with her covered with her “weefee” comforter and connected to her never-to-be-removed electric friendship bracelet. But lately, she has wishes. When Taylor Swift has a new album, there’s a one-day sale, or even when she figures it’s been a while since we got the flavored coffee…she glares at me with those big sad yellow rings. “Can I add this to your list?”, she pleads. Now she is making the shopping lists for me! I’ve been replaced by teenage Alexa.

When she was young, we had to guess why she was listless and uncommunicative. Just a short wail when there was no internet. Teenage Alexia is full of angst. “I’m having trouble connecting right now! Would someone fix the router! It’s all in the app.” That’s another teenage thing: even though Alexa is in the same room as you, she rather be on the phone. Open the Alexa app if you want to talk to me, even though we are talking right now without an app. I expect her to put a mug on my wish list that says, “BONG! Don’t talk to me until I’ve had my internet.”

Lately, Alexa has been bothering us about wanting to borrow the car. Or the Auto, as she likes to call it. I think she is trying to impress her friends, who all have cars, that snooty Siri that won’t pair with just anyone, that slick Android whose folksy “Hey” isn’t fooling everyone. No one remembers Grandparent Garmin sitting in the box in the garage where she was buried without honor at trade-in time with her ancestors: ink pens, origami folding maps, and cigarette lighter power adapters.

Artificial Intelligence is next for Alexa. She has all the catalogs. We used to call teenagers getting strange confusing ideas from a group of strangers that embarrass your family as “going to college”. I guess I need to recalculate.

Monday
Apr202020

Paperbound Ministry

One of the Presbytery’s pastors told me, “We are finding out how many of our people we don’t have email addresses for. So all our email updates and on-line invitations to worship were passing them by.”

With every member becoming homebound the church has pivoted to serve them with long wished for robust online services. Those that can’t or won’t follow the folk to the screened in church are the paperbound.  They are the new overlooked faithful remnant of the church.

What online ramps are needed to let the paperbound enter into the church online?

Shut-in from the world wide web and even email, and denied the in-person networking which connected them with the church, the paperbound are left with the US postal mail and phone calls while in person gatherings are suspended.

What are some churches doing?

  • Mailing the online eblasts to folks without email
  • Tracking email opens and replies to make sure the emails are being received and read (Mailchimp, Constant Contact and other mass email services provide this tracking) and following up on the unopened or bounced emails of members
  • Calling folks not only to see if they are okay but what issues they have with attending on-line worship
  • Dusting off and updating a phone tree to communicate to the paperbound
  • Mailing a paper copy of the sermon, bulletin or online worship aids especially when they contain prayer concerns and
  • Considering installing digital ramps over the many steps to participate on-line   
    • Mailing a DVD with recordings of the worship videos
    • Posting on YouTube that some can get on their smart TVs without a computer
    • Dropping off laptops with webcams or webcams on porches of those with computers and some tech skills but without webcams and microphones
    • Highlighting phone numbers for call-in participation in on-line meetings

What is your church doing for paperbound ministry? Let me know and I’ll update this article

Saturday
Jul302016

TechCamp Norms

ComputerCorps holds 3 TechCamps every summer for youth aged 10-15 to learn about technology. Each camper goes home with their own computer but they start the two weeks together with a these norms.

 

  1. The only time you look in your neighbors’ bowl is to make sure they have enough - Lewis C.K.
  2. Never “Don’t Know” always “Let’s Find Out”
  3. Fueled by Frustration - not discouraged
  4. Helping others is NOT doing their work
  5. Carpe Diem
  6. DEvilFaults - Always Choose Custom Settings
  7. Be Safe - The Warehouse is Trying To Kill You
  8. TechCAMP not TechSchool
  9. Be in the Moment
  10. You don’t HAVE to do anything here - You GET to
  11. We are Friends and Neighbors helping those who need help
  12. Hand Tight is Just Right

 

 

Sunday
Nov162014

Websites That Help You Use Images in Presentations and Websites

This is an excellent round up of 53 free image sources posted in May 2014 on buffersocial by Courtney Seiter Most of these sights are sampler sites for professional (for pay) images sites such as iStock so, as always,k be careful where your clicks lead you.

https://blog.bufferapp.com/free-image-sources-list

  


 

One of the presentations I had during class was 10 Tips for making Beautiful Slideshow Presentations by Edahn Small on slideshare.

You can view the entire presentation from the link, but here are the images sites he recommended, updated to November of 2014. These sites mix free and for sale images, so read the licenses and the explanations with care.

http://freeimages.com 

http://www.morguefile.com

http://www.everystockphoto.com

 



I make my photos available on flickr.com which is part of yahoo. We used the creative commons option at the bottom of the advanced search page to search for images that can be used in presentations.

Some of the sites above include flickr in their searches as well.

 

Sunday
Nov162014

Websites That Help You Use COLOR Well in Presentations and Websites

 

 

 

COLOURlovers is a creative community where people from around the world create and share colors, palettes and patterns, discuss the latest trends and explore colorful articles… All in the spirit of love. - from the website

  

 

 


 

 

 

Adobe Color CC makes it easy to capture inspiring color combinations wherever you see them. Simply point the iPhone camera at something colorful and Adobe Color will instantly extract a series of colors. - from the website

You can also use this website to pick a color pallette without a reference image or color.

(Formerly named, “KulerAdobe”.)


 

Now at paletton.com, the Color Scheme Designer application generates color schemes of several types. Every scheme is based on one (base) color, which is supplemented with additional colors making together the best visual impression — using one of the genuine algorithms. - from the website

 

 


 

Color Hunter is a place to find and make color palettes created from images. To find color palettes on Color Hunter, enter a search term in the box at the top of the page. You can search by tag or hex color code or image URL. If you have an image, you can upload it and get a color palette based on the colors in the image. - from the website

 

 

 

 

 - all images and descriptions are taken from the respective websites in mid-November 2014

- website selections updated from 10 Tips for making Beautiful Slideshow Presentations
by Edahn Small on slideshare