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Thoughts on Blackberry Fail
In my neck of the woods we had two writers, Studs Terkel and Kurt Vonegut..now I think both passed away. and both kept some basic writing tools around not because they could write faster on them but because of the inspiration factor as those tools of forgotten writing technology held fond memories that they could recall for inspiration.
But recently, there was another writer that passed away. a sports writer by the name of Terry Armour. who wrote about the Chicago Bulls championship seasons and later was a radio broadcaster and passed away before his time. In later years he wrote entertainment stories for one of th e Chicagoo papers using his blackberry.
That blackberry of his held so many memories. Interviews with Tony Curtis, here is a recent audio interview with Tony Curtis on his radio show:
http://podcast.wckg.com/wckg1/685819.mp3
I would imagine your blackberry holds so many good memories tthat is unavoidable getting more inspiration from that blackberry.
My medium of consumption forms the way I consume. If I receive your post in the form of a printout I might use a textmarker and work with it in a different way than with e.g. a laptop and cut and paste.
If there is something wrong in between, a cable is cut off or a connection slow, I might not read your post at all.
I'm thinking you'd find it of interest for business reasons as well.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andy_Clark
but that¹s something amazon should fix
A big part of the appeal of the kindle to me is just in time book purchasing
It's the curse of the writer's temperament: you start to become a pen freak.
Another thought: a lot of us in the media business seem to take it for granted that people have always wanted to sit at home, after the workday is done, and watch something, get told a story. A lot of us (in Hollywood, anyway) tend to think this is some kind of natural human activity. But before movies and TV, for hundreds of years, people sat around at night and wrote letters, played music together, talked idly, played games -- they "connected" in a bunch of ways, both formal and casual. They didn't go to the theater every night. They just....hung out in a loosely structured way. I sometimes think of that when I see what people are doing now at night, online: emailing, IM'ing, online games, Guitar Hero --- what are these, really, but the same basic stuff they used to do in all of those Jane Austen novels? Writing letters, playing music, chatting, bridge, etc.?
So I guess what I mean is: maybe things aren't changing. Maybe they're changing back.
I do it so much that I'm actually having brain spasms with my laptop, because the punctuation isn't where it "should" be.
I, too, used to have a pen fetish ( and a paper type fetish and when I was VERY young, even a location fetish). Without MY pen, I simply could not write. Gradually, the message of the words became more important to me than the method, and I finally was able to write anywhere, on anything, at any time.
Then I noticed that my writing sucked.
I went shopping for a pen - a cheap Parker like the one I used in my late teens. I don't use it, mind you... but it's right - over - there ->.
Is there anything special about how you insert links?
Which Blackberry model do you use?
I don't embed links when I post via bberry. I try to go back and add them later
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2008/12/22/0...
As someone who spends double-digit hours per day at the keyboard, the speed at which I type is considerable. This creates a very fast thought to medium cycle. I can get it all down, and quickly. This does not lend itself to considered writing. Be that prose, editorial, or correspondence, It's just too easy to 'dash something off.'
If I am careful to edit viciously I can still produce something of an order of magnitude or more higher in quality.
If I sit down with pen and paper I have to slow down a bit and I find that I spend more time early in the process. Thus, less editing is necessary. Forgoing editing, I still have a better outcome.
Do you think that the extra time it takes you to work with the smaller keyboard on your blackberry gives you more opportunity to construct your writing?