Kurmudgeons and Kids

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Am I a Mac or a PC or just plain old Bill?  Click here.Oh gee, I think I've become a Kurmudgeon. Or maybe a naysayer. Or maybe just a Buttoned-Down Corporate IT Technocrat. Or maybe, and this is most frightening of all, PC - and I don't mean "politically correct" - but rather the character played by John Hodgman in the "Get a Mac" advertisements

Bill Schriers ancient draft card - click for blogBut I know I'm anti-establishment, because I marched and protested the Vietnam War. I actually participated in a sit-in demonstration. I crossed a police barricade during an anti-war protest in Madison Wisconsin (ok, so it was St. Patrick's Day, I was drunk, twenty-three years old, on my way to work, and headed to get a cup of coffee to sober up - I still "crossed the line", ok?). Gee Whiz, I almost burned by draft card (oh my gosh, am I that old, that I still have a draft card?)  How could a militant activist plebeian, farm-kid like me become the ultimate embodiment of "The Man"?

What happened?

Elections.

Yup, we've had a few recently in Seattle.

We have a new Mayor, a new County Executive, a new City Attorney, and two new City Councilpeople.

And they are all younger than me.

Worse yet, their campaign staff - who are now working on their transition teams - are college kids or twenty-and-thirty-something young people who have all these odd and annoying habits.

They use I-Phones. Gee, I can't even spell I-Phone (correctly).  We corporate IT types use proper BlackBerrys or proper mobile phones that fold out when you want to talk.  (Although I did give my wife an I-Phone for Christmas - does that count?)

They use Macs. Yes, Apple Macintosh computers - (not the Ronald McDonald type of Mac).  We corporate IT types use proper Windows XP computers manufactured by prim and proper corporations like Hewlett Packard with proper advertising campaigns, thank you very much. (My always-suffering wife is a Mac person - does that count?)

They don't use anti-virus software.  Anathema! Heresy!   My Chief Information Security Officer is writhing on the floor. There ARE viruses which affect Macs, he says.  And how about all those I-Phone (I still can't spell it right) apps which are written by hackers and can be downloaded?  Oh wait, I-Phone hackers aren't trying to create bot armies, they're just trying to modify the software in the phone and bend it to their will.  Gee, does that make Apple Engineers and Programmers and Executives Buttoned-Down corporate IT types like me?

These kids - they tweet and twitter and blog and facebook (is that a verb?) and post video they take with their danged I-Phones to YouTube and create legends for their innovative use of cell phones to collect last minute ballots on election night. 

Where is my defense from all this anarchy?   Where is my official City of Seattle Information Security policy when I need it?   Where are my guidelines for the use of social media like Facebook and Twitter and Blogs (oh my)?  Where is that holy grail of all Chief Information Officers and Buttoned Down corporate IT types - "standards"? 

At least I can take comfort and wrap myself in my reduced budget (Macs and I-Phones cost more to buy and manage) and my economic development (gee, Microsoft DOES employ 40,000 people in the Seattle area and it DOES, after all, make software for Macs, too).

They are challenging my policies, these kids. They are challenging my assumptions. They don't care for my technology standards. They have taught me how to spell iPhone.

They are challenging my very identity as the Chief Technology Officer for the City Government of Seattle.

And I love it.

5 Comments

PMI Network had an interesting article last month, "The New Old". It suggested that anyone over 30 is now considered to be technologically expired by many employers. I hope that while you're listening to younger staff, you're also investing in technical training for your older staff. Continuous learning is a terrific preventative for kurmudgeonry and a great way to tap the wisdom that comes only from experience.

Now that you have learned to spell iPhone, next on the list should be curmudgeon. I realize it doesn't look as nice in the title with Kids if correctly spell it with a C, but that's no excuse. Some of those kids may be unfamiliar with the word and be mislead by your error, intentional though it may be.

An English teacher I'm not, a journalist I'm not, a geek I am. IIWII (it is what it is).

Good comment, Diana. In technology, chronological age is almost irrelevant. A 65-year-old can be more flexible and adaptive to new technologies and ideas than some 25 years old. The difference, I think, is not so much "training" but rather willingness and eagerness to learn. That's continuous learning, and it is in the attitude of the employee much more than the training budget of the employer, although both are necessary.

I can appreciate what you have to say...my three kids all Mac users in my house and my Dell laptop is laughable when it comes to editing videos or recording music. We're Old Skool...

BTW, it's spelled Curmudgeon, as my band is called Lonesome Dan & The Curmudgeons. If you're going to profess to being one, at least get it right.

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