Carbon paper, anyone?
Dec. 13th, 2003 02:30 amTonight's foray into the back attic turned up a think pad of Onward carbon paper,30-year-old bank statements and cancelled checks, the receipt for the garage door I had installed in 1986,and several more bags of plain paper recycling.
My dilemma du jour is whether or not to take the genuine, original IBM Portable Personal Computer. It's a 44-pound luggable; I paid $75 for it shortly after I left NCS in 1989; it hasn't yet shown any signs of becoming one of the collectible vintage computers. I don't anticipate powering it up for anything other than sheer entertainment values, and I haven't yet run across the boot disk or any of the other floppies. (Look, ma; no hard drive.)
So why am I even thinking about taking it? I honestly don't know. The reminder of how far we've come vis a vis computing technology? The amusement value of it being a *portable*? Maybe. But am I willing to pay roughly $36 to move it, and to devote storage space to it once I've bought a new home? Why? This is one of those objects where the scales don't tip one way or the other on the burden of stuff vs. treasure and joy of stuff balance beam. Which should be all the reason I need for leaving it behind. But will I?
Answer cloudy; ask again later.
As for the carbon paper, its weight is indiscernible. But I'm not taking it. No way, no how. Anybody here need some?
My dilemma du jour is whether or not to take the genuine, original IBM Portable Personal Computer. It's a 44-pound luggable; I paid $75 for it shortly after I left NCS in 1989; it hasn't yet shown any signs of becoming one of the collectible vintage computers. I don't anticipate powering it up for anything other than sheer entertainment values, and I haven't yet run across the boot disk or any of the other floppies. (Look, ma; no hard drive.)
So why am I even thinking about taking it? I honestly don't know. The reminder of how far we've come vis a vis computing technology? The amusement value of it being a *portable*? Maybe. But am I willing to pay roughly $36 to move it, and to devote storage space to it once I've bought a new home? Why? This is one of those objects where the scales don't tip one way or the other on the burden of stuff vs. treasure and joy of stuff balance beam. Which should be all the reason I need for leaving it behind. But will I?
Answer cloudy; ask again later.
As for the carbon paper, its weight is indiscernible. But I'm not taking it. No way, no how. Anybody here need some?
no subject
Date: 2003-12-13 12:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-12-14 01:02 am (UTC)