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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: printers, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Being a Writer in the 21st Century

In Becoming Alice you found out that Ilse became Alice in the 20th Century, not only in name, but also as an American person. Fast forward just a bit. Well no, fast forward a long way in years all the way into the 21st Century. That same Alice who was such a fish out of water and struggled to fit into the American landscape, is now trying to catch up to the technological demands of the 21st Century.

Yesterday I spend most of the morning trying to replace an ink cartridge in my printer. I’ve done those replacements before. No big deal, I thought. The trouble arose out of the fact that I purchased a new printer that not only prints, but is a fax machine, telephone, and has internet access capabilities. I haven’t checked whether it also will brush my teeth in the morning. I only wanted a printer. Period. Nothing else. There is no such animal on the market.

Never mind, I’ll just use the printer and send off those first ten pages of my new work to someone whose judgement I trust and who would give me an honest critique. I purchased a double cartridge, not wanting to be bothered so often. God, but they are expensive. I digested the price. Writing is really important to me and proceeded to install it.

I lifted the top from the printer and the ink cartridge carrier came into full view. Piece of cake, I thought. I removed the old one and installed the new one. The printer/fax/telephone/computer told me it didn’t recognize any of the red, blue, yellow, and black cartidges. I hadn’t even touched the color inks.

I’m not without any technological knowledge altogether, so I turned the printer/fax/telephone/computer off and unplugged it from the socket. Replugged it, turned it on, and the same message came up. I went to the handbook. There is no information about “how to replace an ink cartidge.”

Long story short: It took me two and a half more hours to notice that in installing the new black cartridge the other three colors popped out of their place by 1/16th of an inch. I needed to reinstall all four colors to make the @#$%&* work. Sigh!

Being a writer in the 21st Century is not for sissies!


Filed under: Becoming Alice, Books, Writing Tagged: 21st Century, Becoming Alice, humor, printers, Technology, Writing 0 Comments on Being a Writer in the 21st Century as of 1/1/1900
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2. Computers Lie!




 “Insanity:doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.”
~Albert Einstein

Whencomputers are good, they are good. When computers are bad, they are bad. Wetend to take them for granted when they run smoothly, and when they “crash” orbecome infected with a virus, it’s the end of the world. Trying the same thingover and over hardly ever fixes them. Albert is right. It’s insane to do thesame thing again and again hoping to fix your computer.

On the otherhand, I have learned that computers and printers lie. I’ve had a computer tellme a number of times that what I just tried to do can’t be done, and then asecond later it’s opening up the folder that I requested or doing exactly whatI wanted to do in the first place without me doing anything extra. So, why didit tell me that it couldn’t do it? I don’t have a clue.

And when theprinter tells you that it’s “low on ink” it may be telling you a big fat fib.The machine doesn’t actually measure the ink level. It counts the number ofsheets that you use, and it gives you’re a ballpark figure in terms of how muchink you have left. 

If the printer has the gall to tell you, “Using yourprinter without ink can harm your computer”, that’s another lie. It just won’tprint anything for you without ink. The bottomline is: if it doesn’t work right the first time around, it okay to try atleast one more time.  

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