
Attics of the 21st century are different from attics of even the 20th century Hazel thought. Or was it just her grandmother’s attic that was different. No ancient carved wooden chests, no creaking old rocking chairs, no dark corners, no bookshelves up to the ceiling, not even very many old books. It was all a little disappointing in fact. Instead there was one metal filing cabinet, locked. One utilitarian but ugly computer desk partnered with a swiveling computer chair, again useful but not particularly attractive. The only mildly interesting attic inhabitants were the old fashioned computer keyboard on the desk, the equally old fashioned computer screen overlooking the keyboard, the bulky computer mouse keeping company with the keyboard, and the large ungainly desktop computer hiding beneath the desk. Hazel never understood why they were called desktop computers. In most of the image files she had seen of antique computers these plastic-metallic monstrosities were placed anywhere other than on a desk.
She pushed her sunglasses back down over her eyes, tapped the minmac on her wrist and by default the current date, time and weather conditions momentarily replaced the actuality of the attic. For a moment she was surrounded by the pouring and roaring of yet another spring storm but another tap and the storm disappeared into virtuality if not in reality. Well there was no point in going for an electrobike ride. This was her virtual school shift week and her next class was not for another couple of hours so she didn’t have to worry about lessons for a bit. And Edwin, her uncle was in virtual conference with his colleagues at the lab so she couldn’t go chat with him about his latest research. With a shrug she turned back to the old computer. It wouldn’t be quite the same as rummaging through chests in a musty attic but it was something to do to fill in the time.
The power cord was still connected to the computer so she plugged it in and flicked the power switch. A small LED on the computer casing glowed orange, she assumed that meant it was ready to go. Now she just had to find the power switch on the computer itself. After a couple of false starts, pressing peculiar extrusions on the casing she found one that actually moved when she pressed it. Immediately she heard a noise something between a murmur and a hum, the computer screen flickered and lights glowed on both the keyboard and the computer mouse. With a satisfied smile she sat in the chair, the start up routine of this antique was admittedly more exciting than the startup of the modern comtablets which started up as soon as you touched them, no lights, no noises, no anticipation.
An attractive image of a sunset filled the screen and in the middle of it she saw a small box which she assumed required some form of login information. Given that the computer had once belonged to her grandmother she typed in ‘Gwyneth’ only to get an error message telling her that the username was invalid. Frowning a little she tried the names of her father and those of his siblings, her aunts and uncles. None worked. Her frown deepened as her determination to gain access increased with her irritation, it should not be this hard. She stopped typing and glared at the keyboard. Then she noticed the small drawer hidden to the side of the computer desk and somewhat to her surprise it opened when she tried it. There was a bundle of papers in the drawer most of which seemed to be instruction manuals for old computer hardware and old computer programs. A date on one of the instruction manuals caught her attention, 2010. Her grandmother was born in the 2020s so maybe this computer did not belong to her grandmother after all.
Unlike many young people of her generation Hazel knew her whakapapa well. Perhaps this computer had belonged to her great grandmother Cara, not to Cara’s daughter. She typed in ‘Cara’ and almost immediately the screen blanked and a small spiral image appeared in the top left corner of the screen. Hazel recognised the image as a stylised koru, a symbol used by both cultural branches of her whakapapa – Māori and Celtic. A few seconds after the koru’s appearance a couple of lines of old computer style text formed in the middle of the screen, ‘You are not Cara. Please enter your own name’. Hazel went very still, suddenly aware that her heart rate had increased and there was a fluttery feeling in her stomach. Even as she shivered slightly she was speaking aloud to herself.
‘ Don’t be silly, of course it can’t know that I’m not Cara!’ Still she hesitated a little until, with a small shrug, she typed in ‘Hazel’.
This time nothing changed on the screen except for an apparent spinning of the koru symbol, then the sunset image returned and more text wrote itself on the screen.
‘ Username accepted. Version 1.3. Access available Folder 1’ and a single folder appeared in the center of the screen. She clicked on the folder. Nothing happened. Hazel was puzzled for a moment until she remembered that with most old computers that used mouse control a double-click was needed to open a file. She double-clicked.
A moving image of rain falling appeared on the screen. The background was dark and only the backlit streaks of rain were visible. As Hazel waited for something else to happen she became aware that she could hear the sound of rain. She was unable to discover where the sound was being generated from, however, there were no obvious sound devices in the attic. Smiling slightly, she realised that this must be one of the very primitive forms of senscoactivity applications that had been available in the first couple of decades of the century. They had been nothing more than a video combining visual imagery and sound files that was designed to elicit a sense of relaxation in the audience. They had been very popular for a while in the second decade of the 21st century but even then they were starting to be replaced with almost as primitive virtual reality technology. She wondered what her great grandmother would think about the virtual reality options of the present day. She was just about to close down what was turning into a slightly disappointing attic investigation when the world went away.








