Posts Tagged ‘internet’

Future–shock or stimulation?

Sunday, June 13th, 2010

I was reading an article about the latest in the Future–this time saying that the Personal Computer Age is over, and the age of the Mobile Devices has come.  That is to say, the future, according to this article, is with Iphones and Ipads and maybe Google’s fast-rising Android.

All the  little colorful devices with their Apps and the fast moving thumbs sending notes around the world like freed-up school kids from my childhood.  Snapping pictures, finding out if there’s traffic on the freeway, what’s the weather, where is the nearest public restroom, let me make a reservation at a restaurant, buy a book get the news.
I started feeling sidelined, at best, with my small but clunky cell phone with a piece of plastic broken off, and all it does is take and make calls.
Another article asked, Will the I-Pad replace the PC?

And the answer was an intriguing one: Yes, for consumers, No for creators.
Some of my confidence came back.  I have, in fact, been using a compute for more than a quarter of a century. I was sold, completely and totally, when my brother-in-law told me I would never have to retype again. I hated to retype.  I had left things in articles and stories that I would have changed otherwise if it hadn’t meant typing up a whole fresh copy of the manuscript.  So I got the earliest computer I could, a portable sewing machine sized Kaypro rival called Zorba.  I learned the ridiculous, arbitrary code of Word Star.  It only took two or three 5 and a quarter floppy disks to hold a whole novel!  It was a miracle.

It really was a miracle, too.  I had no interest in learning to program, and the world of bulletin boards and chat that some of our friends’ teenage sons were involved in didn’t interest me.  In fact, I refused a color monitor fo r several years, wanting to keep the computer as a no-retyping machine.  Email caught my attention, though, and then, in rapid succession, all the riches for research of the internet.

I now even keep websites and blog, and, with some reluctance, shop on the internet as well. I own a little netbook for taking to the city with me, and I never use the yellow pages anymore or, really the phone book.  Like all of us, I have moved a great deal of my life online. The struggle for me, though, is to keep separate the world of consuming that even the PC thrusts at you (forget the little mobile devices) and the world of making and expressing.

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

Chris Echaurre sends this link to an interesting piece about novelist Colm Toibin and technology: http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE63J69X20100420?feedType=RSS&feedName=entertainmentNews&rpc=76 .  Toibin, who writes with a (gasp!) ink pen claims to be a technophobe and says he tried a Kindle once and didn’t like it, but at the same time feels the Internet has changed his life and the lives of others, especially previously isolated individuals like gay men in small towns and others who have felt alone and can now feel part of a community.

Also, Kim W. and John A. recommend Ken Auletta’s article in the New Yorker on publishing and the price of ebooks:  http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/04/26/100426fa_fact_auletta

Tricia Idrobo on the Limits of Social Networking

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

See Tricia’s always-interesting blog here.

Writer’s Block versus Writer’s Blog

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

It’s nothing new that it’s hard to get started on creative work in the morning, when you have a morning to work.  But for a writer who uses a computer, the call of the Internet is a serious Siren’s hiss.  I have been aware of this all along– the danger of using the same environment, the same machine, for writing and other activities.  So easy to check email, to look on Facebook to see what  random people you know who also happen to be on Facebook are doing.  To work on a project other than creative work.

I tried hard– I went for years avoiding the Internet  (I started using a computer more than twenty years ago), insisted on a black and white  (or actually bronze and tan) screen monitor instead of color.  But email was too convenient.  Having links to my work available online was too wonderful.  Experimenting with giving free writing exercises was too empowering.

And, I tell myself, back in the day, there were distractiuons, too, weren’t there?  Pencils to sharpen?  Coffee to make? And, especially, angst to experience– the high drama of writers’ block!  Now, instead of suffering, I answer email.

Or blog.

Week-ends on the Web

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

Have you noticed how much less email there is on week-ends?  I can’t tell about Facebook, but email, especially messages about setting up meetings for organizations –  drops off spectacularly.  I hope this  means that people are all out cross country skiing, or maybe unplugged from the ‘net, at least metaphorically, while they write poems and stories.

But it does make me wonder how much social networking and organizing of political and social service events happens at work?

I love to think of that, too, that poems are being written and mass movements organized on corporate nickels.

Mission Statement

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

By the time I was seven I thought of myself as a writer, or maybe a book maker or comic book artist. At any rate, I was writing stories in notebooks and making my own little illustrated stapled books, and reading as much as possible. I’ve been part of the world of literature for pretty much my whole conscious life. I first published in a national publication when I was a teenager, and my fifteen and sixteenth published books are due out in 2010.

In the mid nineteen-eighties, my husband Andy Weinberger and my brother-in-law Internet Guy David Weinberger brought me not quite kicking and screaming but muttering a lot into the world of computers. At first, my Zorba was for nothing but writing without having to retype. Well worth learning the stupid Word Star codes to avoid retyping. For a long time, I refused even to have a color monitor. I wanted my computer to be a writing machine.

But now, more than twenty years later, I spend at least an hour a day doing business by email; I keep three websites and upload to others. I do a Constant Contact e-newsletter for my local Integration organization; I write a newsletter on books that I email and post on my web page; I teach an occasional writing class online. I have also been blogging in a desultory fashion for a while, mostly posting an edited version of my private journal.

Now I’m going to try this blog, using WordPress on my web site, and I’m going to focus on what is happening to the written word in the social networking online world. Some of it is an unmitigated good– lots of small online zines for poetry, not to mention Garrison Keillor’s rich-mouthed daily readings at Writer’s Almanac– and some is scary. Book sales are way down– and for us so-called midlist writers (Gad I had that term)– book contracts are more and more difficult to find. It’s a moment when we stand at an abyss– unless, if you look at it a different way, it’s a vault to the stars.