The 1990’s was arguably the decade in which communication
technology grew by leaps and bounds, spreading into all corners of the world.
At the beginning of the decade, I worked in a small help desk company called
Computer Hand Holding. It was sort of a computer lab, hiring geeks
involved in both hardware and software. I was the only woman my boss could find
to hold her own in this environment. I could take phone calls, answer the easy
questions, passing the harder ones on to my colleagues. And I did have a few
women melting down on the other end of the line, happy to talk to me.
Our boss encouraged us to get on Compuserve, an on-line
provider that allowed people to sign in to their servers (located in Ohio) via
a modem, and leave messages or participate in forums. “I am about to become a
‘lurker,’” I write in August 1992. I didn’t do much of that, as there were few
forums on literature and I wasn’t much for gaming. A woman in my writer’s group
had been given a subscription to the Well as a present. The Well hosted
conferences on writing as well as many other topics, but these things were
expensive at the time. I also insisted to myself that I was more interested in wisdom
than the information computers could provide.
I did love the email that came with Compuserve, private
conversations with friends and relatives who were far away. By the next year, I
had an IBM computer with a modem in my home for the purpose. On Compuserve, you
paid for the time used. When AOL showed up in the mid-1990’s, people shifted
over because AOL used monthly rates. About this time I left the country for a
year. When I got back, I worked in a big architectural company which was
Mac-based. I bought a small portable Mac computer and got an email address from
my Internet Service Provider. Service was still too slow to send photographs easily.
When free email service came out, from Microsoft, I was quick to get a hotmail
address, which I still use.
People had used answering machines for quite a while by this
time, to take phone messages when they weren’t at home to answer their phone. I
waited until AT&T added centralized messaging. How wonderful it was to come
home, pick up the phone and hear the tones which indicated someone had left a
message! Sometimes I would play and replay a message, just to hear the person’s
voice. You could pick up your messages from a pay phone as well, which I
sometimes was impatient enough to do. The concept of store and forward, for
both voice mail and email was new and helpful when people were so active and
running around.
Mobile phones really got going in the 1990’s also, using second generation networks with digital technology. Not
being a freelance worker, or one who traveled to different sites, I didn’t get
a mobile phone until much later. Working in administration, however, I had a
drawer full of non-working ones at the office! They were heavy and clunky, but
it was a status symbol. All the principals at the firm had to have one. I
recall when the president of the company came to me in 1996 and explained that
his phone was fine, but he wanted to replace it with a tiny “clamshell” phone,
the Motorola StarTAC. He demonstrated how big it was and how he would put it in
his pocket! He wanted to be the first to have one.
Working for a big international firm, we sent a great many
documents back and forth. At this time I developed my theory that people always
trusted the next to the last technology the most. We were all using email, but
didn’t trust it as much as the fax machine! People would follow up an email
with a phone call to see whether one had gotten the item, and often fax it as
well! A fax could also provide a signature that an email could not.
Though the World Wide Web got going in the 1990’s,
sophisticated searching, blogging, sending photographs, video conferencing and
streaming were all to come. They arrived as transmission rates increased and
storage capacities grew. Websites such as MSN and Yahoo for news, Amazon and
Ebay for purchasing things, and Google for searching began in the 1990’s, but
they came into their own in the following decades.
I feel lucky to have experienced this growth, while at the
same time remembering what it was once like to wish that you knew more about
something contemporary, to laboriously look up articles about it in the Reader’s
Guide to Periodical Literature and then hunt down the referenced magazines
in some cardboard box in the dusty library stacks! At the time, the idea of
Google or Wikipedia would have sounded like Wonderland to me. It is still up to
me to process information into wisdom, but perhaps a little more information
helps!