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In the period between shipping my computer to Apple's repair depot and this moment, I've enjoyed a nice weekend away from the computer.  It's true that I cheated a little and used my roommate's iMac to do some quick e-mail checking and such.  And although I don't exactly count the Kindle as a computer, buy no prescription Lotensin online, Rx free Lotensin, I did spend some significant time with it as well.  My computer vacation, though, order Lotensin no prescription, Online buy Lotensin without a prescription,   has made me realize just how much of my free time revolves around my laptop.

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I have two thoughts from this unplugged weekend.  First, Lotensin over the counter, Order Lotensin online overnight delivery no prescription, the Kindle is more awesome than I allowed my previous review to express.  It is easier to hold than I let on (when I actually wrote my review, I did not have the device with me), comprar en línea Lotensin, comprar Lotensin baratos, Online buying Lotensin hcl, and can be gripped readily with either hand.  The Kindle absolutely disappears in your hand and lets you enter into the author's words without distraction.  The New York Times downloaded in less than 20 seconds.  I can also reconfirm my claim that -- at least for me -- reading comes easier and quicker on the Kindle than either on a screen or on a page.  The only stumbling block to the Kindle is the geek factor (who wants to be that guy standing on a bus with an e-reader in his hands?), but as it gains wider and wider adoption this will dissipate, real brand Lotensin online. Amazon really hit the nail on the head, and as long as they don't try to do too much with Kindle 2.0, then it will also be a raging success, BUY Lotensin ONLINE NO PRESCRIPTION. Fast shipping Lotensin, My second thought is best expressed by referring to a scene from WALL-E.  At one point in the film, our curious little robotic hero damages the electronic wheelchair of one of the humans aboard the Axiom, buy Lotensin without a prescription, Lotensin gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release, the space cruise ship that has been satisfying its passengers' unlimited demands for comfort and luxury for hundreds of years.  The chair is outfitted with a screen that blocks out everything around it, distracting its occupant with advertisements, where to buy Lotensin, Lotensin trusted pharmacy reviews, videochats, TV shows, buy Lotensin without prescription, Buy cheap Lotensin, and more.  As the damaged screen sputters out (much like my MacBook), the woman in the chair goes wide-eyed as she observes -- seemingly for the first time -- her environment.  She meets another passenger, where can i order Lotensin without prescription, Lotensin samples, and they both frolic in a pool that they've both zoomed by in their wheelchairs every day, but neither of them knew it had existed, where can i buy Lotensin online. Lotensin from canadian pharmacy, I wouldn't say that we're as doomed as the movie makes us to be.  And I wouldn't say that my altered routine this weekend really had a profound effect on my overall well-being.  But the palpable feeling of a little emptiness coupled with my altered behavior signaled that perhaps I need to be more intentional about how I spend my free time.  Computers make certain parts of life easy, but they can make it easy to isolate oneself as well.  The humans depicted in WALL-E are obese and self-obsessed.  The film offers a comical, online buy Lotensin without a prescription, Where to buy Lotensin, but frighteningly poignant picture of our potential future as a species.  From time to time, we need to unplug, purchase Lotensin online, Buy Lotensin from mexico, go outside, and smell the roses -- even if only to change things up for a day, australia, uk, us, usa. Order Lotensin online c.o.d, Images used under a Creative Commons license courtesy of Flickr users functoruser and inky.
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  • Another Rachel

    Don’t you think it’s interesting that even in your “unplugging” activities that you mentioned, two of three were on your new electronic device? Even though you changed locations and interacted more with humans, you were still looking at a screen. And though you talk about the WALL-E moment where the humans realize what’s around them and actually interact with their environment, you cite as a benefit of the Kindle that it seems to disappear from your hand and let you read without distraction. Does that mean that the actual physical device doesn’t matter?

    I’m not arguing with your point – I think it’s a great one. I am frequently astonished by the amount of time I spend staring at a computer screen. But, if the benefit comes in interaction with real objects and real people then play a game, look at a photo album, use things where the actual object, environment, and company really matter.

  • Another Rachel

    Don’t you think it’s interesting that even in your “unplugging” activities that you mentioned, two of three were on your new electronic device? Even though you changed locations and interacted more with humans, you were still looking at a screen. And though you talk about the WALL-E moment where the humans realize what’s around them and actually interact with their environment, you cite as a benefit of the Kindle that it seems to disappear from your hand and let you read without distraction. Does that mean that the actual physical device doesn’t matter?

    I’m not arguing with your point – I think it’s a great one. I am frequently astonished by the amount of time I spend staring at a computer screen. But, if the benefit comes in interaction with real objects and real people then play a game, look at a photo album, use things where the actual object, environment, and company really matter.

  • http://jarredtaylor.com Jarred Taylor

    Fair enough, though I’d argue that laptops and the Kindle are real objects to be interacted with. The problem with the laptop for me is that it enables my addictions. It has all my music, photos, and writing. With the Internet, I can read about anything at any time. There is unlimited, diverse supply for my high demand. As a result, I use it all the time because it’s easy.

    The computer is a real tool that matters just as much as games or photo albums. The problem is that I never get bored of it, like I would — after a time — with a photo album or a game. The Kindle was a nice step back because it has a limited supply of information. At its essence, it’s simply ink on a surface, and so is just as “real” an object as a book or photo. The screen isn’t the issue; the problem is how and how often it’s used.

    But as you say, we agree. The main lesson I walked away with this weekend was that it’s important to be intentional about how I spend my time. Too much of anything — computers, games, sports, you name it — is never good. Moderation in everything, everything in moderation.

    And for what it’s worth, this weekend I also went to dinner with friends, saw a Dave Matthews Band concert with friends, played in the park with my friend’s daughter, and sat on a roof listening to friends play music. So, I’m not a completely hopeless cause… just didn’t mention those because they weren’t a result of my computer being repaired.

  • http://tropophilia.com Jarred

    Fair enough, though I’d argue that laptops and the Kindle are real objects to be interacted with. The problem with the laptop for me is that it enables my addictions. It has all my music, photos, and writing. With the Internet, I can read about anything at any time. There is unlimited, diverse supply for my high demand. As a result, I use it all the time because it’s easy.

    The computer is a real tool that matters just as much as games or photo albums. The problem is that I never get bored of it, like I would — after a time — with a photo album or a game. The Kindle was a nice step back because it has a limited supply of information. At its essence, it’s simply ink on a surface, and so is just as “real” an object as a book or photo. The screen isn’t the issue; the problem is how and how often it’s used.

    But as you say, we agree. The main lesson I walked away with this weekend was that it’s important to be intentional about how I spend my time. Too much of anything — computers, games, sports, you name it — is never good. Moderation in everything, everything in moderation.

    And for what it’s worth, this weekend I also went to dinner with friends, saw a Dave Matthews Band concert with friends, played in the park with my friend’s daughter, and sat on a roof listening to friends play music. So, I’m not a completely hopeless cause… just didn’t mention those because they weren’t a result of my computer being repaired.

  • http://tropophilia.com Taylor

    The last paragraph of your comment is important, Jarred. Let’s call it the “I have friends” addendum. What your post talked about was spending the time you would spend in front of the computer doing other things…even if some of them involved gadgetry. You weren’t talking about how reading from the Kindle instead of your MacBook changed your life…just about the difference in a few days’ worth of “computer time” re-allocated to other things.

  • http://tropophilia.com Taylor

    The last paragraph of your comment is important, Jarred. Let’s call it the “I have friends” addendum. What your post talked about was spending the time you would spend in front of the computer doing other things…even if some of them involved gadgetry. You weren’t talking about how reading from the Kindle instead of your MacBook changed your life…just about the difference in a few days’ worth of “computer time” re-allocated to other things.

  • http://jarredtaylor.com Jarred Taylor

    Here’s what A.O. Scott had to say about the human characters in his review of WALL-E in the NYT:

    They’re us, in other words. And like us, they’re not all bad. The paradox at the heart of “Wall-E” is that the drive to invent new things and improve the old ones — to buy and sell and make and collect — creates the potential for disaster and also the possible path away from it. Or, put another way, some of the same impulses that fill the world of “Wall-E” — our world — with junk can also fill it with art.

  • http://tropophilia.com Jarred

    Here’s what A.O. Scott had to say about the human characters in his review of WALL-E in the NYT:

    They’re us, in other words. And like us, they’re not all bad. The paradox at the heart of “Wall-E” is that the drive to invent new things and improve the old ones — to buy and sell and make and collect — creates the potential for disaster and also the possible path away from it. Or, put another way, some of the same impulses that fill the world of “Wall-E” — our world — with junk can also fill it with art.

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