"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
RSS feed: http://teabyrd.tumblr.com/rss
-
This is remarkable. If you think I didn’t silently repeat ROY G BIV to make sure it was right, then you overestimate my...
-
“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...”
-
-
Daily Struggle.
-
-
-
My first feature for The Verge, “Sparrow Takes Flight: How A Startup Built The Gmail App Google Couldn’t”
-
“Only Half the Stuff I Shazamed”—
List: Honest Spotify Playlists
Another slam dunk from McSweeney’s Internet Tendency