On my desk sits a relic of the past, a phone. Every now and then, I receive a call on it. Almost always a wrong number with someone looking for Real Estate Taxes. I politely transfer the caller, after giving them the correct number. They have usually dialed a 9 instead of a 6. I hang up the phone. Happy with myself. Happy with customer service. Happy to ignore my phone until the next time. Happy to return to my life as a creature of email.
Today was going to be different. I had two calls coming in. Two calls related to my job. Two calls that would be ideal for a conference call. First call came in. I exchanged pleasantries. Second call came in. I placed first call on hold. Pushed “Conf” (thinking it meant “Conference”) and the first call promptly disappeared. I talked to the person on Line Two. Said hello, said I would try the conference again. Pushed “Hold.” Called back first person, after entering a six digit long distance code, and pressed “Conf,” which of course caused the person on Line Two to vanish. I was becoming desperate. Repeating different orders of buttons, but always losing the same two callers. More than desperate, I was becoming pitiful. After ten minutes of trying and a suggestion from one caller that I just speak with them one at a time, I gave up. I had failed at 1980s technology.
Finishing up my calls and apologizing to the callers a lot, I searched for answers. What had gone wrong? Why was I a phone failure? Finding the instructions for the phone online, I soon learned that my phone was a one-way ticket for conferencing. I had to initiate the calls. I could not receive them. Not only did I have technology from the 1980s on my desk, it only operated one way. Outbound.
The moral of the story? You can’t go back, especially in terms of technology. I read it on the internet.