At the time, my
employer was one of the first to embrace the computer as a word-processor that took
over from the once brilliantly advanced golf-ball IBM typewriter as my favorite
acquisition. Not long after learning how to use the 3.5” floppy disk for my
workplace BBC (I was living in Cardiff at the time), we invested in a Sanyo
dual 5.25” floppy disk PC on which my husband transcribed his doctoral thesis.
My own set of floppy disks held chapters from some of my early manuscripts.
Shortly afterwards, my brother sent me 5.25” floppies with
programs to load onto my hard drive – the only problem? My Sanyo ran programs
in one floppy disk drive and saved to the second floppy disk drive, holding
information somewhere in something called ‘memory’. Within a few years, the technical world had
leapt light years ahead and we were still in dot matrix mode.
Barely six years before, I had written my Masters Degree
dissertation on a typewriter on cotton rag paper and a carbon copy, pecking one
letter at a time to avoid any errors that meant re-typing the whole page
because corrections were unacceptable. This collection became my first
publication in hardcover. A few decades later my second hardcover book, a
novel, had been written on a laptop and sent over the wireless network of the
Internet from my home in Wales to my publisher New York.
The progress is ceaseless and I have recently confessed that
I no longer use the myriad of notebooks I possess, preferring to take notes on
my phone in a program that can be accessed from my tablet as well as my laptop
and is held in that space somewhere called “cloud computing”. And strangely, my
laptop has a solid-state (no moving parts) hard drive but no floppy disk drive
nor a DVD/CD player. The programs (applications) I have added have come from
“the cloud” – where ever that is – and I do not have them in any tangible form.
All of these developments make for equipment and activities
that are beyond our comprehension and our control. What is convenient about my
cloud note-keeping also makes me vulnerable to the failure of the entity where
is it stored or the entity that has provided the program I use. If by some act
of sabotage or Deus Machina, the bank
of storage disks my provider uses is disabled, I will have lost all my work.
Yet, the lack of
security is outclassed by the convenience. We innately trust progress, even though
the original copy of my husband’s thesis is no longer accessible as the floppy
disk has been superseded by the flash drive which has now been superseded by
cloud-computing. In order to reproduce my dissertation, I would need to
transcribe it from the printed copy.
There are always prices to pay for moving ahead. Change is
embraced and resisted in equal measure. Making the most without losing the best is a balance we
achieve by due diligence and thoughtful consideration.
Embracing the future does not require that we must shun the past.
I am so techno-challenged it is ridiculous. I don't know how I manage to survive. Off and on is about the limit of my knowledge. I just went through Hades changing to a new computer. The old one was ancient and when I took the edits I got from my editor for my next book from old to new, the formatting went crazy. Spend 6 weeks fixing all the oopses after work. Nearly done with that.
ReplyDeleteI guess I need to take a tech course or call you - LOL
I understand your frustration! I married a technophobe and my employer is worse. I don't know what it is that makes me love tech - I never did well in the sciences or math. I probably didn't apply myself too much after I learned to tell stories! I have worked in the tech industry as a software trainer and website designer - all self-taught. I just 'get it'. My husband hits the screen with his handkerchief and gives me a call...
DeleteLeigh, I sooo agree with all you said about technology. My computer is getting old by today's standards and I dread the idea of having to get a new one. Seems as soon as I conquer one level of tech, a new one comes along and I'm lost again.
ReplyDeleteI've just done that and to another format...AARGH! The learning curve is a real stretch but it's worth it. We lost our main computer which was and is still great, when my husband did ... something. I decided then that we were getting separate laptops. He has the one he wrecked and paid to have repaired and I have this one. A true relief when you have all your work in digital form of some kind.
DeleteI remember those IBM ball typewriters. It was so exciting to be able to change the font! Putting reports together at my office often involved a large pair of scissors and a pot of glue. We've certainly come a long way. Interesting read, Leigh.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Cheryl. One of my friends prepared her dissertation with stacks of pages and a pair of scissors, tape and glue. A nightmare. The tech age has its own nightmares but everything looks better from the start.
DeleteSo true - everything you say about the evolution of how we record our thoughts - and write our books. I used to work in a law office and well remember pecking out one letter at a time to avoid making a mistake. My favorite thing about my computer? The delete key. Insightful post. Nice.
ReplyDeleteI work in a law office during the day...my boss (The Boss) taught me to 'conform the document' - easy with a computer, not so hot to do without the digital copy. In a way, we can get sloppy with modern technology and I can tell you when The Boss finds an error that wasn't 'conformed' there is some soul-searching. :)
DeleteThat was a cute-as-a-button walk down technology memory lane!
ReplyDelete"Keep it light. Keep it happy. Keep it gay." (with apologies to Mel Brooks!)
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