27 September 2024

Technology in our lives

In my previous post, I mentioned the anniversary of Google. It is an undeniable fact that we experience the benefits of technology in our daily lives.

(In my own life, I keep deriving the benefits of technology. When I was a high school student, I was considered to have very good handwriting. Somehow, it gradually became shabby. As I finished my first degree, I thought that typewriter was a better option than writing by hand, when writing letters to friends. I bought a portable typewriter and it did serve me very well. Later in the early '90s, like most people of my age, I began using desktop computer alongwith scanner and printer. In those days, most computers had Windows as the Operating System. I nostalgically remember Windows 3.1 that was easy to use. Rightly or wrongly, compared to Windows 11 that I use in current PC, a laptop, I think that Windows 3.1 was more attractive).

I think that people of my age at 73, are generally not as  interested in going for outings, eating out etc. as they would have been, when they were younger. I like to avoid walking on the streets partly due to my age and partly to avoid rowdy looks of men who smoke and stare at elderly people. Bicycling or self driving one's own car becomes hazardous even after 60 years of age. Thanks to Technology, we have call taxi facilities and mobile phones to assist.

After Google Pay came into being, most of us don't physically go to the bank to pay bills and for other transactions. We don't need to go out for shopping. I am glad that I can pay the monthly wage to my servant maid, rent to my landlord etc. using Google Pay. When calltaxis fail, we are forced to depend on autorikshaw drivers in the city. Although most of them charge exhorbitantly (about no Tamilnadu State Government has taken any step so far), it is good that the drivers can accept payment via Google Pay. 

Technology is beneficial if it is in good hands.    

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About Me

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Chennai, Tamilnadu, India
I am a retired K-12 Education Management Professional. I have worked at different levels in K-12 school systems, textbook publishing, elearning and Education NGOs. I have held memberships in The Association for Science Education (UK), American Association of Physics Teachers and The Malaysian Institute of Physics. I hold a 1st class B Sc Degree in Physics followed by B Ed [English and Physical Science] and M A [Childcare and Education] degrees. My published works include 59 articles in teacher development magazines in India and the US and a book entitled `Creative Classrooms and Child Friendly Schools' (listed in Amazon). This book is almost an anecdotal account of my professional experience in six countries (including Cambodia where I worked as Technical Adviser to the Ministry of Education, Youth And Sports). I served as mentor in the Certificate of Teaching Mastery Program offered by Teachers Without Borders.