My nine-year-old laptop died and I dithered about how to replace it. Ultimately, I chose to build a desktop. Back in 2014 my adult son and I built a gaming PC for him, so I had some experience. And about the time my laptop died, we needed to upgrade the motherboard, processor, memory, and power supply in his machine. You could say I was in the groove.
Most of the hot button items I normally needed a computer, I did reasonably well on my phone. I could pay bills, update spreadsheets, and certainly surf the web (does anyone say “surf the web” anymore?)
I had read for years that in many third world nations without a telephone infrastructure, smartphones had been a major change for many communities. Farmers would get current stock prices, people could do banking for often the first time, order goods, and obtain micro loans, all on their phone. As someone who has always used a computer, I wondered how that all worked. Having primarily a phone taught me a lot.
Of course, we have multiple computers in the home, just none I could make mine exclusively. I have a work computer, but that use was limited largely to work.
On my Substack, familytech.substack.com, I’ll return to topics of interest to families using technology. My more technical posts will here on long-time blog,
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