Meh.
Chinese internet. It's a mixed bag, really-some is really fast, some
is really slow. My real annoyance is more school internet
than Chinese internet, if I'm honest. The internet at school in the
USA sometimes had these issues too, and my high school internet was
almost always horrible. Besides, the internet was totally fine at my
host family two years ago. Well, not totally
fine. The great firewall is obnoxious, and whoever said Facebook got
unblocked was sadly mistaken. So was the person who said that you
could get to blogger.com but not blogspot blogs. Both are blocked.
I'm only still blogging here because I know ways to get around the
firewall, and even those are occasionally iffy. Freegate has been
pretty good, and it's free, but I've only gotten it to work with
Internet Explorer, which I hate. My other proxy, which I like,
randomly decided that working with blogger was going to stop being a
thing, which is frustrating. Add that to school internet that doesn't
always work at all, and yeah, sometimes the internet annoys me.
I'm a
college student. My
homework for my daily Chinese classes is posted online.
If I do not have internet, I can't even find out what my homework is,
let alone download it and finish it. [Depending on the homework in
question, I may also need internet to do the homework itself, like
when they want us to search for news about something on the
internet or watch a news
recording on the internet.]
So I really do need internet. People can talk about how technology is
doing all kinds of bad things all they want, not that I agree with
them much of ever, but the fact remains: For my current position in
life, I need internet
access.
But
the school internet has a tendency to stop working without warning.
They didn't tell us
when they took the modem and router for upgrades and there was no
internet at all for a week. That
made for a fun week of getting homework done. [This was about a month
ago. I have fairly consistent internet now.] The internet in my room
occasionally disconnects me randomly. After the upgrade, I don't
think it's really any worse than the internet at my school in the
USA, but the internet in the classroom is actually pretty bad.
Sometimes it works, but slowly. I can work with that, since all I
really need in the classroom is for nciku to work. Nciku is
important. That's my dictionary for when I forget words. Google
translate is nice too, for getting a vague idea of grammar structures
that we're learning. No, don't try to translate a long paper using
just Google translate because you will be sad, but if you read two
languages, one quite a bit better than the other, Google can be a
good starting point. That's what I use it for. Heck, even translating
stuff I wrote, I'll
sometimes grab Google and nciku. They're way quicker than paper
dictionaries, plus they've got more colloquial words and update
faster.
Other
times, the internet will load so slowly that not even nciku will
load, and turning instant translate off for Google translate isn't
enough to get it to work. By the time a page loads, I don't even need
that word anymore. That's a problem.
At
worst, the internet won't even pretend that
it's working. Can't connect to any networks. Just. Nothing. That's no
good for language stuff. It's just not. Some of my classmates have
cellular internet, so they're not quite as doomed as I am when this
happens, but I don't
have cellular internet. I have it in the USA, since I finally got a
smartphone and have mixed feelings about it. [It's a phone. Mixed
feelings is a step up. Why are you calling my texting device?] Here
in China, I have the most basic phone ever. I only have it because my
teachers practically ordered me to get it. Not a fan of phones. Never
was, probably never will be. I'm cool with this. I like typing stuff.
Point is, I don't have mobile web here, so if the wireless is down, I
do not have internet in the classroom. Simple as that.
Wooo,
internet. Love internet, hate when it doesn't work.
Cellular internet was probably the best thing to happen to me. I like it because then I can use internet-based messaging services for people who use different phone carriers, but it is also really useful for when my home internet decides it doesn't like me anymore (which is often...sad).
ReplyDeleteI'm also not a fan of phones, by which I mean I hate talking on the phone with a burning passion... It took people a while to get used to texting me rather than calling me, but they're really good about it on the whole.
Link, linkie, linking, linkish, linkalishious: I assume your invocation of "Why are you calling my texting device?" was a reference to this excellent essay: http://freethoughtblogs.com/blaghag/2013/08/why-are-you-calling-my-texting-device/
ReplyDeleteGrumble, non-auto-linking: http://freethoughtblogs.com/blaghag/2013/08/why-are-you-calling-my-texting-device
ReplyDeleteNice article! while to get used to texting me rather than calling me, but they're really good about it on the whole
ReplyDelete