Mostly I do figure the cat has plenty of places to curl up and sleep...
Natter 64: Yes, we still need you
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
As a dedicated cat pamperer, I've put soft blankets folded up in front of my cat's favorite birdwatching spots. With one he sits next to it. The other one got knocked to the floor. He'd rather sit on the hard wood.
There should be a band called "Cat Pamperers".
So, it seems I'm old, because I wear a watch and prefer email to texting. [link]
prefer email to texting.
Well, especially in a work context, which seems to be the focus of that article.
I did love this:
And sometimes the generations can synchronize wonderfully. A comment on a recent blog post on Ms. Satran’s book applauded the disappearance of voice mail: “At almost 48, I am definitely old, and all I can say about that whole voice mail thing is, ‘Thank GOD — finally freed from this hateful tyranny.’ Well done, young people. Well done.”
The syrup I buy at TJs says refrigerate after opening, so I do. If I ever have room in my freezer I will try it there instead, since I don't go through it very fast.
In case anyone is wondering, I bought chocolate milk to mix with the espresso vodka and lemonade and sprite to go with the sweet tea vodka.
of adults 65 and over...only 11 percent sometimes use their cellphones to text.
I suspect this will continue to be the case when the current generation of teens becomes senior citizens - in the case of my grandmother, at least, she can't text because she has arthritis and bad eyesight, not because she doesn't "get" it.
Yeah. I have nerve problems and bad eyes which makes texting on a cell phone impossible. Yeah, I can add a keyboard, but it would have to be a big one, and at that point not much advantage over a netbook.
I do not understand this thing of checking your mobile instead of wearing a watch. I've had to give up wearing a watch due to needing wrist splints, and I'm bereft without one. My phone is always in a bag somewhere - not convenient when I want to know the time about 600 times a day.
I suspect this will continue to be the case when the current generation of teens becomes senior citizens - in the case of my grandmother, at least, she can't text because she has arthritis and bad eyesight, not because she doesn't "get" it.
Texting does have an advantage over phoning if you don't hear well, though. My grandmother has more problems hearing than seeing, so she likes getting texts. She can't reply due to technical confusion, but she likes to read them. (And my father, who's been deaf since he was 30, is a prolific texter. He and I have analysed our way through many a season of Lost by text.)