This snippet from the BBC News website somehow interested me enough to want to share it here ...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-43203095
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-43203095
it seems Grandpa beat me at nearly every game of Cribbage. He seemed to always have the cards to make 15 and 31... still can't imagine how he managed that.
There was always a game going in the student center. Game started every morning by 7:00 even though the first classes didn't start until 7:30 or 8:00.
Cribbage is like that: there must be more skill in it than meets the eye ... "old timers" seem to be fairly consistent winners at the game.
Must have been quite some game, to get students up for 7.00am (unless they were still "up late" from the night before?).

Ah.... things we used to do. Now days, people don't have time for such. (Can't seem to get their beak out of their damned iPhones... pity, that.)
Yep. The iphones/chat rooms/ email were all supposed to keep us connected, and indeed it does that when it does, but is also a major contributor to the epidemic of loneliness in modern civilization. A guy meets a girl sitting on a park bench next to him, and his first instinct is to hope that she will send him a pic so he can download it and see what she looks like. Hellooooooo!. I am sitting right here. Or maybe he will go out with her and they can sit there in the coffee shop and watch their iphones together. Doesn't get any better than that.
Obviously that card game remains popular because it is an antidote to the epidemic for many. But someone will develop an app for the game- already have most likely- and then the bright idea that you can play online- and voila- who needs to go down to the store and talk to all those hillbillies.
And so it goes. Progress.