Remembering the Kitchen Computer -------------------------------- Sat Oct 8 11:56:25 PM EDT 2022 --- Written on: Thinkpad X13 Listening to: Goose Live at Dillon Amphitheater 2022-08-17 --- I'm dog sitting for my folks this weekend which means I'm spending a good bit of time in my childhood home. It's nostalgic at times, although I do come over about once a week with Jennie to see my parents for dinner and board games. We live close by, and it's a nice way to stay in touch. Anyways, this post isn't about dog sitting or being at home really: it's about remembering a fixture of my childhood: the Kitchen Computer. For most of my pre-teen and all my high-school years, my family had compact PC desktop running Windows XP (then Windows 7, never made it to Win10). It was finally put out to the garage a few years ago, when it became so slow that people would rather use phones than wait 30s for the browser to start. But during its heyday, it was a central part of my computing life. I was fortunate enough to go to a high school where halfway through they were able to give everyone a laptop, but prior to that it was one of the main ways I accessed the internet. Our house is laid out so that the kitchen, a wide open space with an island, is a frequent gathering spot. So the kitchen computer was the natural place to gather round and share a video. Or to queue up some music to listen to while my mom cooked (she's an amazing cook). Cooking tonight for my friends (pizza game night!) it just struck me how the computing world has moved on. My kids probably won't have that communal "gather round" experience of a shared desktop. It's both amazing how far our handhelds have come and sad to lose that old experience. Even if it was slow and involved dealing with Windows :) I wonder what home computing will look like by the time I have kids. Hopefully I'll be able to pass along some favorite technologies when they're old enough.