**** Analogue I've been pushing towards digital, technological solutions to my problems for most of my life. In the past month or so, I've been a bit more analogue. It started when I began to feel silly about carrying around a laptop all the time, constantly worrying about its charge, leaving it in the sun, having it stolen, forgetting about it, and only really using it now and then to quickly type something. I then thought, "Hey, I can leave the laptop at home, and just use my phone. I can take notes on the phone, I can even ssh back to my computer, this is a brilliant solution." It wasn't. Phone interfaces are like trying to squeeze your thoughts out through a straw. I found it clumsy, frustrating, and plagued by "helpful" features that try to compensate for the inherent issues in the medium. (like autocorrects based on large scale statistical models) This lead to carrying around a bluetooth keyboard as well as the phone. Now, I was carrying around something almost as large as my laptop, but with a tiny tiny screen, and it lagged all over the place. Well, lag can be partially alleviated with mosh, and the screen size can be partially alleviated with a tablet. Now, it was phone, tablet, and keyboard. of course, sometimes I wouldn't have functional wifi, so I would need to tether the tablet to the phone. Of course, they have this amazing powersaving feature where they would untether after a couple minutes without being actively used. I did not forsee how frustrating that would become. Thinking about what to write, getting a cup of tea, checking something in a book, even urinating, all resulted in tapping all over two screens trying to coax them back into a tether. Then, I tried using a small notepad and a mechanical pencil. Despite my writing having atrophied over the decades, despite it never having been particularly legible to begin with, I found something that worked. for the majority of uses, I was just writing things down anyway. I needed to spend a bit more time at the end of the day transferring the notes I had taken to the computer, but I found this was actually helpful. It was like a review of the day, like a reminder, it helped collect my thoughts, and sometimes when transcribing the notes I would think of things that hadn't occured to me at the time. There may be disadvantages I'm not seeing, and there may be advantages I haven't noticed yet in all of these ways of working, but at this moment, pencil and paper seems like a pretty good option.