the online magazine about life as a creative process

 

One Day at the Cyber Café

 

By Sandy Kinnee

 

 

     
 

I knew I was spending much too much time at the cyber café, on Rue de la Bucherie, in Paris. I’d go to check my email, to keep in contact with Lauren, in Greece; friends house-sitting for us, in Colorado; and to keep track of the results that day in the Tour de France.

Tourists from around the globe drop into this tiny cyber café, a block from Notre Dame. The Algerian manager was a graduate student, easily conversant in multiple languages. His area of specialization pertained to traditional Berber architecture. At least that is the conclusion I gathered from the images he would print on the color laser jet. The texts were neither in English nor French. A page or two would usually be sitting on his desk or in the printer bin.

A variety of keyboards accommodate the wide array of languages that would walk through the door, in characters from Hebrew and Sanskrit to standard English and French. Seven of the thirteen computers were set up with English keyboards, in proportion to English speaking visitors.
Sometimes I’d be stuck using a French keyboard, which looks almost identical to an English one. The subtle differences can be frustrating, but infinitely easier than trying to figure out one of the non alphabetic keyboards.

Two American girls stuck their heads in the door hoping for a vacant seat. I noticed them several times that day. Each time I watched a dejected frown sweep over their faces, finding still no open keyboards. Once they saw an empty slot, but backed out the door when they saw the keyboard was French. As they passed my seat, I suggested that a French keyboard is better than none and that the differences are not that big if you "hunt and peck," like I do. The girls said they'd tried to use the French board the previous day and would rather wait to use an English one.

I was still there, sending emails to Lauren in Athens, when the girls returned again. This time they finally succeeded.

Turning back to my screen, I was greeted by fresh email from Amsterdam. Good. My Dutch friends had sent their telephone numbers so I could call when I came to visit. I pushed the “print” button, walked over to the printer and retrieved my printout from the top of a pile the printer had just coughed up. The stack of other printouts weren't mine, so I left them there. At the cyber café you pay extra to print something, so if you aren't careful it can add up. I paid the manager for my copy and bought a cold bottle of water and a candy bar. It’s a bit over priced to buy a candy bar at the cyber café, but better than leaving and losing your place.

People were stopping by the door, stick their heads in, looking to go online, in a constant flow of traffic. At his screen, the manager sat surveying the room and logging users on and off. I noticed a little old lady, barely four feet tall, enter and navigate her way past the seated patrons busy at their email. She was dressed like Snow White’s apple-toting nemesis, looked about ninety years old, and walked as if using an invisible cane. Someone near the door had pointed the manager out to her.

I overheard her tell the manager, in an unfamiliar French accent, that she had been standing in a line outside Notre Dame when she overheard a couple talking about sending and receiving messages without using paper, envelopes, or stamps. She asked if this was a form of prayer? They said it was better than prayers because you usually got a reply. Well, the old lady decided it sounded like some kind of miracle. So, she asked the couple where she might find out about this “internet”. They pointed to the cyber café. Mind you, this woman was not a tourist, unless visiting from a different time period.

When she asked the manager if he could perform miracles he looked around the room and saw that all the places were filled and told her she'd have to wait her turn, like everyone else. That made her so happy to know that everyone else was already having miracles performed for them that she started jumping with glee, like a little girl! She told the manager how happy this made her! At that point, since he was a bright person, he realized she wasn't wanting to check email.

The manager smiled at the thought that had just entered his mind. The old woman had taken whatever the couple in front of Notre Dame said too literally. Sadly, he had to tell her that, no this was only a place to receive and send messages between two humans who are both using computers; and that “surfing the web” was similar to using an encyclopedia. The machines were unfortunately not designed for sending messages to God or other spiritual beings. No, sorry, there were no actual miracles.

No actual miracles?

No, sorry.

Oh, well, said the woman, if I return at a time when you are not so busy, will you show me about this internet?

He smiled, escorted her to the exit, and bid her goodbye, saying, aside to those of us who had been an audience, “that might be a real miracle.”

On his way back to his post, the manager noticed a pile of unclaimed printouts on the printer and went asking, desktop by desktop, who they might belong to. No one knew. I suggested they might belong to the woman who just left. No, not her, the text was English and she was French. That meant seven likely people. The two American girls shook their heads no. The next person who stood up to leave was charged for the cost of printing. He was an elderly man who was puzzled that he was charged for this wad of paper and said he didn't recall printing it. But he paid anyway. The topic of the printout: "Preventing Alzheimer's."

A little while later the two girls logged off their computer and got up to leave. One came over to me and handed me ten Euros. I wasn’t even puzzled. I now had proof that I was sitting in the cyber café far too long. They thought I worked there.

 
     
 

 

     
 

Sandy Kinnee is an artist whose work figures in the collections of many museums, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He lives in Colorado Springs. See website.

 
     

 

     
   
     

 

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