"Technology reveals us to ourselves as we always in fact were: networked, distributed, laced with code. I use the laptop for everything. I’m not even properly “awake” until it’s switched on. Word seems like the “natural” programme to write in now: the default, blank page 2.0. Before I got an iPhone, I used to do this daft thing of phoning myself up if I had a thought while out and about, and telling my home answering machine: “OK, write this down…” Now, you can just talk into the voice-memo app, with its retro oversize mic and quivering needle visual. The internet being just a click away is a blessing and a curse at once: you can find out instantly which year Egypt won independence or who Persephone’s mother was, but that essential solitude you need to write gets more and more elusive … While I was writing Remainder I listened to Rachmaninov a lot, just like the hero. And Gorecki and Paart. I like the voicelessness and quasi-repetition. I don’t own a Kindle. It’s strange: I like reading my own stuff on a screen, and other people’s on a page."
thomas houston writes things
Ask me anything
November 25, 2011
September 5, 2011
But e-books and nonlinearity don’t turn out to be very compatible. Trying to jump from place to place in a long document like a novel is painfully awkward on an e-reader, like trying to play the piano with numb fingers. You either creep through the book incrementally, page by page, or leap wildly from point to point and search term to search term. It’s no wonder that the rise of e-reading has revived two words for classical-era reading technologies: scroll and tablet. That’s the kind of reading you do in an e-book.
(via The Mechanic Muse — From Scroll to Screen - NYTimes.com)
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This is remarkable. If you think I didn’t silently repeat ROY G BIV to make sure it was right, then you overestimate my...
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“Essentially, we become our own documentarians and archivists in order to impose meaning on daily life, to show that we are honoring moments with the...”
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Daily Struggle.
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My first feature for The Verge, “Sparrow Takes Flight: How A Startup Built The Gmail App Google Couldn’t”
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“Only Half the Stuff I Shazamed”—
List: Honest Spotify Playlists
Another slam dunk from McSweeney’s Internet Tendency