I used to revel at technological challenges. Not so much now. And it seems the past several weeks there have been little computer & technological problems to keep me out of sorts.
I decided to get air purifiers for our apartment. For a variety of reasons I sneeze quite a bit and I hoped that cleaning up the air a bit would ease that situation — and it has. But…

The “but” is all about Spectrum cable services. We’ve had those purifiers for 7 months now. What has been happening is the purifiers sync and drop out of the Wi-Fi network for seemingly no reason.
The first several months were fine. Then we had network problems and Spectrum replaced our router. Ever since the units sync and drop at random intervals and we are unable to get them to reconnect.

Finally, Spectrum replaced the router again, telling us that their routers auto sense which appliances to connect at 2.4mhz or 5mhz. The purifiers cannot connect to the 5mhz signal and we need a consistent connection.
Then we were told that the router senses distance as part of the criterion for when to connect at 2.4. The thing is, we live in as all apartment and distance a thing we can provide for a fussy router.

I had brought a spare personal router back from our summer trailer. The router is an ASUS unit. Until now I have used TP-LINK. My specifications research pushed me into the enemy’s camp, (as it were) and I’m so happy I made the change. Not only does the router work well but the management APP is far superior.
Last week I’d tried to connect the replacement router with no luck. Yesterday I finally succeeded. The reason I failed was my own fault. My aging brain forgot some little details and the device was doing just what it was supposed to do. Frustrated customer, me, got annoyed and gave up for a week until that conversation with Spectrum pushed me into action.

And that is something I have been noticing about getting older. I get frustrated and irritated much more easily than in my younger days. I’m not an angry person; I don’t lose my temper; when irritated I turn it all inward. But for some reason I seem less able to control feelings of irritation.
And frankly, there seem more legitimate reasons to GET irritated. For example, I had an AI conversation in and among all the technological challenges. And I have come to the conclusion that AI aims at the lowest common denominator it’s there to best serve the least capable customer.
Why do I say this?
I do my own trouble shooting. I don’t pick up the phone to call Customer Service at the least glitch. I troubleshoot, I reboot, I check and recheck before dialing. As a result the first half-hour of a tech call is re-doing everything that I’ve already done because the AI doesn’t depart from it’s program.
Also, when you used to talk with real people you often learned more about what caused the problem, or how to prevent, or even how to troubleshoot better. You don’t get volunteered info from a help bot.
But, bots are the wave of the future. I’m only “kicking against the pricks” to be upset about a the reality of life ahead. I better get used to it.











It’s time for a few reflections on proximity. Proximity is the one variable that — it would seem — is not easy to ‘test’ before making the commitment to an RV lifestyle. And proximity might have more to do with whether a couple continues RV’ing or gives up their dream.









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