JoeChartreuse wrote:
What scares me is that you think this is a good thing. I'm not speaking of any quality issues, but privacy and control.
Of course it's a good thing. Losing floppy discs was a good thing. Losing punch cards was a good thing. Losing hard drives the size of a washing machine was a good thing.
You lose no more "privacy" or "control" by losing CD's then you did by losing floppies. It's just an antique storage method and has no inherit privacy. There are dozens of alternatives that are infinitely larger and cheaper per gigabyte.
JoeChartreuse wrote:
I have a tablet, and unless I buy an external drive, I can't add any software unless it's from cyberspace
I am quite sure your tablet came with a cable that you can sync, and thus load from a PC. That is unless you have
chosen to go "PC less", but again, that is your choice. Regardless, your fears of buying & loading software over the internet are unfounded.
JoeChartreuse wrote:
which is entirely without privacy, quality control, or source verification, and - in many cases- without software instruction.
Again, Joe, when you make these continued (and thus far unexplained) statements about "privacy", "quality control" and "source verification", you are only displaying your complete ignorance as to how data gets from point A to point B. In Joe speak "It's a broken record".
JoeChartreuse wrote:
Forget software backups too.
Huh? You can backup to external hard drive, solid state media, etc. Plenty of methods that are infinitely larger than a 720MB CD-ROM or even a 2GB DVD-ROM. Heck you can buy a tiny 64GB USB Memory stick and carry the equivalent of nearly 100 CD+G's on your key ring. How this is
worse than an antique piece of plastic is beyond baffling.
JoeChartreuse wrote:
Progress is awesome....
Paralyzing fear of technology is just sad.