There is a digital divide in America, but it has less to do with economics as it does with age. Although senior citizens have made much headway in recent years, there are still significant segments of the elderly community that refuse to touch a computer, or anything digital at all with a ten foot pole.
The issue was broached beautifully several years ago on a television sitcom of all places. CBS’s Everybody Loves Raymond told the story of how Ray’s father Frank loved his old jazz records. He refused to modernize with CD’s, and nobody could seem to convince him of the superiority of sound and features that CD’s offered. In order to bring his father into the twenty-first century, Ray concocted a plan. He bought his father CD versions of the jazz records he already owned, and suddenly turned them on to prove their superior sound quality. As luck would have it, the volume on the CD player was cranked up way too high, proving what Frank had always believed: technology is nothing but trouble. Frank then put on one of his scratchy, static-laden LP’s, and sighed contentedly. Low-tech rules!
» Read more: Get Grandma Online in 6 Steps