Thank goodness
Ben Macintyre is a British author and historian who writes a regular column for The Times of London. His columns range in subject matter from current
affairs to historical controversies. This column appeared in The Times (paywall) on Friday and was republished by The Australian in Sydney:
Thanks to the digital age
we’re all losing
our memory
The Russian Federal Guard
Service, the body given the task of protecting the country’s top officials,
recently invested in 20 old-fashioned portable typewriters. These were to be
used to ensure that documents of a particularly sensitive nature would not be
written electronically and stored digitally, but typed out by hand and then
filed away. The message was clear and as old as writing itself: if you want to
preserve something, write it on paper and then put it somewhere safe.
The digital
age was supposed to render obsolete the traditional ways of preserving the past.
Everything written, recorded, filmed or photographed could now be safeguarded
forever at the push of a button. No more filing, storage or dusty archives: the
present would be captured and the past curated by the machines themselves.
Increased computer power and ever-expanding digital storage would ensure
infinite memory-retention, an end to forgetting.
The reality has proved very
different. Digital memory has proven fragile, evanescent and only too easy to
lose. Technology has moved on so fast that the tools used to access stored
material have become obsolete: CD-ROMs degrade, tapes crumble, hard disks fall
apart; the laser disk and the floppy disk have gone, soon to be followed, no
doubt, by the USB and memory card. I have half a novel, written 20 years ago on
what was then a cutting edge Amstrad and “saved” on a 3 1/2-inch disk. I will never
know how unreadable it really is, because I now have no way to read it [ditto here, also on an Amstrad. RM].
As the
Internet pioneer Vint Cerf warned recently, the disappearance of hardware needed
to read old media means we are “nonchalantly throwing all of our data into what
could become a digital black hole”. In 1986, the BBC Domesday project set out to
record the economic, social and cultural state of Britain on 12-inch videodiscs.
Today, those disks cannot be read, unlike the Domesday Book itself, written 1000 years earlier.
The Internet will carry more data this year than was
created in the entire 20th century - some 330 petabytes, or enough capacity to
transfer every character of every book ever published 20 times over - but our
descendants may be unable to read it.
Quite apart from the technical
inaccessibility of the past, the assumption of digital permanence has eroded the
habit of archival hoarding. Earlier generations wrote letters, diaries,
postcards and notes, on paper, stored them, and forgot them. Who archives their
emails, let alone texts, tweets, or posts?
We blithely assume that these are being preserved somewhere, when most are simply evaporating into the ether. The old-fashioned photo album has given way to the digital photo-file - as prone to sudden wipe-out and technical obsolescence as every other “saved” electronic artefact. The images of your grandparents may be better preserved than those of your grandchildren.
We blithely assume that these are being preserved somewhere, when most are simply evaporating into the ether. The old-fashioned photo album has given way to the digital photo-file - as prone to sudden wipe-out and technical obsolescence as every other “saved” electronic artefact. The images of your grandparents may be better preserved than those of your grandchildren.
What looks like never-ending growth on the Internet is really
a form of endless decay. The average lifespan of a web page is 44 days. Pages
are constantly being updated, overwritten, shifted or left to expire in the
process known as “reference rot”. We may lecture our children that anything
posted on the net will be there forever, but in fact it’s true of very little
on this strange, unstable, ephemeral medium.
A web page link that leads only to a
“page not found” message encapsulates the transitory nature of digital data:
solid information that has shifted into nothingness, with no clue to where it
has gone.
Historians looking back on our time will face a mighty challenge, with
a patchy digital record and a culture lulled into believing that the past is
being preserved every time the save button is pressed.
Bizarrely, despite the
vastly larger flood of daily information, we may end up knowing more about the
beginning of the 20th century than we will know about the start of the 21st.
The
world is waking up to the danger of collective memory loss. Cerf has called for
the creation of “digital vellum”, technology that can take a digital snapshot,
at the time of storage, of all the processes needed to read it at later date.
The British Library now routinely gathers information from millions of public
websites as well as tweets and Facebook entries, to create a constant, rolling
record of the digital present. The American Library of Congress is archiving the
whole of Twitter.
Immediately after the Charlie Hebdo massacre in Paris, the
Bibliotheque Nationale de France set out to gather the rolling digital story and
the web response - media reportage, public reaction, blogs, Twitter, online
commentary - to create a genuine digital archive of the moment.
A similar shift
in attitude towards digital preservation is needed in the wider culture.
Psychological studies show that people who gather evidence of their own lives
are happier and more self-confident.
Just as our grandparents hoarded the
physical evidence of their worlds, so we should print out the photographs,
preserve the emails, write, cut, paste, and print the stories, memories and
relics of our own lives and times, and put them all in the attic.
Thankfully, as
the Russians know, a machine has already been invented that can solve the
problem of digital impermanence: the typewriter.
Throwing the
typewriter at it
American broadband and telecommunications company, a corporate component of
the Dow Jones Industrial Average, Verizon Communications is so mad at new
net-neutrality rules, they’re throwing the whole typewriter at it. In a press
release issued after the US Federal Communications Commission narrowly passed new
rules prohibiting broadband providers from throttling legal content or charging
for fast lanes, Verizon used a 1930s-style typewriter font to complain about
it. Verizon said the rules on broadband Internet “were written in the
era of the stream locomotive and the telegraph” and are “badly
antiquated”.
Stone the crows!
Not sure why American actor and director Ezra Stone (1917-1994) is in the news, but it's a nice image that was issued last week. Stone had a long career on the stage, in films, radio and television,
mostly as a director. His most notable role as an actor was that of the
awkwardly mischievous teenager Henry Aldrich in the radio comedy hit, The
Aldrich Family, for most of its 14-year run.
The typewriter: symbol
of a more thoughtful way of life
of a more thoughtful way of life
The Los Angeles Times has warmly reviewed Australian author-illustrator Karla Strambini’s 2013 book The Extraordinary Mr Qwerty: In a world of "Frozen" dolls and Lego Minecraft, how can a mere book - one
without a movie tie-in - compete for a young child’s attention? Those who hope
to best the lure of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle merchandise would do well to
select a title with beautiful illustrations, one that offers the chance of a
whimsical experience. The Extraordinary Mr Qwerty might qualify.
Melbourne's Strambini
It also reviews The Lonely Typewriter by Peter Ackerman and illustrated by Max Dalton (they first
collaborated on 2010’s The Lonely Phone Booth). This book follows a boy named Pablo with
a homework deadline and a computer on the blink. He is introduced to his
grandmother’s typewriter, a machine with a storied history that involves the
Civil Rights movement but is covered in cobwebs. Pablo is bemused by
the contraption, accepts the challenge of mastering its use and bangs out a
paper. When he turns it in, his teacher can’t help but notice that it was typed.
Pablo is quite proud of his new skill: “It doesn’t need a screen or electricity
or anything! … We had it stuck up in the attic, but now I’m going to keep it in
my room with me.”
The Lonely Typewriter is directed at children ages 6 to 9,
but it’s quite possible their parents - or grandparents - will be the ones to
linger over its pages. The first illustration in the book is a beautiful diagram
of a manual typewriter. It might prompt memories of a pre-digital high school
typing class, an era of term papers that actually required a bit of forethought
because it was so time-consuming to correct them. A computer allows the words to
flow, almost spontaneously. Fixing, changing, revising … over and over … is a
given. A typewriter, on the other hand, is a symbol of a more thoughtful - and
often more frustrating - way of life.
Is there a moral here? Is there any
circumstance in which we would willingly use a typewriter, other than a power
outage? Is the end result so much more interesting that we would willingly
return to the pre-computer age? You already know the answer to that. A ride in a
horse-and-buggy is charming, but it’s unlikely to inspire many of us to ditch
the Prius and build a stable. And that’s kind of a pity.
NYC cop shop
typewriter ban?
The New York Post reports: The clackety clack of cops banging out reports behind station-house desks
could be gone for good if a lawmaker can get enough votes to ban typewriters in
the New York Police Department. Councilman Daniel Dromm (Democrat-Queens) plans to introduce a bill that would phase out police typewriters by 2016. “There’s no a reason a police
officer can’t type up a report and put it into a computer,” he said. “I think
it’s common sense that we move away from typewriters.” Dromm came up with his ban
plan after a constituent complained that cops lost a criminal report she made
about being assaulted. The report had been transcribed on a typewriter and only
one copy was made. But that’s not the only problem the old machines pose.
Instead of being able to fill out a sound permit form online for an outdoor
party, people are still forced to visit their local precinct, have it entered
on to a form, in triplicate, the old-fashioned way. “Every time I go into a police
precinct, I see typewriters,” Dromm said. “I believe they all still use them
because they all have the same forms.”
Prison typewriter blues
A prison inmate
serving three life sentences for first-degree murder convictions in 1968 has filed a complaint alleging two officials at the Gus Harrison
Correctional Facility in Madison Township illegally took his Smith-Corona Office
2000 memory typewriter. He claims the officials took his typewriter by claiming it became
contraband when a third party paid a $214 repair bill when it was sent out to be
fixed in 2013. There is no regulation that specifically prohibited his sister
from directly paying the company that repaired the machine, he stated in his
suit. He is seeking compensation for the typewriter and repair costs. And he is
claiming $3900 in punitive damages against the prison property room officer and
a counsellor who upheld the contraband determination.
Oh, Oliver!
Oh, San Antonio!
"Learn more about the typewriter", said San Antonio, Texas, TV channel KSAT. KSAT would do well to start learning something itself.
"The typewriter was invented in the 1860s and quickly became a
machine many professionals used in offices. The machine works by means of
keyboard-operated types striking a ribbon to transfer ink on to a piece a
paper. Bye the end of the 1980s, word processors and computers had mostly
displaced typewriters, but some can still be found. In India, as of the 2010s, the typewriter is still prominent."