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Computing with Bifocals - Reader Letters: Help, Arrogance, & Weirdness
by
- November 3rd, 2004
In today's column I am going to answer readers letters, including some iTunes help, a letter from Mr. Arrogant, and the second weirdest letter I have ever received from a reader of this column.
Listening to the Radio
The first letter came from a reader who uses a PC at work and a Mac with OS X at home. He listens to the radio over his PC at work and wants to know how to do the same thing at home on his Mac. He was a bit frustrated, he said, because usually things were easier to do on his Mac, but he couldn't figure out how to do this. He also noted that he had tried finding the directions using Mac Help from the Finder Toolbar, but it had not helped.

Mac Help
I tried to search Mac Help using a number of different search words related to radio and I didn't have any luck either. The closest I came to the right answer was links to iTunes and music. The missing piece to this is the basic knowledge that radio stations are accessed through iTunes. Once I opened iTunes and then opened the iTunes Help menu, I instantly found the exact directions I needed to access radio stations on my Mac.

iTunes Help
Here are the steps.
Open iTunes.

Sample iTunes Window
Make sure the sound is turned up loud enough.

iTunes Sound Adjustment
In the far left column you will see a Source list. One of the items in the list will be Radio. Click on Radio.
To see the stations that are available, click the triangle next to the type of music you want to listen to.

Sample Radio Station List
To tune in, double-click a station. It will start playing instantly. The station will continue playing as long as you don't quit iTunes.
If you use a modem to connect to the Internet, choose a station with a bit rate of less than 56 kilobits per second (kbps) for best results. The kilobits per second are listed to the right of each station.
To retrieve the latest list of music categories, click the Refresh button in the top-right corner of the iTunes window.
You also can add a radio station that is not listed if that station offers streaming radio. As an example I will use my favorite station KUT. KUT is a local public radio station and when I visit their Web site, kut.org, I can tell they offer streaming radio because they have a link to it.
Sample Radio Web Link
When I click on the link, in this example "listen now," I get a second window that offers me 4 options for accessing the station. For my Mac I choose iTunes by clicking on it.

Selecting Source for Accessing Radio
Clicking on iTunes causes a playlist image to download to my desktop.

Playlist image
Double click on that and my station shows up in my iTunes music library and starts to play. You only have to go through this process once for each radio station you choose to add.
Another reader wrote recently asking about jigsaw puzzle applications. She wants to switch to OS X from OS 9, but has not done so because she does not want to lose her ability to put together puzzles on her computer. She stated that she lives in the country and has a very slow dial up internet connection and every time she tries to look for new applications she gets shut down before she can find anything and wonders if I can recommend something. I think I have a good recommendation for her. It is called Puzzles Forever 1.0. It will work on OS 9 or OS X, but is much more effective on OS X. I checked out a trial version and found the puzzles to be quite challenging. A puzzle can have anywhere from 48 pieces to 900 according to the specs although the trial version only offers 48. Puzzle pieces can be turned 90, 180, and 360 degrees. Registered users can use their own pictures to create new puzzles. The game costs $15. The version tracker site does not specify the product creator. A trial version can be downloaded here.
The Weird Letter
About that letter that I consider the second weirdest I have ever received - I shall the letter speak for itself:
Dear Ms. Gravley,
I have a problem and since it is all your fault I think it is only fair that you be the one to solve it. My mother is in her 60s. She lives several hundred miles from me and, as I am a very busy man, I have tried for some time to get her to use a computer so I can keep tabs on her and make sure she is OK. I purchased a very good Dell computer for her, and showed her how to use it, but she refused to do so. She worked in my father's office for many years prior to his death so there doesn't seem to me to be any reason for her refusal, nevertheless she would never use it, stating that it was too contrary.
Then she met you at some meeting and the next thing I knew she had gone out on her own and bought a second-hand Macintosh computer. Now, suddenly, she thinks she is some computer whiz She is doing genealogy research and wants games for presents. I do not have time to try and find software for a Macintosh, but I would like to please my mother. I assume there are a few games available for Macintosh computers and that you must be aware of what they are. I would appreciate it if you would give me what information I need to purchase some for my mother to help keep her busy. I believe she likes puzzles and card games.
You really should think about the repercussions before you start talking elderly ladies into buying computers.
My first response to this charming note was a huge laugh. My second was, just for fun, to try and figure out which of the several professions that require arrogance 101 as part of the educational degree plan this man must practice. My third was to know absolutely that since he did not say please anywhere in his message that I was not going to do his research for him.
However, those darn good manners that my parents insisted that I learn reared their ugly head and I did send him a link that would allow him to do his own searching. After all, I don't want his mother doing without. She obviously had plenty to put up with already.
In case you are wondering, I haven't a clue who his mother may be. I do tend to talk about Macs wherever I go and it is not uncommon for me to give out a business card with my column URL and TMO e-mail address so I guess that is how he knew how to contact me. My last thought is that when this gentleman learns, as we all learn at some point, that the sun does not rise and set in his back pocket, I hope that he benefits from the experience. Meanwhile, us "elderly ladies" will keep on buying whatever computers we want to buy.
If you are curious about what I consider to be the weirdest letter I ever received concerning this column read on.
Back in May of 2000 I wrote a column in the form of a fairy tale that addressed some of the issues related to growing up a female in the 1940 - 50s when the "accepted" roles for males and females were strongly defined and women were not encouraged to have careers or have skills necessary to support themselves or their families.
In my fairy tale those who could escape to the "Land of Macintosh" were able to gain skills that allowed them to be treated as equals. That particular column garnered a great deal of response, perhaps the most of any column I have ever written. Almost all of the response was extremely positive.
Then I got this letter from a man who accused me of "trying to destroy the American family as we know it." Those were his very words. He informed me, in no uncertain terms, that his wife was perfectly happy staying home and raising the children and keeping house. I read my column again, looking to see if I had somehow advocated for the dissolution of the modern family structure or suggested that all women had to work outside the home to have a happy life. I didn't see it, but hey, everyone to their own opinion. My evil mind wanted to ask his wife what she thought, but I just thanked him for sharing his opinions with me.
It's those darn good manners again.
Copies of Nancy's book Tips, Hints, and Solutions for Seasoned Beginners Using Apple Macintosh Computers With OS X are available in PDF download versions for US$9.57 and in print version for $18.15 plus $4.00 shipping. To view sample pages and get ordering information visit the September 14, 2004 column.
| Check out Nancy's complete index of all her columns for the most complete list of tips anywhere. The list is categorized and is a great reference when you are looking for help!
|
Nancy has a Master's degree in Human Services Administration and prior to her retirement she worked for almost 30 years in field of mental health and mental retardation. She has been a Mac user for 11 years, and has recently developed an avocation of teaching basic computer skills in both group and one-to-one settings.
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Observer Comments
Wow, I am not sure which letter I enjoyed more, the one from Mr. Arrogant, or the one from the fundamentalist pinhead. The former made me laugh in its amazingly high-quotient of self-centeredness, whilst the latter made me sad. OK, I still laughed at his expense, too...
Bryan
Editor
TMO
QuoteGuest wrote:
I believe mr arrogant is messing with you, his tongue firmly in cheek. Take it as a compliment and a sincere request and both parties will be happy. Just a thought.
I thought that at first, too, Guest. But having read it a few times, I think he honestly resents the notion of his mother's choice intruding on his Very Important Time. If he was being tongue-in-cheek, he's awesomely funny, but I think he just fancies himself Very Important.
Bryan
Editor
TMO
Wed Nov 03, 2004 11:13 pm Subject: One good suggestion
You might send Mr Arrogant a link to an excellent provider of jigsaw puzzles: Gamehouse
http://www.gamehouse.com/
They have an amazingly beautiful collection of Ann Geddes puzzles I’m sure that lady would adore, as she obviously has enough taste to prefer a used Mac to a brand new Dell
))
You might want to try them out yourself …
Keep up the good work, Nancy, we’re all behind you !
Jacques
QuoteBryan wrote:
I thought that at first, too, Guest. But having read it a few times, I think he honestly resents the notion of his mother's choice intruding on his Very Important Time. If he was being tongue-in-cheek, he's awesomely funny, but I think he just fancies himself Very Important.
![]()
Bryan
Editor
TMO
Sorry Bryan, I have to disagree. This is a fantastic piece of sarcasm and I can not believe it was not intentional.
This is like finding a fantastic birthday cake and wondering if it baked itself. No...there's a very clever baker at work here.
Need proof? Why would he have gone to such lengths to point out that the Dell was a dud? This is the set-up for the punch-line...it makes no sense for it to be there like that otherwise!
I DO believe that the "women-should-stay-at-home" guy is for real, however! That's sad that I believe that, but I've seen that guy at our local city-hall meetings...or one just like him, anyway!
When I retired asked my husband and three sons to recommend a computer they all suggested it would be too hard. I went out one day, saw an Apple store and my iMac running 9.0.4 was delivered before I got back home.
That was in 2000, I now have a G4 running 10.3.5 and teach retirees new to computers, mentor nursing students via email, run a small home business from my computer and refuse to help my husband or three adult sons with their computer problems.
Children should be very careful when they insult and patronise their computer illiterate mothers - what comes around, goes around.
Fri Nov 05, 2004 11:34 am Subject: I have been grinning for the past 2 hours!
Fri Nov 05, 2004 11:42 am Subject: Hello? Anyone Want To Ask Me?
Fri Nov 05, 2004 11:46 am Subject: Re: Hello? Anyone Want To Ask Me?
QuoteNancy With Bifocals wrote:
With All Due Respect Little White Car, I did not just fall off the turnip truck. I questioned the letter myself before I ever used it. There is one sentence in the letter that proved to me that it was legitimate. I would not do such a thing to my readers.
I appologize, I assumed you were presenting it as a joke yourself. There are columnists who present such tounge-in-cheek things regularly so I did not mean to suggest you were "tricked" or anything like that. If you did not put it in there as a way to pass along a joke then I believe you!
I'm a Windows/Mac user and can attest to the continental divide between PC and Apple camps, as I was "only a PC user" a few years ago. I saw a Mac SE 4/40 at the local hospital thrift shop and wondered what color the grass was on the other side. The $40 price was lowered to $20, and I began the long, strange journey to OS X. A college buddy in the next town, an Apple user since the Apple II days, served as an advisor and sounding board when needed. Mac OS 6 and Windows 98 are about as incompatible as Bush va. Kerry, so it was time to get another Mac to download files and programs off the Internet. That is how I returned to laptops after several years and stand with a foot in the G3 and G4 camps as well. (Talk about cats and dogs!) My "I'll build a PC myself" brother-in-law also eschews Macs, but I did get my sister a complete second generation iPod set to host their CD collection, so there is hope yet. Send "Mr. Arrogant" a copy of "Crossing Platforms" by Adam Engst & David Pogue or suggest he find out that Windows XP and Mac OS X have more in common than he expects. I would be overjoyed if my mother were still able to surf the Internet and connect with her friends, but Dementia, Alzheimer's and the frailties of a non-ambulatory 92-year-old require Skilled Nursing Facility care. Tell "Mr. Arrogant" that the time he spends away from his mother will cause him endless regret. I think I can get her to sign me up for TMO, even thought I am only "Older than age 13." PEA
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