.( /%/\ technical-culture.txt (%(%)) 11-10-2018 .-'..`-. `-'.'`-' ================================================================================ A few years back I was taking part in a project working with older people and digital technology. A large part of these drop-in workshops ended up helping people with their iphones, ipads, facebook and gmail, to keep in touch with their families, etc. Though that wasn't really the initial idea. The project had intended to look into some of the concepts of computers and software through a kind-of cultural lens. What became interesting in these workshops was the way in which a technical dialogue opened up across generational divide that meant both groups (those of us running the workshops, on the one hand, and the older folks we were working with) had to go on a bit of a shared journey talking and working through all the nuance of digitality. There was a moment where we opened up the terminal on one of the machines and started looking at htop and all the process IDs, discussing this stuff. An analogy was offered that this was something like busting open the hood of a car and taking a look at some of the inner workings of the machine under the shiny surface. Here we were able to get on the same page, and so many of the older folks began to talk more about their own backgrounds in technical work; tinkering, work with machinery, textiles, WWII munitions production, etc. I had never been too technical before the past few years, making something of a conscious decision then to start attempting to learn as much as I could about many of the tools and technical environments I was moving within (and here, digital was the most obvious to begin with). Sometime after those workshops, I remember looking through the garage back at my parents house at all the tools there. I found an old hammer that I later found out wasn't just my parents but had belonged to my grandfather. This thing was just... solid, one of the most perfectly robust pieces of kit I'd ever come across. Hard to imagine what the life-cycle of that thing must be, even in heavy use. It outlived my grandfather, no doubt it'll outlive me. There's a humbling thought. I read the other day that Apple are going to start installing a kind-of 'kill switch' on some of their new hardware to actually start bricking devices if it detects being tinkered with by anyone other than a qualified/certified/payroll'd Apple engineer. I can hardly begin to imagine what the equivalent generational technical divide would look like in the expansion of such a scenario; a world of proprietary, locked-down objects that sit out of reach or grasp of their subjects, unable to even bust open the hood and start to get a feel for the machinery inside. Tags: #technology #software #Apple #digitality