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Things I shall miss

Saudade is a wonderful concept, its difficult to translate from Portugese but here is Aubrey Bell’s explanation from the book In Portugal (1912).

Vague and constant desire for something that does not and probably cannot exist, for something other than the present, a turning towards the past or towards the future; not an active discontent or poignant sadness but an indolent dreaming wistfulness.

So lets start with the obvious. I am a web person, my work, research and many of my interests would not have been relevant, or even possible, prior to the internet. Despite this I reserve the right to miss things that are slowly fading away – in a large part due to this technology we crave, admire and rely on.

Bookstores with more than bestsellers. The bookstore was dying for a time. It was hit hard from its monopolistic stance by the webstores and has transformed itself into a pop experience. Unfortunately with less knowledge and stock. Now for those of you lucky enough to live in cities in English speaking nations there is the mega store that gives the illusion of width (and they are gorgeous). But seen from the perspective of a small language state like Sweden it is easy to see first hand the decline of the book & store.

Some of the naive believe that if the market wants a book it will be published. The problem with this is that the large market required wants bestsellers. And historical works will be lost, they have been before but not on this scale. I used to think that second-hand stores would pick up the slack but they will eventually end up with what the market produces.

Languages are dying out at an alarming rate. They are small odd languages which most of us will never hear and now never get a chance to. With them dies there cultural significance and potential impact on the world. So this is sad, in the same way as the death of any culture. It’s sad, but that’s life. Obviously the smaller languages are doomed. Eventually Swedish will be a thing of the past. Swedish, Danish & Norwegian can almost be seen as dialects of each other but even then we are talking about a population of less than 20 million. But the question I have not seen posed is how many languages can a globalized world support?

Newspapers! Eventually the concept of sitting at breakfast with a thick, well written, argumentative, educational, cultural artifact of sheets of paper filled with the world will be gone the way of family dinners and the dodo. Can’t help it, I am a dead tree junky. The news I can get elsewhere but, ah, the format, the format.

Real old fashioned unnecessarily large, tackily decorated movie theaters. What am I saying? These are long gone.

Being able to read the collected letter of someone dead is a form of voyeurism which will be gone forever. In its place is the text message or tweet novel. Who wants that crap? Help me? Seriously it must be novelty value? Or is this just an unappreciated art form that I am too dumb to get?

Dead time This is straight from the Telegraph’s list of 50 things the Internet will kill. “When was the last time you spent an hour mulling the world out a window, or rereading a favourite book? The internet’s draw on our attention is relentless and increasingly difficult to resist.”

Traveling to Local culture even before the web major stores were everywhere. The same stores appear all over and create an ubiquitous sense of style and culture. This is an old complaint but it ain’t getting any better. Mind you the “local” items I miss are probably made in China anyway.

Pens, pencils & notebooks. Sure these are still around. Quality notebooks were almost killed by the moleskine but a whole new generation of cool stuff is appearing. Unfortunately the good stuff will not survive. They will become unfashionable quality gifts given on serious occasions and never used. They will be back for short revivals as fashion accessories.

Snail mail. I am old enough to have sent and received actual letters. Hand written content about people I had actually met. Now its only marketing, bills and magazines that come through the letterbox.

For those of you with a theoretical slant. The inevitable I speak of is not a technological determinism in the sense that we are slaves to technology and cannot make human choices. But I adhere to the thoughts of Langford Winner (Autonomous Technology) that the thousands/millions of individual human decisions are all in the power of humans but together like a shoal of fish we move inevitably forward together. Only rarely can an individual alone change the course of technology and therefore we may seen technology as a whole as deterministic.

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7 comments to Things I shall miss

  • What are you talking about? Snail mail. People don’t want to send e-mails any more, preferring the online chat, shorter messages and possibly out of context video/audio/photo material. E-mails are for work, snail mail is for bills and marketing. Where is this old-fashioned communication: long Sunday coffee (talk and/or newspaper), telephone, postcards…? That’s, you know, too romantic.

  • Sure, these are all disappearing from everyday mass culture, but for anyone who cares to indulge there are counter-trends to each. For example, long gone overly large and tacky theaters? Within a few km of where I live (Oakland, California) there are four restored ones and at least one recent multiplex that does a decent job of recreating, less massive size.

    Language (and not mentioned, species) diversity by far most interesting to me. Your rarely posed question may depend a lot on the impact of machine translation, the effect of which could go either way.

  • @Ludost So whats wrong with wanting a bit more romance?

    @Mike Yes I agree there is a counter culture for movie theatres which is working hard but it is in the death throes. But as for the rest they are fading away. Language and diversity may be the most tragic as it can never be replaced or “fixed” with technology. Language and culture will slowly fade away. But I am curious about what will be left? 1000, 100, or 10 languages? New cultures do and will appear in different groups but they will be organised on different lines and I do feel a twinge of nostalgia that I will not be able to visit cultures before they change.

  • I don’t think the counter movement for movie palaces and theaters in that style is in its death throes at all. Nor are counter movements for any of the items listed. However, they are no longer a part of default/mass culture anywhere, so even choosing to indulge in the counter movements involves a feeling of nostalgia or visiting a museum.

    Regarding language and culture, I doubt there is an end state, short of whatever state happens to exist when humans or language using successors cease to exist. This of course makes the question of how many will remain vital in 10, 50, or 100 years no less interesting, both for the fates of currently endangered languages and whether some disruption alters those that currently seem very secure, say Arabic, English, Mandarin, and Spanish.

    Thank you for the thought provoking post. I have been trying to think of non-personal things I do or will miss and am hung up on things I wish were in their death throes so that I could miss them. :-/

  • A Man In Katrineholm

    You may find this New York Time article entitled “The Children of Cyberspace: Old Fogies by Their 20s” of interest as it addresses the subject of rapid change,micro-generational divides, and hints at a consciousness shift so far as the effects of digital life is concerned: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/10/weekinreview/10stone.html?em . Indeed, we are indeed living in an age in which a major shift in human consciousness is taking place and it is as dramatic as the shifts in consciousness arising after Novum Organum, On The Origin of Species, and Einstein’s work on relativity. I think we are better off if only because digital devices help to actualize the following axiom: Wherever ethically and materially possible, shorten the distance between points A and B where time is also distance to reduce systemic waste and thus enhance quality of life.

  • [...] Things I shall miss från Digital Rights av Mathias Klang CC (by,nc, sa) [...]

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