Atomized

[box type=”info”]Part Two of Cutting Up[/box]

The other night I sat on the porch with some friends and acquaintances discussing this and that. I had my iPad with me, and I was showing a friend what I had been doing with some old books. I explained that the process of getting the books on my iPad involved destroying the physical form of the book so it could gain a new life in digital form. Someone I hardly know got truly offended: “how can you do such a thing to a book?! I love books, and you’re destroying them!” She couldn’t even look at me.

Her reaction might have been mine just a year ago. Until the iPad came out, I would have been the first to argue that our current incarnations of microprocessing technology — the personal computer — does not provide the same reading experience as a book. Period. Perhaps it’s the nature of the machine that necessitates the opposite behaviors that are required to really read. There is something about sitting down in a quiet corner with a book that inspires careful contemplation, thoughtfulness, and introspection. Real reading — the kind that you need to practice to actually take in something in a meaningful and profound way — deserves all of the attention we can bring to it. One thing I’ve learned from teaching is that you never read more carefully than when you know you have to teach something. This I read books: as if I’ll have to teach the text sometime soon. The web? Not so much.

Reading on the web — probably the most popular form of reading done off a computer screen — is not the same thing. I’m not saying that it necessarily can’t be, but in my experience it is not. Something about the computer — even a laptop — inspires a cursory, quick, and superficial consumption of text. Perhaps because it looks more like a television than it does a book? Perhaps we are trained that what comes to us through a monitor should be consumed in a certain way, whereas that which is found on leaves in a cloth binding must be absorbed in another way. Books are like holy artifacts; computers, to paraphrase Norman Mailer, are machines of the devil.

I still hear people say that they can’t proofread or edit on a computer screen. There’s something about the printed word on a physical sheet of paper that allows our minds to take it more seriously than we would something appearing on a computer screen in a web browser. Seriously, I’m pretty sure I could never read a book on a PC.

Perhaps it’s the notion that what we see on the computer screen is somehow transient and impermanent — that it can disappear with a flick of a switch or the press of a key. Books sit heavily on shelves. They are weighty matter that can be handled and not so easily disposed of. Until recently, the idea of publishing was like, in Gilgamesh’s words, “having one’s name stamped in bricks.” If you were mentioned by a poet, you achieved a kind of immortality. “Literature” deserves this treatment, after all. It is weighty. It matters. It should be in books, not on computer screens. Sven Bickerts echoes this sentiment: “our entire collective history–the soul of societal body–is encoded in print. Is encoded, and has for countless generations been passed along by way of the word, mainly through books” (20). This is significant, no?

Birkerts goes on to lament what he sees as an inevitable paradigm shift away from print to the digital. He states that we have lost the ability to read, and now it seems I am destroying books. What’s going on? Am I really committing some sort of heresy against humanity? Against the holy book?

I think not. The iPad is a new medium, something less like a computer and more like a book. Computers are for business; iPads are for personal time. I create on the computer; I enjoy on the iPad. Indeed, these are too easy generalizations, and there are many crossovers between the two, but I use my iPad in a different way than I use my computer. If anything I can say the following: I read more now because of the iPad than I did just a year ago. This is profound because I am a professional reader. Yes, I do it for a living. I enjoy the experience of reading from my iPad more than I do from a paperback book. I can also carry around a library with me on the iPad, dispensing with the need to pack ten books for a short trip.

The only advantage I can still see in using a physical book is that I can more easily annotate it. Yes, I must annotate all of the books I teach. But I do not teach all of the books I read. I predict within the next year that this will not even be an issue. Apple has already made significant improvements to reading PDFs using iBooks. I also predict that we will be using our word processors to easily make EPUB files that are meant to be read from the iPad rather than printed. Long live the trees!

Yes, we are moving closer to being all digital. This is not something to be lamented.

I tried to explain this to my indignant porch friend, but I’m not sure how convincing I was. In fact, like her, I still have an irrational nostalgia for the book — especially when considering rare or new books — that I will discuss later. Also, I’ll discuss the implications for publishing, especially for those of us who have not been too successful in traditional markets.

Work Cited

Birkerts, Sven. The Gutenberg Elegies: The Fate of Reading in an Electronic Age. New York: Fawcett Columbine, 1994.

New i7

That’s geek-speak for new 27″ iMac, baby! The i7 designates one of Intel’s newest quad-core processors, so this sucker is fast. It makes my two-and-a-half-year-old MacBook Pro feel like a dinosaur. Also, the 27″ LED monitor is big, bright, and beautiful.

I was originally going to replace the MBP with a new one. Since I bought my current one in November of 2007, the product line has had significant upgrades. Perhaps the most noticeable is their carved aluminum bodies. I really think the reason why my MBP’s keyboard and trackpad died is because of the flimsy body. The difference between new and old is like the difference between the old and new iPods.

While the new MBPs are very nice, I simply needed more room to edit photos. I have been doing a lot of photography work lately, and I really needed a machine with the processor to handle it, plus the screen real estate to allow me to see details. The iMac does both of these very well: Aperture works well on this machine. I would still like to see it move faster, but it is a pro application, so there’s a lot going on under the hood. Its workspace looks beautiful on the iMac’s monitor. This machine is perfect for photo editing; now I just have to teach myself to use Final Cut.

I do miss having a portable Mac. One of the drawbacks to the iMac is that it has to live in the office. This is not such a great drawback now, since we cleaned the office, but I enjoy sitting in front of the tube while working, MBP resting on my lap.

The old MBP will be acting as the home server. I installed Snow Leopard Server on it this morning, and it’ll probably take me a few days to get it totally configured. I must admit: I do miss the Ubuntu server I was running, but the machine I was using was just too loud. While the Mac Server software has come a long way, I still prefer the ol’ Debian command line approach to administration. However, 10.6 server looks pretty bad-ass already. It has a pretty powerful web server built-in, complete with wiki, blog, address, and calendaring functions. This could be a cool family server.

OK, back to work. I still have some configuring to do.

It's so BIG!

Mini!

I picked her up yesterday: my new 2009 Mini Cooper S. She only had 6 miles on the odometer. Brand new.

I was actually not too optimistic about the whole process, but the folks at Mini of South Atlanta, including my sales guy Terry Huddleston, were able to work it out. I wasn’t worried about the tag price of the Mini nor trade-in value of the CR-V; I was just concerned with keeping the monthly payment at about where it already was. After a bit of negotiating, we pulled it off. I went in with this attitude: if they can’t get the price I want, then I have a great Honda that I’ll drive for another year and try again. This allowed me to stick to my guns, so to speak.

My new Cooper is red with a black top. It has the sports package, including Bluetooth and an iPod connector. It’s a six-speed manual (an automatic was not an option — sorry, A) and includes ride-flat tires, a bad-ass computer, cool cabin lights, and a ton of other features that were obviously designed by folks who understand that the details are important. I can’t say this was true about the Honda.

For example: the CR-V had an audio-in jack right below the stereo. It was a standard headphone plug, so a double-male cable would allow me to plug my iPod in and listen to it. Cool, but not really. Yes, I could listen to the iPod, but I had an ugly looking cable strung down my console and I actually had to control the iPod by picking it up. Not only that, I had to have a separate cable for power. Inelegant and inconvenient. The Mini’s is a USB plug that’s hidden at the bottom of the console, behind the shifter. Everything goes through the cable to the computer — playlists, artists, albums, track info — everything. I can actually use the Mini’s stereo to control the iPod without ever even touching the iPod. Awesome.

OK, the best part: it is a fuel-efficient sports car. So. Much. Fun. Need I say more?

You can check out my Mini gallery on Flickr.

Drobo!

I’ve been wanting one for a long time, and I finally got my Drobo.

It was really time. I just couldn’t fathom buying another RAID case for a couple of hard drives that I would outgrow in a month or two. The Drobo was $429 at OWC, and they offered a $50 mail-in rebate. So, I picked up one and a single 1.5TB drive. I should have gotten two drives.

The only negative about it is the copying speed. It took about 8 hours to copy 500GB. Not speedy, but everything else is aces. I currently have the 1.5TB drive in it along with 2 500GB drives and a single 25GB drive. With all that, I have just over a TB worth of usable storage. Yeah, not a lot, but I’m comfortable with that. Seeing that I’m going to use the Drobo for irreplaceable data (what data isn’t), I feel better that it keeps a backup in case of drive failure. That’s something a standard RAID won’t do.

Apple Becoming the New M$

The rumors seem to be true. Yes, Apple, I know you want to become a household name, but does that mean whoring the iPhone at Wal-Mart? Selling it at Best Buy is bad enough, but making it available at the Darth Vader of retail stores? Disgusting. With Apple getting powerful, their head is getting bigger. They seem to care less about their customers (even those, like me, who have stuck with them through the dark times over the last 25 years), starting to make questionable design decisions in the Mac OS, and are now making deals with the dark side.

I really have nothing else to say.

Apple TV: Lame?

I’m beginning to think so.

Apple, why can’t I put what I want on my Apple TV, like I can on my iPod (well, not my Shuffle)? Why can’t I use it to store my media, like I would a hard drive? Why can’t I plug an external hard drive into my Apple TV to up my storage? Why can’t I play Netflix? Why can’t I play Hulu? I know you said it was a “hobby,” but if you sell a product, you should listen to what people want. Fix it, Apple.

And, while we’re at it: why is iTunes so stupid? Why can’t I decide to store music on one hard drive, movies on another, TV on a third? And why — God, why?! — does iTunes erase my entire iPod Shuffle whenever I plug it in to the computer? Do you know how much this irritates me? Fix it, Apple.

I know: some of these restrictions are undoubtedly not your fault. If this is the case, explain yourself, Apple. Why can’t I use my old iPod as storage for my music? I can? Well, what if I want to copy a song off of it to my new iPhone? No? Why the hell not? Fix it, Apple.

I am so tired of all my digital products coming to me broken. Apple, you should have enough clout to be able to begin changing some of these restrictions. TiVo, now’s your chance: you’ve already landed Netflix (though I have yet to see it)l when are you gonna get Hulu? Also, when will you allow me to put my own content on my TiVo? I know you have desktop software, but it’s even lamer than iTunes, and much more restrictive.

We are not all criminals, guys. Stop treating us like we are.

HDCP and Apple

This sounds like complete crap to me. AppleInsider and Ars Technica report that Apple has adopted a new hardward standard that will limit the playback of “Freeplay”-enabled media on non-compliant devices — even if no laws are being broken. Based on the report, it seems that this is going to be a reality across Apple’s whole line of computers, as the current batch of HDCP-enabled MacBooks attest.

Once again, the conglomerates are missing the point. Folks, we are not the criminals, and I’m tired of buying hardware that comes to me broken.

Case in point: I hate my iPod Shuffle. It seems like every time I decide to plug it into my MacBook Pro — the only computer I have ever used with my Shuffle — it tells me that iPod can only used with one iTunes library. The only options I have are “Cancel” or erase the iPod. Huh? Now this wouldn’t be such a big deal if it didn’t take so bloody long to put music back on the thing. And, sheesh, it’s only a gigabyte! How much music could I possibly steal?!

I’ve said it before: I liked Apple better when they were not so successful.

New Toy

I’ve been looking at one of these lately, and I finally spent the money: my new Canon BG-E2 Battery Grip and extra battery arrived today. Since I shoot at least half the time in portrait mode, I figured a battery grip would be a good addition to my equipment. I think it was the $4.99 overnight shipping and the user reviews on Amazon that finally made me go for it.

Hopefully, Giles and I will get together soon for a photostroll, so I can test it out. I’m sure I’ll have more to say about it soon. So far, it is heavy with two batteries. Maybe it’ll make me stronger.

Dude, Where’s My iPhone?

Well, I will not be getting one.

Not because I don’t think it’s the most innovative and appealing product to come along since the original Mac itself; not that it hasn’t received strong reviews; not because I don’t think that this product marks the beginning of a new trend in digital devices that will change our relationships to our technology. From BoingBoing:

Apple now has a DUTY to export this interface to their entire product line. Today’s iPhone naysayers probably don’t appreciate the significance of the UI shift that happened today. The computer industry may once again — at the hands of apple — never be the same again. The interface reminds me of the scene in the film Minority Report where the pre-crimes unit staff were manipulating and viewing multimedia data using direct gestures. I feel like we’re getting a taste of that kind of direct interface control today with the iPhone.

And not because it’s not freakin’ sexy.

It’s not even that I don’t have the money for the 8-GB model; not because I think 8 GBs is too small (even considering I have a 60-GB iPod packed full); not because I think the AT&T rates are outrageous or too expensive; not because AT&T is the weak link in this deal (can you say EDGE?); not because it’s a first-generation product; and not even because I know there will be a better one in a year.

I have a year left with T-Mobile. (Did I mention how much I hate contracts? Why don’t companies, instead of having us sign ridiculous contracts — even more ridiculous when we’re talking about technology under Moore’s Law — why don’t cell phone companies and providers rely on their abilities to innovate and give the best deals? I know: I feel stupid for even asking.) Not that I really have a problem with T-Mobile’s service. I just want an iPhone, and I detest my stoopid Razr.

Therefore — alas! — I must wait another lust-filled year. Probably a good thing, though it will be a long, green year. Stoopid contracts.

SHUT UP!

From Wired. Tom Long has had enough, and I don’t blame him:

The car alarm has become just another part of the cacophony of city life; if anybody notices it at all, it’s out of irritation, not concern. If I were stealing a car and the alarm went off, I’d just continue doing my thing until it was time to drive away. If a cop happened by, he’d just threaten me with a ticket for noise pollution anyway.

I was just talking with someone about this very thing the other day. I think we were outside Dick’s Sporting Goods and heard this obnoxious car alarm (is that redundant?). This insistent bleating followed us on our walk down to Target, nearly 10 minutes. I think I remarked, “You know: all car alarms have succeeded in doing is making us more immune to car alarms.” This is one piece of technology that can get stolen, as far as I’m concerned. Really, does anyone care? We’d probably applaud if the thief would be a bit speedier.

Long also takes aim at annoying cell phone rings (Nokia’s default tone is the worst!) and other noisy gadgets that contribute to increasing “aural pollution.” I’m with you, Long.