Mar 29

I bought my first computer during my final year of college. Custom built for me by my best friend, it sported a processor that smoked (compared to the school lab computers, that is) and came with its own copy of Leisure Suit Larry. I was hooked from the moment I heard it go wrrrroooooooooo! as my own, personal copy of Windows 3.1 came to life.

I’d recently finished making thin sections for the geology department lab, and had taken a new work study position as a computer lab assistant. How I got that job is a mystery, given that I was in school for geology and creative writing (yes, I chose two majors with no job prospects), but I was instantly hooked.

That ugly little box was connected to maybe a thousand people! And they were all mean and snarky! I wasted no time learning the ropes, figuring my natural disposition would fit right in with the rest of the chaos.

A few of the lab assistants took me under their wings early on, showing me how to unfreeze the lab computers for the students and also how to waste time on the internet. This was the early days of the internet, before the web was really rolling. Back when we still got regular warnings from snotty system administrators that every word we wrote was being transmitted and re-transmitted all across the world, and all the pennies needed for connection fees added up to something like the price of a small island.

So because every word written supposedly cost the world eleventy-billion dollars, we didn’t get a Netscape license for the computer lab. Instead, we all logged into the web with a text program called Lynx. It was kinda cute, but the real action was in Usenet, where there were topics about anything you could think of, almost a thousand different topics.

It didn’t take me long to realize my empty soul would only find solace in PC ownership. Sitting around in the lab all night was attracting attention from some of the CompSci students; their aggressive “recruiting” efforts were starting to get freaky. So I got a gadget that I couldn’t afford, like any good American.

The first thing I did was install WordPerfect; the second was to figure out how to use my modem. I was in! Connected! In no time, I’d found my first flame war.

Mid-terms were only a few days away, and I’d written three papers already. It was nearly midnight, and I was working on a critique for someone in my writer’s group, when I encountered my first problem; I was out of disk space! Obviously, things needed deleting.

At first it was old files in the temp directory. That didn’t help much, so I deleted other old files and non-essential programs. And I still didn’t have disk space to spare. Perusing the file system, I saw that there were a few large programs that I never used (such as Word). Looking deeper, I came across one program that was not only enormous, but I had never even used it. Obviously, it was unnecessary. It needed killing! I deleted it, then rebooted my system.

Nothing happened. I pushed the power button again. The disk revved up, but it wouldn’t boot. Just as I was ready to smack the side of it (hey, it works on TVs!), the monitor lit up. And it told me to put in the boot disk. Having no idea what this “boot disk” thing was, I did the one smart thing of the day: I called Chris.

“Hey, something’s wrong with my computer,” I got right to the point. “It won’t start up and I have a paper due and I’m freaking out here. Help!” I was getting more frustrated and upset by the second. I was starting to rant. My brand-new, expensive computer that I was so proud of was now a doorstop.

“Don’t worry; we’ll fix it. So, what did you do?” Now, most people probably wouldn’t ask that. Most people would probably assume that something was wrong with the computer. But this is me we’re talking about, and Chris has been my friend since we were teenagers, so he knows better.

“Nothing! I was out of memory, so I deleted a few things. But that’s all, I swear!” I kept pushing the button. It didn’t make the box light up, but the clicky noise made me feel better.

“You have plenty of memory. You must have been out of disk space.” Memory, disk space, whatever. Good thing he couldn’t see me roll my eyes at him. Then he cautiously asked me, “What did you delete?”

“A bunch of college papers, a few games, that Word program, and some other stuff,” I rattled off a few more things, then said, “Oh. There was one program that was really big, and I never use it, so I got rid of it too.” This conversation was going nowhere. He wasn’t listening to me!

“Um, Vic, what was the name of that program?” He croaked. He sounded frightened, with a dash of hopeful thrown in for good measure.

“Dee Oh Ess. Or whatever.” I was getting crankier by the minute.

“You mean… DOS?” This time, I could swear he was choking back laughter.

“Yes, that one! I never use it. I only use Windows. It was huge and I didn’t need it sucking up all of my memory.” You see, I didn’t know much about computers, but I was smart enough to know that I had Windows. But I didn’t do any of that DOS stuff because Windows was so much, um, prettier. So I got rid of it.

(Note to Self: This was a bad thing. A realllllly Bad Thing.)

“Oh, God. You didn’t!” But yes, I had. I’d deleted DOS. “Oh, man, Vic, this is bad, this is very, very bad.” My heart crushed, he ground it in a little, “You NEVER delete DOS.” My heart rate doubled and I felt sick. No one had ever told me you needed DOS in order to run Windows. And it was now sounding like I’d destroyed the poor thing that I couldn’t afford in the first place.

After he’d had his fun with me, making me think the little computer chips were melting and a bunch of other evil stuff, he got down to business. Three hours later, Chris was out of Mountain Dew, so he set me free. He said that any of the guys down in the computer lab would be able to help out (thank you Matt, wherever you are.)

It was a long night. I was exhausted, and I think I may have had a tiny heart attack. Possibly even a stroke, judging from the new facial tic. But on the bright side, I did learn a valuable technique for keeping future husbands on their toes.

written by vic

Mar 08

Alcatraz on wheels

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If I don’t lose my keys at least once a week it’s probably because I lost my other shoe and couldn’t go anywhere to lose them. Usually, I find them clipped to a shopping cart or in my five-year-old’s pocket (he takes after his father).

In my defense, I’ve had a lot of kids and pregnancy shrinks your brain. Yeah, sure the doctors say you get it all back 6 to 12 months later, but they lie: you don’t get it all back. Some of that brain matter gets all stuck to itself and you only get, say, 80-90% of it back. Do that half a dozen times, and it really adds up!

So there I was, sitting in my car rifling through a stack of school papers, mail, and electrical cords looking for my Costco card. My husband stared at me and shook his head. “I’m going inside. I’ll be waiting for you at the Customer Service desk getting a temporary card.” Muttering, I waved him away, annoyed that I couldn’t find a brightly-colored piece of plastic.

He got out; I barely noticed that he locked the car. He does that when he’s annoyed that my get-my-stuff-and-exit-the-car procedure takes too long. It’s not like I can’t remember to lock the door myself.

Sometime during this intense, methodical excavation of my car’s innards it dawned on me that I’d last seen it sitting on top of the dresser. Great. I’d have to stand in line for a temporary card. I reached over and unlocked my door.

Flip-SNICK!

It immediately relocked itself. Surprised, I tried again and got another flip-SNICK! for my effort. My new Toyota was trying to out-think me!

I prepared for battle. I came to the logical conclusion that I just wasn’t fast enough. Holding the door handle gently with my right hand, my left index finger softly resting on the lock button. Quicker than a greased cat in a laundry chute, I made my move: snapping the button into the unlocked position, I instantly drew back the handle.

Naturally, the security system deduced that it was being broken into from the inside. In my experience, people usually ignore screamy cars. However, sometimes your high-tech, smart car alarm is synchronized with flashing interior lights, and when it’s dark outside, it’s a great show for people who want to ogle the hostage.

(Note to Self: it’s impossible to hide under the dash of a screaming, flashing car in a parking lot full of people.)

Pretending not to be mortified, I waved at a few gawkers while trying to think of ways to escape the car. My cell was at home; my keys were lost in the husband’s pockets. Having no intelligent ideas for escape, naturally the situation required a temper tantrum.

As I slammed things around near the center console, I heard a faint, metallic jingle from deep within. No way! I jabbed at it again.

Ting!

Okay, it was probably just our spare key to the truck. Theoretically, I always kept it in the car so I’d know where it was. Having nothing better to do until my husband finally realized I was never going to make it inside of Costco, I figured I might as well excavate the ting!-y thing buried in there.

Like most center consoles, this would normally require power tools and a hazmat suit to safely penetrate the stratified layers of stuffage. Despite my lack of proper supplies, I had a safety pin, a piece of string, and a stick of chewing gum. I could MacGyver my way into the console!

Buried under three weeks of unopened bills and a green, sandwich-shaped hockey puck one of the kids had hidden there, I found that spare set of keys I’d temporarily misplaced a few weeks earlier. I clearly hadn’t lost them at all!

But it was the valet key. For those of you without a high-tech prison on wheels, the valet key is special in that it lets you drive the car but not open the glove box. Who knew what would happen if you put the key in the ignition while the car thought it was being broken into from the inside?

I’m a risk-taker. I put the key in the ignition and turned the key.

No explosions. No secret car-cell phone calls to the cops. Just silence. Yay, for freedom! Now I could go inside and tell my husband what an inconsiderate jerk he was for imprisoning me in a mean-spirited gadget.

I found my husband waiting for me inside the door. Approaching him with great vengeance and ferocious anger, I was poised to smite when he smiled at me and said, “Oh there you are. Hey, I found my Costco card in my wallet.”

“I was locked in the car.”

He stared at me as if those words made no sense. It didn’t do his case any good that he had a point thinking that.

“It wouldn’t let me out.” Blank stare. “Every time I unlocked it, it locked itself back up.” He started to smile. “And when I tried to trick it, the alarm went off.” For some reason, his fit of laughter took the steam out of my anger.

“Programmers. It figures.” Now, this might have been snarky from a non-engineer, but over the years I’ve learned that the different types of magic aren’t all the same; there’s a hierarchy, and most engineers think their branch of magic is at the peak of this hierarchy. Whatever that is. “They probably didn’t bother getting their security model validated.”

“You’re talking that gibberish that sounds like English again.”

“Sorry. I promise that the next time you’re slow I won’t lock you in, OK?” Then he hugged me.

And amazingly enough, I didn’t kick him in the shin.

written by vic