2024-06-01                         from the editor of ~insom
  ------------------------------------------------------------

  I'm in a University of Ottawa lecture hall because I'm
  attending BSDCan which is hosted here. There's a power
  outlet for every single seat, but they're not being heavily
  used.

  This made me think that there's a curve of adoption for
  computers that goes something like:

  - Students don't use laptops (All of recorded history to the
  2000's. Maybe the 90's for a richer school.).

  - Some students use laptops, people crowd around the few
  outlets in a room.

  - All students use laptops: something must be done. Hundreds
  of additional outlets are installed in lecture halls.

  - Laptop power technology improves: you can make it through
  multiple lectures without a charge.

  - Laptop power technology improves further: I often don't
  bring a charger when leaving the house- I'll easily get one
  day of light use.

  - We still have a bunch of outlets.

  This is related to what I wrote before about on 2023-06-08
  (almost exactly a year ago- maybe it's my time of year to
  think about obsolescence). I wrote about business centres
  and their rise and fall. You still see Ethernet jacks. I
  just went through and made sure that my wife's office
  building has at least one functioning network port in every
  room but ... will anyone use them? In a place with
  sufficiently good quality wi-fi?