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	<title>Caledon Citizen</title>
	<link>https://caledoncitizen.com</link>
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	<pubDate>Mon Jun 1 10:44:26 2026 / +0000  GMT</pubDate>
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			<title>How to read a road map</title>
			<link>https://caledoncitizen.com/?p=37421</link>
			<pubDate>Mon Jun 1 10:44:26 2026 / +0000  GMT</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://caledoncitizen.com/?p=37421</guid>
			<content-encoded><![CDATA[<!-- wp:paragraph -->
<p>by BRIAN LOCKHART</p>
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<p>I was watching a DVD movie the other day from 2008.</p>
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<p>That's not really that long ago. In the movie, the character enters a restaurant and asks if he can borrow a copy of their Yellow Pages. The guy behind the counter handed him an actual book made from real paper, and, yes, it had a yellow cover.</p>
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<p>When was the last time you saw a Yellow Pages book unless you've got a hold-over from over a decade ago?</p>
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<p>I used to get various versions of the Yellow Pages tossed on my porch every year, but I haven't seen one in a long time. Why waste the paper when it's all on-line?</p>
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<p>There are a lot of things and occupations that have simply disappeared over the years. They quietly go away and you don't think about it until something or someone jogs your memory.</p>
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<p>At one, there used to be ads in magazines stating “You Can Be a TV Repair Man!”</p>
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<p>Being a TV repairman was a stable and lucrative job at one time. Solid state technology rendered that profession obsolete almost overnight.</p>
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<p>With LED TVs now the norm, I don't think anyone even knows how to repair one. If your television set runs into trouble and starts giving you a squiggly picture, it's easier and cheaper just to go out and buy a new one.</p>
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<p>I have a fairly large collection of DVD movies, and, yes, I have received considerable ribbing for this. “Get Netflix!” people tell me. However, Netflix doesn't come with the special features, interviews, deleted scenes or outtakes I like to watch. Also, I just like the fact that I have an actual copy of The Maltese Falcon and Casablanca on my shelf.</p>
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<p>I went into a local store to take a look in the $5 bargain bins, from which I have found some pretty good and rare DVDs over the years.</p>
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<p>The rows and rows of DVDs were now down to one half-row, and it was mostly TV shows by season.</p>
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<p>I asked the sales person, and she told me they no longer had a video DVD department because no one buys them.</p>
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<p>I guess Netflix won the battle.</p>
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<p>Have you tried printing photos recently? It's getting hard to find a place to print a simple photograph. The store I dealt with for years suddenly pulled the plug and removed all their printing machines.</p>
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<p>“Not enough business,” they told me.</p>
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<p>I have said in the past there will be an entire generation of people who won't have any childhood or family photos. If you keep everything on-line, all it will take is a glitch on your computer to erase everything. On top of that, people forget, and don't realize until a few years later that old computer they dropped off at the recycling place also had most of the photos on the hard drive.</p>
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<p>When was the last time you saw a motorist parked at the side of the road with a road map spread out over the steering wheel as they tried to figure out their route?</p>
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<p>About five years ago I was heading to a town out by Lake Huron to film an internet commercial for a local business. I thought I had the route mapped out in my head, but somewhere along the line and a V in the road, I ended up in Listowell, and no idea how to get to this other town.</p>
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<p>Do they even make road maps anyone? I wondered. I went to a gas station convenience store and asked the clerk if they had maps. He was quite excited to take me over to the store's map shelf.</p>
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<p>Judging from his eagerness, I was probably the first person to buy an actual paper map in several years.</p>
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<p>I bought a GPS unit the next week.</p>
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<p>When was the last time you used a pay phone? They are still out there, there's one in my local mall, but rarely do I see anyone using it, and when I do, I wonder why?</p>
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<p>The most recent data I could find, from 2015, said that Bell Canada had 636 pay phones that hadn't been used in over a year, and 10,501 pay phones that made less than .50 cents per day. That's a losing investment.</p>
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<p>In our current germaphobe society, I would be surprised if anyone wanted to use a device a total stranger had just handled and breathed on.</p>
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<p>A lot of things have gone away over the past few years. I wonder what's next?</p>
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			<excerpt-encoded><![CDATA[]]></excerpt-encoded>
			<wp-post_id>37421</wp-post_id>
			<wp-post_date>2022-08-04 11:14:39</wp-post_date>
			<wp-post_date_gmt>2022-08-04 15:14:39</wp-post_date_gmt>
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