Appreciate advances in technology
PHOTO BY MARÍA CAMP
Columnists, María Camp, Opinion, Z - TOP HOME
 By  María Camp Published 
3:01 pm Wednesday, June 21, 2023

Appreciate advances in technology

Technological advances, big and small, are happening all the time. From my own experience, though I grew up with computers from a certain point, they are leaps and bounds ahead now from those much earlier days.

I love the options improved technology provides us, and while some say they yearn for simpler times, I think it’s important to realize technology advances are tools. Tools provide us options, and as with many things, they aren’t inherently good or bad; it’s all a matter of how and to what degree you use them.

I remember when my family got our first computer and printer. I was ten. The computer was an “IBM clone” as Dad called it, and the printer was an Epson, a dot matrix, which had to print line by line. It was slow by modern standards, noisy and the print wasn’t that dark.

The pages came out all connected. I still kind of miss tearing the pages apart and folding the sides over on the edges and tearing them off after a print job finished.

Undeniably, desk jet/inket and laser printers provide much crisper, more desirable results, but I’m kind of glad to have had that experience so I can more fully appreciate what we have now.

This past week, my dad and I made a stop at a gas station we like in Dodge City on our way home from Birmingham.

It’s big, with food and souvenirs galore. It’s fun just to walk around and take it all in, maybe have a snack, but what caught my attention in particular on this occasion was discovering a large vending machine with pharmacy items in it. I had never seen one like it before.

It’s nice to have options, and while this may not sound like much to some people, discovering things like this along the way bring me joy. It’s fun to see what “the future” has brought us, and while we still don’t have flying cars (yet), at least not for the general populace, these less Earth-shattering advances are also exciting.

When I was on a trip with a group in college, we stopped at a rest stop with a vending machine that dispensed T-shirts in a plastic tube. I found that pretty entertaining, too.

When I was little, I was amazed to find a pair of fold-up scissors in a different rest stop vending machine. More recently, I have found ice cream in rest stop vending machines, certainly a happy discovery when I run across it.

When I was much younger, I remember my joy at this particular rest stop where they put in a touchscreen information kiosk, and you could print the results. Later, other rest stops installed them.

People didn’t have cell phones back then, and this was pretty remarkable for the time. I still kind of miss those. 
 I’m all for enjoying the simple things, but I love the advances modern life has to offer, too. It’s all about using good judgment and not going to extremes.

Also on Franklin County Times
Pilgrim’s renovations will add 100 jobs
Main, News, Russellville
Alyssa Sutherland For the FCT 
March 18, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — Pilgrim’s Pride’s poultry processing plant is undergoing a total overhaul that when completed will create 100 additional jobs. The over...
Hardware store hosts newest Connie’s Cabinet
Main, News, Russellville, ...
Bernie Delinski For the FCT 
March 18, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — Austin Williams said Monday he hopes a cabinet in front of Green’s Dependable Hardware helps those in need for food but also serves as ...
New animal control facility to cost $485K
Main, News, Russellville, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
March 18, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — A new county animal control facility is set to be built next to the Franklin County Jail with construction expected to begin by month’s...
Hadrian, Navy partnering on project
News
Bernie Delinski For the FCT 
March 18, 2026
BARTON — Federal and local officials are gearing up for Friday’s public unveiling of a major defense project at the Barton Riverfront Industrial Park ...
Who defines professional competence in Alabama?
Columnists, Opinion
March 18, 2026
Irecently reviewed an extraordinary student paper. The student analyzed a proposed state policy, determined it conflicted with our profession’s ethica...
Gardens have their own notes in history
Columnists, Opinion
HERE AND NOW
March 18, 2026
Gardens often carry more history than people realize. That felt especially true this month, as our March meeting and the Liberty Tree ceremony at the ...
High power bills has church seeking answers, solutions
News, Russellville
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
March 18, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — Electric bills that have more than doubled in the past two months have officials at Cedars Church working with the Russellville Electri...
Development near county line draws concerns
Franklin County, News
By Addi Broadfoot For the FCT 
March 18, 2026
TUSCUMBIA — Concerns over a large land development in neighboring Franklin County are now reaching into Colbert County, where some property owners say...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *