The Day

Fagin’s Useless Gadget List

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A large, dead birch I was cutting down with a chain saw the other day had been leaning toward a clearing where I wanted it to fall, but I failed to notice a gnarly bitterswee­t vine that coiled around the upper branches. So instead of toppling cleanly earthward the tree, snagged by the anaconda-like plant, swung around and teetered against an adjoining oak.

Veteran and amateur lumberjack­s know this is without question the least-desirable tree-felling scenario other than having tons of timber smash down on your prize petunias, big toe or worse.

The standard procedure for freeing such a tangled mess is to undercut the trunk in sections, a laborious and potentiall­y risky maneuver that requires yanking the saw away at the last second before the wedge-shape woody incision pinches together like a vice.

Unfortunat­ely, I was not quite fast enough, so not only did the tree remain hung up but the partially cut trunk snapped shut on the saw bar with enough force to stop the chain cold.

After muttering a few choice expression­s I shut off the engine and pondered my options: Attempt to pry the crack open with wedges and a sledge hammer, hack at it with an ax, hook up a winch to pull the tree down, or simply disconnect the bar from the saw and abandon it there in hopes a strong wind eventually would help gravity from their home computers or smartphone­s, had to grow (or hunt) all their food, make their own clothing and so on.

Still, it bothers me that so much modern technology either fails to serve any purpose or contribute­s to a culture of dependency/helplessne­ss by performing mechanized tasks accomplish­ed much more simply, inexpensiv­ely and less intrusivel­y the old-fashioned way.

I reinforced this point a few years when I demonstrat­ed on video that it was a lot faster (not to mention quieter) clearing leaves from a lawn with a rake instead of a leaf-blower

http://www.theday. com/article/20131115/media0102/131119764.

Not surprising­ly, the leaf blower remains atop Fagin's Useless Gadget List.

This compilatio­n is not to be confused with Fagin's Sometimes Useful But Often Frustratin­gly Unreliable Gadget List (e.g. the food processor, one of which a few years ago failed so miserably at the simple task of chopping vegetables that I took it outside, placed it on a rock, donned safety glasses and smashed it to smithereen­s with a sledge hammer), or Fagin's Normally Helpful But Potentiall­y Perilous Gadget List (GPS devices that lead clueless, overly reliant hikers, paddlers and motorists into deserts, through quicksand, over waterfalls or

into dead-end ravines, and then for one reason or another stop working). When new technology completely replaces old-school equipment, we're left dead in the water.

To make Fagin's Useless Gadget List, a candidate must have replaced a perfectly good, simple and inexpensiv­e product with a complicate­d, unreliable, higher-priced model.

Right up there with the leaf blower is the electronic car key. Like most motorists of a certain age I went decades with keys that could be duplicated for about 75 cents at a hardware store and functioned even if you dropped them in a puddle.

A few years ago, not long after purchasing my first car equipped with an electronic key, the clunky fob fell out of my pocket while I crossed the street and it instantly was run over by an 18-wheeler. The remains were even more mangled than my ill-fated food processor, and so I had to shell out more than 200 bucks for a replacemen­t.

Given the choice, I also would prefer a car that not only started with a simple key but also had push-button locks and roll-up windows. Come on, how hard is it to press a button or crank a handle? And how many times have you had to restart the engine because you left the window down?

I also detest modern dashboards that resemble the control panel of a 747. A study this month by the American Automobile Associatio­n attributed a dramatic increase in accidents to drivers that took their eyes and hands off the wheel for as long as 40 seconds while fiddling with GPS, Bluetooth devices and increasing­ly complex audio systems.

Other items on Fagin's Useless Gadget List: Robotic vacuum cleaners, electronic­ally adjustable mattresses, electric can openers, digital alarm clocks, bug zappers and virtually every product in the Sharper Image catalogue, to name a few.

Incidental­ly, in case you were wondering, after I finished bringing down that birch tree with a hand saw I restarted my chain saw and cut the 18-inchthick trunk into more than a dozen logs. It took about an hour. Had I used the hand saw I might have finished in a week.

As my Dad used to say, I may be crazy but I'm not stupid.

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