20 for 20... heck still using 4+ of them.... guess I'm older than I thought....
I looked at the list again and I couldn't see anything other than cursive and checks that I might still use
20 for 20... heck still using 4+ of them.... guess I'm older than I thought....
I read recently AI can’t read cursive. I personally think it should still be taught. I don’t have a reason b
I can’t read my own cursive writing. And I am not a doctor.Secret code to communicate with when the machines take over.
Then again, I can't read some people's cursive handwriting writing either.
I still have and use paper maps. USGS quad maps are fantastic.
I can’t read my own cursive writing. And I am not a doctor.
18. Even back then, nobody would admit to having an AOL address, and I never had a walkman or similar.
I read recently AI can’t read cursive.
I read recently AI can’t read cursive.
Seems like a great reason to use it!
https://www.facebook.com/reel/1502645261867801
20 here, I can't believe rabbit ears, 8 track tapes, and having to get up to change the channel on the TV weren't on the list.
I hate to burst everyone's bubble, but....
Cursive is only good for confusing the younger generations who didn't learn it and haven't figured out their phones can translate it for them. Long before AI, there were software programs created to convert cursive to text. According to a simple internet search it started in the 60s with programs designed for recognition of hand written text. Widely available cursive-to-text conversion has been a feature of software for about 30 years. AI is continuously improving the ability.
Trouble is, nobody else can read it either. Most people's cursive is illegible - especially mine!
My father never had to get up to change the channel - he had a voice operated remote back in the mid 1960s!
The redundant term "Software Program" is something I haven't heard in many years now - but it still beats "App"!![]()
"Voice operated"Yep!! My father had the same style remote, 2 of them in fact, and if they didn't work "instantly" there was usually some form of flying object involved to get them to perform the required function.
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I loved the switch from printing to cursive, whatever grade that was. It's much faster, smoother and easier. But more importantly for someone with mild dyslexia, it's great for hiding spelling mistakes!
Never mind that I often couldn't read my own writing...
I loved the switch from printing to cursive, whatever grade that was. It's much faster, smoother and easier. But more importantly for someone with mild dyslexia, it's great for hiding spelling mistakes!
Never mind that I often couldn't read my own writing...
18. Even back then, nobody would admit to having an AOL address, and I never had a walkman or similar.
Come to think of it, I never did have an AOL address, but I did have a Compuserve address. I think that's worth two AOL addresses.
