starstruck,
Of course computers can bring math alive beyond slide-rules, punch cards, calculators, and the rest of the evolution of technology. The problem is that these mathematicians need to come from somewhere. There is so much more math to figure out in the universe beyond just calculating pi to 15 billion decimal places. Much of math comes from simplification of higher math into basic elements. Knowing much of the simpler aspects can actually give you a fighting chance of solving incredibly complex problems. Computers become a crutch for the mathematically challenged. By the way, I've fallen asleep in math class as well, but I don't believe thats a function of the elements of the class, but more in regards to the teaching method.
I personally enjoy the dull problems because I can't learn from people instructing me how to do things. In my college math classes, I went to MAYBE 25% of them. Before each semester, I would talk to my professors and let them know I just couldn't learn in the standard educational fashion. Instead of going to class, I would just work through EVERY problem in the textbook and ask for additional problems I could do. That is the only way I learn. My talents are in deductive reasoning. I can't necessarily remember every formula, but I can derive them from basic mathematical common sense. This is why I bombed almost every single one of my 'memorization classes'.
This is the exact problem with education. It's not in teaching things that could be solved in easier fashion. It's in teaching everyone the exact same way. Just as in piano, some people learn by ear, others read, some people memorize through physical memory. Some are better at improv because they might just understand music theory more than they can play someone elses music that's all but set in stone.
Lastly, higher level math doesn't even use numbers. I stopped using numbers in my classes after sophomore year. A computer can't solve anything I learned after sophomore year. It needs to be figured out by people so that there are actual formulas to apply in the programs that run your numbers. How do you think derivatives were understood? Proofs with no numbers that can then be applied to numbers. How about statistics? Proofs are what figured out normal distributions, students-t distribution, chi^2 distributions, etc. All these numbers are what plot that graph in the background when you give a table of numbers. Saying that computers can do everything for you is just like saying 'everything that can be invented has been'.
EDIT:
https://www.aomori-u.ac.jp/staff/midori/ProbDistr/t-e.pdfTry wrapping your head around that one without learning any of the derivations of mathematical formulas.
BTW, that's the dumbed down formula.
Feel free to take a look at this powerpoint presentation.