Three minutes from now it will be tomorrow
Saturday, May 09, 2020
Today Saturday I am biting the bullet and I will be going to Richmond to have Bensen at Powersonic Computers remove my Windows 7 and install Windows 10. Bensen is very careful and savvy and will probably keep everything that I have in my computer now. The problem will be passwords I do not remember. I can truthfully say that this century was ruined by Steve Jobs and his iPhones and the invention and proliferation of passwords and pin numbers.
I am biting the bullet because my computer runs smoothly and
I have everything I need in it including a readily available feature to be able
to do this:
¡¡¿¿Qué carajo que tengo que cambiar esta linda
rutina y me voy a sentir otra vez un pingüino en el ártico!!
Bensen will be able to carry over my useful 15 year-old
Photoshop. But I doubt he will be able to help me transfer my Blogger blog
dashboard (from where I write my daily blog) into my difficult to use (for this
idiot) Microsoft Surface laptop. This means that until I get my computer back I
will not be writing my usual blogs. I don’t think anybody will care.
The problem is that with three people, at the most phoning
us every day, writing my blog was a high point in this everlasting quarantine isolation.
I no longer tell my Rosemary at 10:30 in the evening, “Five
minutes ago it was yesterday.” Now my new one is, “Three minutes from now it
will be tomorrow.”
The picture illustrating this blog is not really out of
context. All I remember of the girl is that her name was Aleysha Mishelle. I
photographed her in the early 80s for an article on the Planetarium’s laser
show guy, Craig McCaw. Here are the relevant blogs.
Craig McCaw & Maybellene
A Rendezvous with Craig McCaw
Craig McCaw & Maybellene
A Rendezvous with Craig McCaw
The purpose of this photo of the lovely girl with the big
hair is that in the 80s my photos of her were drastically underexposed. My 15
year-old Photoshop is not inventing detail that is not there. It is bringing
out detail that was always there. The obstruction to getting a good image was
the limitation of my nice basement darkroom and the process used at the time
which was limited.