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salon.com > Technology April 9, 1999 URL: http://www.salon.com/tech/chal/1999/04/09/chal20_results 21st Challenge No. 20 Results Luddite testimonials - - - - - - - - - - - - Judges' comments There must be 50 ways to love your lever, but our readers found far fewer ways to renounce technology. We asked you to write a rejection of any technology, past, present or future. Many of you wrote to sincerely tell us how you're doing just that -- picking and choosing what works for you. Did we ask for sincerity? In addition, this Challenge was the first in which some of you dared attach JPEGs and GIFs to your entries -- as if we judged on technical merit. Hah! We reject attachments! Sorry, no winner this time. - - - - - - - - - - - - Earliest Times "Don't get me started on fire. When I was a boy, we ran away from fire; we didn't sit around it burning our food. It's not natural, I tell you." " " Things were fine the way they were. Foraging with the warthogs. Occasionally falling victim to the predatory impulses of the less-civilized beasts. The use of the Bone for hunting has changed this and our innocence has thus been lost forever. What good could possibly derive from the mad desire to kill? I will never know the answer to this question. I am starving. The Middle Years "Gutenberg, Schmutenberg. I wish that I had lived before technology was even
invented." "Thanks for the invite, but your project won't work. 120 cubits is bigger than anything that's ever been built, except maybe the Babel vaporware fiasco, but it's probably too small to do the job. Your gopherwood construction is hardly state of the art. Have you considered getting a deadline extension from the Maker? We'll be more comfortable on the outside, spearing fish. Please send our best to Japheth, Ham and Shem, and of course Mrs. Noah." Our Modern Era I entered this contest by screaming the individual zeros and ones down a phone line. In counterpoint with our high-tech jobs, we have been turning back the clock a bit at home, expanding our gardens and orchards, keeping bees and ducks, spending more time on our feet (or our bicycles) than we do in our cars. I make all our bread, and am having a spare fireplace converted into a wood-burning brick oven. We grow shiitake mushrooms in our garage. We do not own a television, and have taken to spending the evenings when we are at home curled up on the couch with our cats, taking turns reading aloud to each other ... But you can have the Internet connection when you pry it from my cold dead hands. I'm not anti- "Send your submissions via e-mail only ..." "Course, ah'm disappointed. But no red-blooded, Southern gentleman should be usurped in the marital bedroom by one of them -- them 'thingies.' And no genteel Southern woman needs one." I am not as much anti-technology as against the uses to which technology is often put, particularly digital technology. Articles that work perfectly fine in many cases no longer do so after a technological "fix." I could sum the whole thing up, I guess, with an axiom. PEOPLE DO NOT NEED SMART TOASTERS. I wake up to the sound of my wind-up alarm clock. I watch the morning news on a television but you have to turn it on with a pull knob. I don't own a microwave and I make my own bread from scratch, without a bread machine. I'm learning to spin wool in my spare time and, for my birthday, my friend Wendy gave a blown-glass fountain pen that I use with a dip ink well when I write letters to her. What do I do for a living? I'm an online editor at a bleeding-edge technology Web site. What Herman Melville knew: Thanks for your submissions -- and check back in two weeks for the next Salon 21st Challenge. |
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