Thursday, March 05, 2009DIGITAL CLOUDBUSTINGIf you believe in the trend presaged by this week's rumble between Facebook and Twitter (briefly, after failing to buy the microblogging service, Facebook is redesigning its home page to incorporate more of the immediate news and info-streaming features that Twitter has made popular), then we are moving towards an always-on, always-connected social reality. We will no longer "log on" or "check our email." Bytes of data will be like air, a digital cloud the intake of which we won't really think about. Of the Facebook change, CEO Mark Zuckerberg says, "As people share more, the timeline gets filled in more and more with what is happening with everything you're connected to. "The pace of updates accelerates. This creates a continuous stream of information that delivers a deeper understanding for everyone participating in it." The problem with all of this is that a kind of offline time -- those in-between moments in which the mind is freed to contemplate and do the mental work required to sustain long-term projects -- is going away. Jack Cheng, a web designer who blogs at JackCheng.com, has a lovely post, "In Praise of Lo-Fi," that discusses just this issue: Whenever I travel, I feel a remarkable sense of clarity on the return trip. It usually hits me as I’m staring out the window of the airplane cabin or train car. I think it happens because on the way there, you have all this pent-up anticipation—you’re looking forward to seeing old friends or new cities, and chances are you’re still worrying a bit about hotel confirmations. And whether all your stuff made it through airport security. Cheng goes on to discuss the extreme measures that some have gone to to create their own digital-free Walden Pond. One person is the writer Rob Long, who booked passage from Seattle to Shanghai on one of the few passenger compartments on an industrial freighter so he could finish his screenplay free from wi-fi, on-demand, pay-per-view, hotel room porn, Twitter, Facebook and the like. The blog's comments thread has presented other, less-radical solutions, like the software program Freedom, which disables the internet for up to eight hours at a time from one's laptop (an unsatisfactory solution -- one can re-enable it by re-booting), cancelling cable, getting rid of TiVo, and going on a self-imposed media fast. There's this 1998 quote from William Gibson:
For those who are not ready to accept the pastoral come-on of online shutdown, and who simply wanted to be prodded to focus , there's Dr. Wicked's Writing Lab. From their site: The idea is to instill in the would-be writer with a fear of not writing. We do this by employing principles taught in Introduction to Psychology. Anyone remember Operant Conditioning and Negative Reinforcement? Hat tips: Ted Hope and Alex Johnson. Comments (2) |
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