Blog Archives

Average length of local cell phone call in 2003 was 3 min; in 2010 it’s 1 min 47 sec

Here’s a read for you; this article presents some data that sort of shocked me.  Thanks to Douglas M. for the recommendation!

Today we worry about the social effects of the Internet. A century ago, it was the telephone that threatened to reinvent society.
In 2009, the United States crossed a digital Rubicon: For the first time, the amount of data sent with mobile devices exceeded the sum of transmitted voice data. The shift was heralded in tech circles with prophetic fury: “The phone call is dead,” pronounced a blogger at the Web site TechCrunch. Writing in Wired, journalist Clive Thompson observed, “This generation doesn’t make phone calls, because everyone is in constant, lightweight contact in so many other ways: texting, chatting, and social network messaging.” And the online news network True/Slant declared a paradox: “We’re well on our way to becoming an incredibly disconnected connected society.”

 

Read the rest here at the Wilson Quarterly.



Paul Spring Album Review (music available on iTunes)

Paul Spring‘s new eponymous album is available on iTunes.  The music is excellent all around!  It has top notch production quality.  The lyrics walk the line between universal and particular, and the chord progressions with wailing harmonies are the backbone of the sound: they really set the tone of the whole album.  This is most pronounced in the song “The Night.”  But the album offers more; Spring demonstrates his musical ability: “Lake Louise” has a kind of maturity and bitter-sweet sentiment to it, but then he is able to present something with as much levity and ‘spring’ as “Jackson Pollock.”  There are sweet guitar solos, beautiful ballads, spine-tingling coming of age songs, poetic references (Wallace Stevens!), and groovy drum and bass beats.  Paul Spring has sprung.

 

https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/paul-spring/id521142070 – GET IT!

Paul Spring Song Superlatives

Best to drive to: The Night, Plum Street

Most Beautiful: Stormy Sea, Thin Veil

Most Bone-Chilling: Lake Louise

Most Different (in a good way): Mind of Winter, Into the Water

Enjoy,

-PB

Pedantry & Science

Has anyone else read / is anyone else reading Thinking, Fast and Slow? It’s pretty great. Here’s a reference I found in it: Consequences of Erudite Vernacular Utilized Irrespective of Necessity.

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