Aug. 29th, 2009

Dance Step

Aug. 29th, 2009 02:22 pm
xenith: (Default)
I came across a line in a newspaper article that I find interesting. It is a reference to a youth "performing a dance, and showing to a large number of admiring companions a new step he had just learnt".

Why interesting? It's from the Argus, January 1882. Kids don't really change.

Also I wonder what sort of dance step. Not a waltz, I should think :)
xenith: (Default)
The other interesting thing about my last entry was I posted it using my phone (which explains the lack of paragrahs and the "detecting" for location) while, as I said I wasn't in my Facebook update, out at Franklin House, a Georgian-era gentlemen's residence and former boy's school now owned by the National Trust.

What would the former inhabitants of this house have made of a hand-held, pocket-sized device that could be used to speak directly with anyone, anywhere; that could send images and sounds across the world in seconds and could quickly access information on any topic? Even for the last residents, in the 1950s, that is a futuristic SFnal gadget. (Although I'm sure the SFnal version wouldn't have problems getting a signal in a built-up area.) Yet for us it's an easily available common and relatively cheap everyday item.

I'm reminded of the many discussions 9 years ago along the lines of "Here were are in 2000 -- where is my futuristic technology?" Here, obviously.

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