(03-16-2017, 12:11 AM)EFDan Wrote: I guess I'm an odd one then, because most of mine do.
Zippered pants go with dress clothes and jeans. Jeans are still in fashion. dress clothes are not. First it was Casual Friday. Now is Casual every day. And tomorrow no one goes to work because they all telecommute. No one wears a watch except as jewelry. Clocks are everywhere and everyone has a phone. Dress shoes have been replaced with Rockports (something with a rubber sole, not leather), sneakers, moccasins, etc.
This discussion is like its 1955. Times have changed. And beards? The grubby look is in. Its everywhere. Just watch any TV show. Its a fashion statement.
https://www.thestreet.com/story/13238672...iness.html
Beards are back in vogue, and that trend plus declining shaving by women are putting a big dent in Procter & Gamble's (PG) lucrative grooming business.
Look
https://www.jeanlouisdavid.us/article/me...rd_a3138/1
Beards are most certainly back. With no need to leave it to grow for months at a time, the 3-day beard also does the trick.
This is real life. Just look around. Its fashion.
(03-16-2017, 04:23 AM)KAV Wrote: 3 out of 4 High school students cannot read a analog clock
Who cares? I can't remember how to program a VCR now nor would I want to. Time moves on. Out with the old, in with the new. Knowing how to read an analog clock is meaningless. Even gauges in cars are now digital. We live in a digital world. I think maybe, with respect, you need to just look around.
Life has moved on.
(03-16-2017, 04:23 AM)KAV Wrote: and I wont mention cursive writing.
Again, sorry, but who cares? People don't even "write" their own signature anymore, its partly printed.
(03-16-2017, 04:23 AM)KAV Wrote: But my great grandmother said she could size up a man's character by his shoes and watch.
Then your great grandmother would not survive - with respect - in 2017.
(03-16-2017, 05:08 AM)KAV Wrote: Cursive handwriting has been demonstrated as one of those early skills that help develop a young mind's hardwiring. It was only, and still not universal, in the last 100 odd years internal combustion transport supplanted horses and other livestock as mankind's transport and battleweapon. Mechanical watches are looked upon as mere jewelry or affectation. Yet when the Apollo Mission's computers malfunctioned a critical burn time was accomplished with a Chronometer on astronaut's wrist. There are caves with vivid paintings of a lost world, illuminated texts and the journals of Lewis and Clark. I still have my girl's ephemeral preserved in a chinese camphor chest. It is not that I dislike or wholly distrust the digital phenomenon. But the mortality of non archived websites, hacking, solar flares and this whole disconnect from the real world via texting,sexting, tweeting can be swept away like a fly focused on food. I always think of Obi Won giving Luke the light saber; a weapon from a more elegant age. I have a russian Shaska, and get it.
You just changed the subject to "will digital data" survive time. And yes, it most surely will. While its true that data has moved from tape to CDs to DVDs to thumb drives, etc. Of course scientists know this is an issue. What is mankind to do, build huge Pyramids in rock to survive? Sorry, time moves on. See
http://www.newsweek.com/2015/07/03/stori...45557.html
Go look at some old photos. Notice they are fading away. In time, there will be no data on those analog photos.
You can read the article yourself but of course scientists are working on preserving digital data. Don't worry about. There are a lot of smart people out there working on this.
I think perhaps, with respect, your living a bit in the past and need to move on. No one cares what shoes you wear, if your pants have zippers, or if you shaved this morning. It might be nostalgic but so aren't Ice Cream Trucks, the milkman, and analog TV.