Do You Stay Connected During Your Vacations? PDF Print E-mail
Analysis - Commentary
Written by HANS BOLDT   
Thursday, 06 September 2007

Why do some people feel the need to bring their high-tech toys with them when visiting the great outdoors?

We all know that technology is taking over the world. But where do you draw the line? Where should we dig in and build that Maginot Line to prevent technology from taking over absolutely everything?
The other day, there was a discussion on the radio about bringing your high-tech toys with you during camping trips to the great outdoors. Imagine that: You canoe to some out-of-the-way lake in Algonquin Park, set up your tent, build a campfire, and then open up your laptop to check your email! Is there no one else who sees something wrong with this picture? But more and more people are doing just that. One person called in and described how excited his son was to climb the tallest peak in Killarney Provincial Park and, from there, immediately called his mom on the cell phone! Another caller complained about trying to relax at a campfire only to hear Dora the Explorer from one direction and Barney the purple dinosaur from another!

Now, we're not big outdoors people, but we do enjoy our breaks away from the hustle and bustle of the big city. This summer, we were able to poach on my sister-in-law's boyfriend, Peter, twice with visits to his cottage. His cottage is on a beautiful lake in the middle of a scenic nowhere some four hours from our home. Watching the water and the wildlife thereon is a great way to relax and escape the world of stress and anxiety.

I do enjoy our visits to Peter's cottage. And for days after our visits, my dear wife likes to read the real estate rags, looking for our dream cottage. I always have to explain that it's a lot less trouble, and ultimately a lot cheaper, to just rent a cottage for a week or so during the summer (or take advantage of friends or relatives!). With a rental, you get to enjoy the lake without all the hassles of maintenance and driving there every other weekend, battling all the cottage country traffic, which can be worse than the westbound 401 at dinner time.

Take Peter, for example: Over the past two years, he has spent a lot of time and money renovating his cottage. A big garage is understandable. You need one to hold your snowmobile and jet ski. But his dream cottage also included a humongous great room where he can watch his DVDs in luxurious comfort. Again, another fine example of someone missing the point of cottage life!

But back to that call-in show on the radio. There were indeed quite a few misguided souls who not only enjoy the use of Wi-Fi connections while camping, but actually seek out connected campgrounds. This may sound like the ultimate in silliness, but one person described how he was able to identify wildlife by doing a Google search. In the old days, we just opened up our Peterson Field Guide. What's next? Binoculars that can automatically identify the animal you're looking at?

Of course, one of the motivations for being connected during vacation is to be on call in case your boss needs you. Pshaw! You don't want to hear the expletives I'd use if my boss wanted me available during my vacation! Maybe I'm unusual, but I've always used all of my assigned vacation. And I've always enjoyed not being accessible. Perhaps there are people who think they're indispensable to their employer? Well, I for one would never want to be in that position. No salary would pay for the stress of being the most important worker in the IT department. Furthermore, having irreplaceable employees is a good recipe for trouble for any IT manager. Why then do IT workers delude themselves that they're indispensable? That too is a good subject for a rant. Maybe someone else will write that one.

And if you absolutely have to be connected, why bother at all with actually visiting the wilderness? Just go online and look at all the nice pictures of this world's wild and unexplored spaces. Heck, you can even see some nice photos of our trips to Peter's cottage—taken, of course, with the one high-tech toy I'd never go to cottage country without: my digital camera!

For that matter, many city dwellers may not even be aware of wild spots they can visit within their own city. Take my own burg, Toronto, as an example. Sure, squirrels, raccoons, and skunks are common pests. I even chased one incredibly huge raccoon out of my garage! But within mere blocks of our home, we've also seen fox and deer roaming the streets. Furthermore, there's a wooded area nearby where the white trilliums and jack-in-the-pulpits bloom in the spring. Sure, the urban wilderness areas have a few problems. You can never escape the noise from the streets, highways, and railroad lines. And unfortunately, you don't want to skinny dip in the streams and rivers flowing through those parks.

But getting back to the real wilderness parks. If the visitors to the woods can be connected, what about the animals who live there? Shouldn't the black bears be able to look at a Google map to see where the good garbage dumps are? A beaver could log in and look up the locations of the undammed streams. Animals such as moose and deer and turtles could use the online maps and forums to avoid the really busy highways and share the locations of hunters and trappers.

Bottom line: Please leave those high-tech toys at home during your wilderness outings. Enjoy the great outdoors as it was meant to be enjoyed, with all that nature has to offer, things like peace and quiet, beautiful sunsets, and majestic scenery, along with other pleasures such as mosquitoes, black flies, and poison ivy.


Last Updated ( Tuesday, 27 November 2007 )
 
Discuss (14 posts)
JonFParis
Do You Stay Connected During Your Vacations?
Sep 14 2007 23:47:00
Indeed Par-tner is a role model couple for all us in the IT field. (30+ together?). Do not give these type of advices to this IT icon. :) <p>Sorry to have to disillusion you Hassan - but it is actually "second time around" for both Susan and myself. We have been together now for about 14 years. <p>And we have no intention of taking separate vacations - at least Susan has told me I'm doing that any time soon ;-)
#118116
Guest.Visitor
Do You Stay Connected During Your Vacations?
Sep 14 2007 15:00:00
<i>"perhaps, you and Susan could take separate vacations?"</i> <p>We have discussed what a low percent of couples are still married to their original spouses. Add seniors factor to it and it goes lower. Add IT factor and it becomes almost invisible (Here we are talking about TWO IT factors). <p>Indeed Par-tner is a role model couple for all us in the IT field. (30+ together?). Do not give these type of advices to this IT icon. :)
#118115
Guest.Visitor
Do You Stay Connected During Your Vacations?
Sep 11 2007 14:28:00
Even when the dentist looks at my molars and says, "Doing a lot of User support lately...???"...and I reply, "No, Just doing a lot of thinking lately...For people that don't do it themselves!!!". Well I still get something good out of it...The persception that they need me.
#118114
scatterload
Do You Stay Connected During Your Vacations?
Sep 11 2007 13:17:00
even when i got sent to iraq a few years ago, i did some work for the company, there. <p>it was nearly nine months before they had an internet connection where i was stationed. i emailed my family, friends and co-workers. family and friend said the missed and loved me, co-workers wanted help with a /FREE program, because they did not even attempt to understand its syntax......arrgghhh! <p>-sarge
#118113

H.Boldt
Do You Stay Connected During Your Vacations?
Sep 10 2007 17:11:00
Hassan wrote: "<em>If I would not see the author's name that it is indeed my old friend Hans starting his career in non-tech writing, I would think it was Joel writing.</em>" <p>Hi Hassan! It would be great if I could make a living writing. But even if Victoria does invite me back (and I hope she does!), I doubt it would be enough to live on. I got to get off my fat lazy butt sometime soon and look for a programming job. Based on my last three years of zSeries programming experience, I think what I <em>really</em> want is a job in an iSeries shop! <p>Cheers! Hans
#118112

H.Boldt
Do You Stay Connected During Your Vacations?
Sep 10 2007 17:02:00
Ditch the cell phones and get a set of FRS radios, a pair for the parents, and one for each kid. You can stay in contact, and the kids will have lots of fun with them too. <p>We did bring our cell phone with us to Golden Lake. But coverage in the Ottawa Valley is pretty spotty. Apart from the larger towns, the cell phone was all but useless.
#118111

H.Boldt
Do You Stay Connected During Your Vacations?
Sep 10 2007 16:57:00
Re jetskis, once this summer when we were up at Golden Lake, my sister-in-law's boyfriend worked hard all day to get his jet ski in the water. At around 8:30PM, he had it in the water and running, and the two of them were off. Fortunately, their neighbor followed them in his jet ski. After about an hour, when it was getting dark out, they came back, towed back by the neighbor! <p>I'm not a big fan of powered water craft. Give me a canoe or sailboat any time. <p>Anyhoo, if you decide you need to hire staff, give me a shout. Summer's over, and I got to think about looking for a new job! We all need to take time away from our responsibilities sometimes. Or perhaps, you and Susan could take separate vacations? <p>Cheers! Hans
#118110
Guest.Visitor
Do You Stay Connected During Your Vacations?
Sep 09 2007 02:34:00
I too am dressed with laptop, cell-card, cell-phone, and 24-7-365 or 366 callability during leap years. Much has to do with what you write, what shifts your user's work, and in what states and time-zones you're covering. So...Easy recovery is always applied to my apps where applicable and documenting that recovery process in a really big font. <p>Anyway...remember when you went home at five. Cell-phones were big as shoe-boxes and nobody had them. You couldn't be called because your line was busy on the dial-up. (9600 baud syncronous modems) Remember when you could smoke right in your cubicle? And colleagues would throw bad 8" diskettes around the office like frisbees...Ouch! They hurt.
#118109

mike@pavlak.com
Do You Stay Connected During Your Vacations?
Sep 08 2007 02:21:00
I have my camper in place where I cannot receive cell or Blackberry Data service. Call it plausible deniability!
#118108
Guest.Visitor
Do You Stay Connected During Your Vacations?
Sep 07 2007 15:45:00
My wife and I have a pop-up camper. I never check email when camping. I do use my cell phone. It's convenient for my wife and I to call each other while camping if we get separated with the kids, if we can get a signal at the campground. <p>Oh, I will use the cell phone to call a friend to do google searches for me if I can't find the campground while driving there and the campground won't answer the phone. I guess that counts as indirect internet access, huh? <p>I prefer sitting by a nice campfire and eating smores than coding in RPG any day! <p>Chris
#118107
bobthesystemiguy
Do You Stay Connected During Your Vacations?
Sep 07 2007 15:19:00
Agree with the premise of disconnection and also appreciate how difficult it can be. I also appreciate the variable situations people have. <p>I never had a cell phone until several years ago my employer mandated it. Call me a Luddite, but I just didn't want to be bothered. <p>Now, I can be bugged 7 by 24 by 365, but my work is usually not the bugger and I'm not the buggee - I'm just the middleman. It's my wife, who runs an assisted living facility and assists in running the attached nursing home. Many of those 2AM calls are nurse's aides/LPNs asking what to do with clients in medical situations. Usually, these issues are simple and straight-forward, but someone with the proper professional license (my wife) must make the decision. <p>For handling my vacation, my manager and I set some guidelines as to what constitutes an emergency. Anything that can be deferred is deferred since they aren't true emergencies. If there are tasks that only I can do and the must be done before I return, I will do them - but only them. I use my manager and my team leader as filters to prevent the non-critical, non-emergency stuff from getting through to me. <p>I used to check email daily when on vacation - I now check no more than twice a week and aim for only once a week. I hate coming back after 3 weeks off and being confronted with several thousand e-mails in my queue - few things are more depressing. <p>Every task that can be, is delegated to somebody else. I also attempt (but not always succeed) to have a backup for all urgent work. <p>Now, this doesn't eliminate every item of work during vacation, so I do plan for a few hours in a week of vacation to handle the truly emergency stuff. <p>The last thing that needs to be disconnected is your mind - that is often harder to turn off. I generally find something else to think about - crowding out the thinking about work. <p>So yes, I take the laptop, cell phone and a good book with me. The laptop stays off nearly all of the time. These strategies seem to work for me, they may not work for others. <p>Gracious, I've been on too long... resuming vacation mode. <p>Vacationer
#118106
JonFParis
Do You Stay Connected During Your Vacations?
Sep 07 2007 13:46:00
I agree with you 100% Hans - and as far as the wilderness goes I'd also like to see a ban on Jet skis and (if used simply for racing around) Snowmobiles. <p>Back in the days when I worked for IBM followed your doctrine almost religiously. However, since becoming self-employed things have been very different. The longest time I have spent without checking email has been two business days. <p>In part I can thank the spammers for that. When we first started I used an "Out of Office" message to tell people that I was away for a few days. The only result as far as I can tell was that within a week my daily spam volume doubled. Since then I have not used the OOO setting. <p>This leaves me with a problem as unlike a contractor with a set number of clients I am completely reliant for my business on responding to queries as soon as they come in. If someone needs training they need it now - and a lack of response is taken as a lack of interest. These opportunities don't come up often enough to be able to ignore even one. <p>Therein lies the problem of the small business - you can't afford to hire office staff and you can't afford to miss business.
#118105
Guest.Visitor
Do You Stay Connected During Your Vacations?
Sep 07 2007 10:31:00
If I would not see the author's name that it is indeed my old friend Hans starting his career in non-tech writing, I would think it was Joel writing. By the way I can see Joel online as I write this post and think he would reply almost immediately. <p>You remind me of the movie "Terminator" where the lady asks Reese (it has been over 20 years so I dont remember the name exactly), as to how he overcomes the pain. His reply was that he just "disconnects" it! <p>When I start a project, I fail to disconnect with it even when it goes live, is in production support, and is none of my business anymore. <p>So I would always carry my blackberry on vacations. While I check my normal email at the end of the day, I have a secret email known only to the machine and my boss. That one beeps. <p>This gives me peace of mind that nothing is going wrong while I am away on vacation. It is just a mental state which you may call "Failure to Disconnect".
#118104
MC Press Web Site Staff
Do You Stay Connected During Your Vacations?
Sep 14 2007 23:47:00
This is a discussion about <B>Do You Stay Connected During Your Vacations?</b>.<p align='center'><a href=http://www.mcpressonline.com/mc?1@232.1KNKfHX1eQT.17@.6b50a2fb>Click here for the article</a>.</p>
#118103


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HANS BOLDT
About the Author:
Hans Boldt worked as a software developer for 26 years at the IBM Canada Laboratory in Toronto , mainly on S/38, AS/400, and iSeries RPG compilers. From 2004 to 2007, he worked on the PL/X compiler on the zSeries, which gave him an increased appreciation for the iSeries. With a B.Sc. (Honours) in Computing and Information Science from Queen's University, Hans' interests range from programming languages to Web design to Linux. His other interests include photography, model railroading, and stained glass art. You can visit Hans at www.boldts.net.

 

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