Corolinth wrote:
I understand you're a big Apple user. It's a huge step for you to grasp the appeal of even a two-button mouse.
"Like"
In the spirit of the thread, I don't really get RSS, either. And it's not even like my attitude towards Twitter -- Twitter, I can conceptually understand, and even recognize the appeal for in some circumstances. I simply don't have the time to wade through and find Twitter channels that I consistently would care about. I need some kind of Twitter screener or aggregator, that picks out the highlights for me and is attuned to my tastes. Seeing people I know comment on tweets they find germane, approaches this on a small-scale basis, like when Skee and I would be sitting in line at Dragon*Con, and he'd laugh and recount the tweet posted by one of the guests we were about to see. RSS, though -- is it really that hard, if I want to stay current on something, to check the site? If it's content that appears infrequently, it's easy to check and say "hey, that's new" or "okay, nothing new here." If it's content that happens constantly, then the RSS feed for that site is bound to become yet another deluge of information overload that I don't need.
As for the Kindle/nook/e-reader of choice, Hop: If it's e-ink, it's a fantastic alternative to ink and paper. I love the feel and experience of ink and paper myself, as well as the comfort of having a nice bookshelf stocked with a collection of entertaining/informative reads. In addition, books themselves offer a handy way to cross-reference; it's infinitely faster to flip through a book scanning for a quote, or some foreshadowing you think you remember as you run across a later reference. However, e-readers offer a very valuable asset: portability and durability. Paperbacks are similarly portable, but aren't as durable. They'll bend, corners will wear, pages will get ragged, covers will deteriorate. Hardbacks are terrible on the portability front. And e-readers offer the ultimate in portability: they remain equally portable even as the volume of reading material increases to huge proportions. I can take a veritable library on vacation with me, when I know I'm guaranteed to spend several hours in an airport and will probably finish the book I'm reading. And with an e-reader, I don't have to commit myself to what I'll read next.
More things I don't get:
*LCD e-readers. Eye strain, even on good/bright ones!
*The drive to socially network. I'm on Facebook now (*sigh*) and I still have no desire or impetus to update my status more than a couple times a month. I don't have anything of any particular import to say, and nobody cares about the minutia of my life, despite millions of Facebook/Myspace/Twitter/Blog vectors that seem to think otherwise. Wanna know the fastest way to get put on my ignore list? Make multiple posts a day about how awesome a Mom you are for taking your kids to the playground last night, and how they are the most cherished thing in your life. I don't care, and I don't care that you're so insecure about it that you feel like you need repeat it to the world over and over. It's like the old, tired cliches about slides from your vacation from the 60's or whatever, where everybody hates it when people whip them out, but is too polite to say anything.
*Custom, contact-specific ringtones. My phone tells me who's calling when I look at it, and I have a hard enough time noticing my ringer as-is, without having to try to think, anytime I hear any vaguely musical series of tones, whether or not that's one of the ways my phone can sound. One ringer for incoming calls, one for incoming texts and email, done.