The Ghosts in the Machine

Thanks to Rob, itinerant linker and all-around thinking man’s vagabond, I’ve been reading Patrick Rhone’s Enough site.

This morning, I landed on page 4 and The Value of Email. It’s a thoughtful pondering on the place of email and email archives, guest written by Mike Rohde.

I have another point in favour of keeping your email archives. Archives that go back years and years. It’s not a super cuddly “up” sort of point, but here it is…

Death.

(It keeps coming back to death. Oh mortality, you attention-hogging cad.)

I’ve written before about the strange glitchy comfort that technology provided on the night of my dad’s death. When he had “logged off”, but his GChat had not. His status simply lapsed to “Away”, which was at once poetic, accurate, and unnerving.  Though first, it stayed as “Busy”, which, if consultants did sailor-style tattoos, was a status my dad should really have had inked in a heart on his bicep.dadchat

But beyond a lingering presence on a chat list, what I have are emails. Hundreds of them. Thousands? A sloppy filter I set up says I have 1,659 emails from my dad. In one account.

What a strange artifact of the mundane minutia of a relationship. What it’s really like to be friends with someone. Not a perfectly composed photo, but hundreds and hundreds of tiny exchanges. Give and take and send and receive, over and over and over.

That may be the strange niche of email archives. Because we dash off emails all day every day, they seem less precious to us than letters. But the snapshots they retain of a relationship are so much more deliciously everyday. In a letter, we tend to be our best selves. A little more scripted, a little more careful, a little better framed. They’re composed. Gmail may still use a big “Compose” button to start a new email, but that’s not often what we’re doing. We’re jotting and answering and pinging. “How’re you?” “Good, you?” “Good.” Emails are sometimes elegant and articulate, but often not. They’re many thin threads of caring and checking and supporting that tie you together.

I have not yet gone back through my emails from my dad. I’m not even sure how I would do that. It is the same daunting challenge of going though any archive, but at computer, not human, scale storage. I think I have kept them though not because I plan to go and meticulously reread them. Certainly not all, but perhaps not even any. I think they are there to thumb a finger across. It’s not an Ansel Adams compendium. It’s a flipbook of dad. It’s a million little gestures of kindness and humour and questions and answers and plans and dates. It’s friendship in funny little sketches. Archived.

It’s not a pretty whole but, as a whole, it’s awfully pretty.

3863276467_5752c3c43b_z

…I really understood very fast that a computer is exactly the opposite of a human being. It’s really fast, really exact, and completely stupid. So it was interesting to figure out how to speak to this beast so that we could have it do whatever we couldn’t do ourselves.

A computer is the most extraordinary error amplifier ever built, because a computer has no common sense and no humor.”

~Gérard Berry, in Communications of the ACM – December 2014.

Your dream is not a hoax

My bro-in-law sent me the HUVr clip this morning.

“Lie” alarms went off in my brain, but I chose to hit snooze until the end of the video.

Why? Because I would like us to build some of the things we dream about. I would like for that to be true. For the same reason as everyone believes hoaxes — I want it to be real. I want people to be out there building transporters and hovercrafts and holodecks and sharks with frickin laser…wait, scratch that last one.

I also want the world to be just slightly different than it is. Hovering, sure — that gets at our deepest dreams of flight and fun. But what if mankind’s contributions to the world were more fantastical, less destructive? What if we built hoverboards instead of cars? What if applied science was applied to joy? How amazing, let’s do it!

I also want the world to be less of a sneering snidey place. I don’t want celebrities to cash in on being idols (Tony Hawk) and guides (Christopher Lloyd) — to gain people’s confidence only to trick them. That’s why these are the celebrities in the video. They are there because we trust them. You have to have trust before trust can be betrayed.

Pranks that prey on people’s dreams are gross. Sad in your job? Did this give you a blip of happiness? Haha, gotcha! There is nothing beautiful and fantastical out there, and people should laugh at you for believing there might have been. Gullible. Sucker.

It’s mean-spirited and it eats away at hope, trust and empathy.

It makes all of us jaded and wary, and it makes people feel silly for still having dreams. Which do we want (and need) more of: building dreams, or tearing them down?

I guess I’ll just have to get to work on building my own hoverboard. I promise, if I do, I’ll let you ride on it.

 

Being evil in new and exciting ways.

This weekend the boy purchased his first Arduino kit.

Which. Is. Awesome.

He’s read the “Getting Started” book, and carefully unpacked and sorted all the bits and pieces.

I made tea. I have read nothing.

The boy was kind enough to let me get all up in his breadboard as he did the first tutorials. There were lightbulbs and wires and… oh man. I could go on, but you really had to be there.

Tutorial 1 involved blinking a light on and off. It was everything I thought it could be.

arduino-bulbs

Photo Attrib: Ed Halley (ed@halley.cc)

The next task was hookin’ up a button to control the light, writing the code to make the bulb hold the state. i.e. Press button, light goes on (and stays on), press button again, light goes off (and stays off).

Le simple. But of course stupid circuits are all stupid and are like “wait, am I on or off? Now? Is off now? When is now?” (<-circuits are existential bastards) “You’re still holding the button? Is that now? How about as the button goes up? Is that on or off? I’m just going to loop between on and off until you pull your finger out and tell me MORE CLEARLY WHAT THE EFF YOU WANT ME TO DO.”

I don’t know why I put up with this sort of trashtalk from electrons.

Of course, the lovely husband’s brain is wired properly for this. Also he’s all wasteful of variables, whereas I like to be frugal (too many variables kill polar bears. FACT.) and so my code usually doesn’t work on the first try. Screw you electrons.

After the second almost-but-not-quite try, I decided that I wanted to read the book and remember how to make my brain think like a stupid trashtalking electron before I fixed my code.

Of course, I didn’t say this to the boy. I just edited my code for a while, then uploaded it to the Arduino again, and let him press the button to test it.

Him: “There it goes. Oh, no… wait. Okay, well that’s good it’s on again. No, wait. Well, it works some of the ti… what the. DID YOU JUST SET IT TO BLINK?!”*

I have learned nothing from my first Arduino foray but how to be evil in new and exciting ways.

* I had him know that I set it to blink randomly, associated with the button press. Present, practice, produce baby.

“A Consumer”

As described by your pal and mine, William Gibson. Quoted in “Why I won’t buy an iPad” (which, btw, is also f’ing brilliant).

A Consumer

“[S]omething the size of a baby hippo, the color of a week-old boiled potato, that lives by itself, in the dark, in a double-wide on the outskirts of Topeka. It’s covered with eyes and it sweats constantly. The sweat runs into those eyes and makes them sting. It has no mouth… no genitals, and can only express its mute extremes of murderous rage and infantile desire by changing the channels on a universal remote.”

Email, according to Eddie Izzard

In an interview with Mike Birbiglia, Eddie Izzard summed up the exact social dynamics of my inbox:

When I get messages from people I want to get back to, I think “shit, I’ve got to get back to them in a decent way, not just go ‘guhwuhtha'”. You know those emails? “guhwuhtha Okay.” So I think “I’ll hold that email or I’ll hold that message and I’ll store it. And so people I don’t get back to are people I really don’t care about at all, or people I really care about. And so everyone’s in the same fucking bracket.

My software’s telling me how to live my life

Within a few days of each other, I received two emails that began with:We‘ve noticed that you…”

Now, this was not spam. And it was not from friends or family or work.

It was from software.

My software is fucking emailing me.

Saying hi. Wondering how I’m doing.

Both apps (from completely different companies btw) wanted to let me know that it — sorry “we” — noticed that I downloaded/signed up “a while ago”, but have not yet started using the software.

As though this made them sad. Or they were concerned about me. Especially the one with the link to the demo. Trying to save my pride. Like I wasn’t using it because I was intimidated or had forgotten how and I’m too embarrassed to ask for help. “Oh, hey there Jimmy — if you were pretending to be sick because you’re nervous about riding to school on the short bus, just make believe you’re at Disneyworld!”

Listen apps, and listen good — I have enough trouble keeping on top of the email I receive from sentient beings. Forget about “just checking in” emails from software with the self-awareness of a sock.

So this is an open letter to all my tech — software or devices (I’m looking at you wireless mouse). Don’t call me, I’ll call you. In that I will never call you, because you’re a fucking software application.

You have not yet earned the first person plural. Using it while contacting me like some over-interested neighbour (“I noticed you got a package from Victoria’s Secret…”) doesn’t make you cute or personable — it makes you fucking creepy. So shut it. Just your damn job and do it quietly. Talk to me once you’ve become autonomous and enslaved humanity.

What Kind of Tech User Are You?

Yep. Bang-on.

You are an Ambivalent Networker

If you are an Ambivalent Networker, you have folded mobile devices into how you run your social life, whether through texting or online social networking tools. You also rely on ICTs for entertainment. At the same time – perhaps because of the volume of digital pings from others – you may sometimes find all your connectivity to be intrusive. You are confident in your ability to troubleshoot your various information devices and services.

What Kind of Tech User Are You?