Wednesday, May 26, 2010

No Twitter!

I get why Twitter is useful, and why people like it. Twitter links people and interest groups and communities. It's accessible to people in small places and big places. It hopes to influence what is being talked about around the world.

Despite all this positive-sounding stuff, I don't want to Twitter. I consented (willingly) to a cellphone and a Facebook account, and I still feel pangs of remorse at being part of these large, faceless, privacy-sucking entities.

Maybe I'm a luddite, or a slow adapter, or just plain uncool. I do have visions of ending up in a cave somewhere scratching my head and trying to make fire while everyone else on earth is exchanging the minutiae of their daily lives through chips implanted in their forearms.

But then I also have visions of being one of the last free persons on earth with access to privacy, walking through the wilderness while others are shackled in techno-dungeons thinking they are enjoying a picnic in a rainforest when really they are just viewing said repast on a screen.

Don't get me wrong - it's not like I think I would be the only one walking through the wilderness, that I have some kind of superior knowledge that would allow me to remain immune to being shackled in a techno-dungeon. I just know that I don't want to be accessible all the time. I don't even want the possibility of being accessible all the time.

Sometimes I think that applications like Twitter, that allow for constant connection, are responsible in part for creating a society where people can't connect with those who are right in front of them. That they are so busy telling people what they are doing that they forget to just live in the moment and enjoy what they are doing.

So maybe I'll just go out for a walk instead of Twittering. I hope that maybe the colour of the sky, or the buds on the trees, or the people I meet, will tell me something that Twitter won't be able to tell me.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Love LibraryThing

Being eternally skeptical of all things technological (this seems to be a recurring theme in my blog postings), I tried LibraryThing, thinking that at least it involved books, so couldn't be all bad.

And indeed, it was not all bad - in fact it was mostly very good. I already have a "homemade" reading list of my own - a completely unembellished word document containing the books I have read since 2004 - and LibraryThing seems to be just a nicer looking version of it, complete with pictures of book covers to add to the records I create. I think I may even start using it instead of my homemade list, as I do have a fondness for pictures of all kinds (see previous post) and it allows me to see what other people are reading and recommending. It's also much easier to use and easier to add to than the visual bookshelf on Facebook, which takes forever to load and always leaves me feeling like someone somewhere is spying on my booklist and thinking about ways to sell things to me.

I thought I might be put off by the fact that LibraryThing allows you to find others who have similar tastes in reading ( I always like to think that I am totally unique, especially when it comes to reading!) but I actually enjoy being part of it and hope to find some good recommendations from other book lovers in the not-too-distant future.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Will Google take over the world? (a gen X perspective)

I enjoy using Google calendar, I have to admit. I like to be organized and nothing pleases me more (except maybe making lists) than putting things that I have to do into little calendar boxes.
Yes, Google makes its online calendar easy to use. Yes, it is unintimidating. But darn it, are we going to end up slaves to the Google universe? So many Google options, all of them easy to use and unintimidating. Will we reach a point where we can't make a move without Google - when every computer in the world crashes and then how will we edit our photos or know what we're doing that day or do our banking (I can see this being an option in the near future) or regulate our breathing? (an option for the farther off future).

So I guess this answers the question (in a somewhat hysterical fashion) about my use of Google calendar instead of using the more traditional options. I am staring fondly at my Grand & Toy paper desk calendar, much maligned by pen scratches and whiteout and the occasional smear of lunch - and I feel calmer.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Oh Flickr, Oh YouTube

I've never been much interested in either Flickr or YouTube. I'm always suspicious of things everyone likes, and these two technologies were no exception.

But it turns out everyone likes these applications for a reason. So ridiculously user-friendly. So easy to search. So quick with the results. So easy to find something you'd be interested in, which would lead to other things you would be interested in, and other things you would be interested in...I may turn into a technology junkie yet.