« Not in Kansas City anymore | Main

It Takes Twos to Tango

At work the other day, the internet came crashing down.

The internet on the public machines continued to function—thank goodness, or the patrons would have rioted—but for the staff, nothing was working. Apparently the air conditioner had somehow broken in the server room (though not in the main library; patrons and staff would have rioted), and so we had no access to email, to our files, or to the internet.

For a brief while, perhaps thirty or forty seconds, we took this as a godsend: “Can’t do any work! Whee!”

But the true implications slowly dawned on us: There was no internet. No… internet. It was like being in the Middle Ages. No—the Dark Ages.

No: It was like being in Prehistory. By the time two minutes of no internet had elapsed, our fragile constructions of civility had collapsed. Our primal selves reasserted themselves. I found myself jonesing to slay a mammoth.

Chaos and anarchy ensued. Grunting and crude gesticulations replaced human language. We did not actually resort to cannibalism, but only because we were still fat off the riches from those glorious days of internet access, lo those four minutes prior.

With no mammoths in sight (I should have checked the public computers; you never know what you’ll find), I began cycling through the classic signs of severe anxiety. My right foot tapped continuously. My left eye developed a serious twitch. My teeth ground against each other, till I had the good sense to gnaw on…

…to gnaw on…

“What’s this?” I grunted/gesticulated to Asserty. It was a long, slender, hard object, perhaps the length of my hand, but not even as big around as my pinkie.

The following conversation really did happen:

 

Asserty: Dunno, but I have one on my desk, too.

Jessica [gnawing]: Maybe it’s for chewing on.

Asserty: Yeah, this little bit at the end here looks… looks almost rubbery, like bubble gum, maybe.

Jessica: You mean this white nub here?

Asserty: Huh… it’s pink on mine. But yeah.

Jessica: [Chews on rubbery white nub. Grimaces.] No. Not for chewing on. [Spits out the object.] Say!

Asserty: What!

Jessica: This… doohickey thingy, it made some kind of mark on the paper!

Asserty: [Rolls her doohickey thingy against a piece of paper.] Mine’s not doing it.

Jessica: No, you have to use the dark pointy end.

Asserty: …Oh! Hey, neat!

Jessica: You can scribble things in the margins!

Asserty: And draw pictures!

Jessica: And… oh, wow, this is awesome, look at this.

Asserty: What?

Jessica: It’s like… it’s like I’m typing.

Asserty: But… but there’s something weird with your font.

Jessica: How do you mean?

Asserty: I mean at a glance it all looks like the same font, but each individual character is a little bit different.

Jessica: Oh. So it’s like typing, but not quite as good. Too bad.

Asserty: You could still use it the same way, though. You could still create words and sentences and things.

Jessica: But then how would I email it to people?

Asserty: Hrm… You could… You could make photocopies, and then distribute them to everyone.

Jessica: This thing is really neat. I can’t believe I never noticed it before.

Asserty: Me neither. I mean, I’ve used one before, but only to tie up my hair. It can do so much more!

Jessica: I wonder what it’s called?

Asserty: Mine says… Two.

Jessica: Mine says No-dot-two.

Asserty: Twos, then. These things are called Twos.

Jessica: I still want to know what the rubbery bit at the end is for.

Asserty: Yeah… oh, wow, look!

Jessica: What?

Asserty: Rub it against some of the words you typed with the dark pointy part.

Jessica: …Oh!

Asserty: It’s like a delete key!

 


At this point the internet came back on, so we both abandoned our twos, but I’m still keeping mine at the desk as a curiosity. And I still want to hunt for mammoth.

 

Posted on Wednesday, July 2, 2008 at 10:33AM by Registered Commenterthe lesbrarian | Comments3 Comments | References1 Reference

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

References (1)

References allow you to track sources for this article, as well as articles that were written in response to this article.
  • Response
    Tango argentino en Canarias (Tenerife y Gran Canaria), clases de tango, una selección músical con más de cien canciones de tango para escuchar, acontecimientos, milongas en Tenerife, actuaciones, eventos y mucho más.

Reader Comments (3)

OMGLOL.

I don't know how you feel about South Park, but if you're bored (and not at work cos SP is so not work safe, LOL) for a half hour, go here:

http://www.southparkstudios.com/

Click on:
Full Episodes
Season 12
"Over Logging" (#6)

This episode = many LOLs. It's about the internet going down cross-country and what the people of South Park are doing to cope. (not that I have to say it, it's South Park for cryin' out loud, but, CRUDE HUMOR WARNING!... which I find hilarious, but again, some people just don't like it. So I have to warn. JUST IN CASE.)

If nothing else, you might at least find the Grapes of Wrath reference mildly amusing. :P
July 2, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterCara
until advanced course increases skill set w internet world this correspondent ,too, regularly utilizizes#2's Dixon Ticonderogas, however. ah, America.. infinite variations. Happy post-4th of July.tgb/EA
I'm sure the Queen of Claremont has told you I work in the IT field. Make that 'used to', I've been unemployed since May. Anyways, server issues were always our favorite problem to handle. NOT. Especially when I'd get three calls from the same office asking "Is the internet down?" To which I'd answer, "Yes, the internet is down, I just told your team-mate five minutes ago." Next call would usually be their supervisor: "Is the internet down? Nobody can work..." It would be a vicious cycle until either a) The manager finally got the word out to his teams that the internet was down, stop calling the Help Desk please, or b) The internet was restored.

Sigh...the fun of being in the computer world. It's not exactly one thing I miss right now... ;)

Chessie >^..^<
July 21, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterChessie

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
All HTML will be escaped. Hyperlinks will be created for URLs automatically.