You know you’re old when…

…someone says something to you, all the words are in English, he’s obviously imparting information that makes perfect sense to him and (presumably) to the bulk of his audience. But the sentences don’t seem to actually mean anything.

When I bought my HTC One X, the selling point was that I didn’t need to root it because tethering was enabled. That really was the selling point for me. I tried it out at the store, saw I could hook other devices up just fine, bought it and went home happier ‘n a pig in shit. Tethering was really the only main feature I rooted / hacked my previous phone to death over and over 3G, I could remote control computers just fine. 4G was even better (I’m getting 10mbps up and down over 4g).

Then AT&T pushed out updates. Since I hadn’t rooted my phone, I didn’t care. I wasn’t going to lose anything.

Except, apparently… tethering.

AT&T turned it off. They turned off the one thing that I bought the phone for without telling me. And nobody seems to be able to find a way to root 2.20 so I’m now stuck without what I purchased.

And I’m left honestly wondering if new/improved “phones” retain making and receiving telephone calls as part of their function. Is that obsolete, and nobody told me? Is there some other gadget that does that now? Because I found that useful, back in the Olden Days.

I am adrift in a strange new world.

About Joel

You shouldn't ask these questions of a paranoid recluse, you know.
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3 Responses to You know you’re old when…

  1. MamaLiberty says:

    Indeed… I have that conversation once in a while with my computer expert friend. He’s a great guy, but he speaks mostly geek, and I don’t always translate well. When I ask what the heck he’s talking about, he usually just smiles – and then goes right on speaking geek until I threaten to stop feeding him anything when he comes. That usually fixes it… until next time. LOL

  2. jack says:

    > And I’m left honestly wondering if new/improved “phones” retain making and receiving telephone calls as part of their function

    Yeah, they do that too… they are backwards compatible with us old geezers 🙂

  3. Tam says:

    A smartphone is actually not a “phone” as such; it is a computer in your pocket that also can call people. 😉

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