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Patricia Lay-Dorsey | all galleries >> my photo-a-day archives >> 2007 photo-a-day galleries >> photo-a-day October 2007 > Isabella and Muha study at Amer's Deli
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22-OCT-2007

Isabella and Muha study at Amer's Deli

In a university town like Ann Arbor, Michigan, every available table has a laptop on it, just as every other hand holds a cell phone pressed to an ear. Whatever did we do before the electronic age? Did we actually go to the library instead of Googling? Were there actually such things as phone booths? Speaking of which, did you ever wonder where Clark Kent would change into his Superman outfit in today's world? Just as I remember the day our first TV was delivered to the house in 1947, I guess it would be Isabella and Muha's parents' generation that would remember the first computer they ever saw. Electronic technology is moving forward so rapidly that it's hard to imagine what we'll be seeing within the next month, much less the next year. And yet we don't seem able to eradicate poverty or come up with nonviolent ways to settle disputes between countries. Children die of starvation every second of every day, and elders die even here in the most affluent country in the world simply because they can't afford the medicines they need to keep them alive. If we put the brainpower, money and energy into dealing with these life-and-death human issues instead of working to come up with a cell phone that will make coffee and walk our dog, where would we be as a world community? Ah, but we'd have to change our definition of "profit," wouldn't we? Our bottom line would have to be people not money. I wonder what it would take for that shift to become a reality? Maybe a first step would be for us to stop buying ever-more sophisticated electronic toys. If there were no demand, I bet the manufacturers would think twice before making and marketing them. As with the long struggle to end apartheid in South Africa, a coordinated global economic boycott was what finally did the deed.

Canon EOS 350D
1/8s f/3.5 at 50.0mm iso400 full exif

other sizes: small medium large original auto
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Greg Harp28-Oct-2007 05:47
Fabulous work! V
Guest 23-Oct-2007 14:49
What you describe is communism. True communism rather than the corrupted and distorted versions of it which litter human history :o(

Still, if you want a very cool, techie gadget look up the one laptop per child project and their "buy two get one" scheme.
Neal Nye23-Oct-2007 11:31
A wonderful shot of their concentration. I hope they're preparing for their future roles in saving the world and curing people of their greed.
Paco López23-Oct-2007 05:56
Excellent shot an very good pov!! VOTE!
Guest 23-Oct-2007 05:02
I'm with you there. We have however to be conscious that electronic companies are not non profit organization, so the work for what makes them money. It would take a significant shift to get them to feed the third world. The most ridiculous IMHO is the so called Internet gap, the third world not having access to Internet. This is simply outrageous to think that this companies are trying to use the funding to give access to Internet in starving countries.
Guest 23-Oct-2007 02:55
Excellent points and shot! V
an nguyen22-Oct-2007 23:41
I absolutely agree your commentary about the new technology that affect our daily life. Even myself I can't imagine life without the computer. I am just trying to simlyfy life by taking one day at a time and slowing down where I can. Even the brain needs a break .
Marijka22-Oct-2007 20:03
I enjoy your commentary as much as enjoy the photographs. I really am disappointed in the plagiarism that seems so pervasive on pbase. It would be nice if the information was at least cited. Good use of blog format!! Let everyone be heard! :)
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