Posts Tagged ‘thefuture!’

Crafty Tech & Fashion Technology

I’ve recently become pretty fascinated by wearable technology/fashion technology and its DIY counterpart, tech crafting.  To me, it’s a sure sign that we’re living in THE FUTURE!  Here’s some recent writing I’ve done about it:

Making Geek Chic: Can Tech Crafting Outfit More Girls for Technology? is an article in the new issue of Bitch magazine.  I was inspired to write about tech crafting after participating a core conversation about the subject at SXSW Interactive this year.  It’s available online, so please feel free to read and comment!

LEDs are the New Sequins: Fashion, Craft, and Wearable Technology, a new post for Zeitgeist.  This is basically where I geek out about the rad potential of wearable technology – now and for the future.

Tron Dog (A Delightful Thing!)

I’m in the midst a pretty crazy week.  Deadlines galore!  Not sure if there’s time for actual writing, but I always have time to share delightful stuff.  Like Tron Dog.

Tron Dog by Julia Segal - juliasegal.tumblr.com

Tron Dog by Julia Segal - juliasegal.tumblr.com

The link.

It’s 2010 and I’m Still Not Vacationing on the Moon

Kids_Whole_Future_CatalogThis Slate article about Omni magazine reminded me of just how influential that publication was to me as a kid.  Along with this 1982 book, The Kids’ Whole Future Catalog, which I used to read and read and re-read, Omni inspired my pre-tween dreams about the future, and helped to offset my anxieties about nuclear war.  (I grew up in the shadow of NORAD and Cheyenne Mountain, so I spent a pretty unhealthy chunk of time calculating my survival odds after seeing The Day After on television.)  Robots, space vacations, and technological solutions to poverty and inequality: these were the subjects of my dreams about 2010.  It’s a year laden with so much sci-fi meaning.  This is the year we’re supposed to make contact, yo.

Being a few days away from 2010 feels all sorts of mixed up.  Our dreams of the future from twenty years ago just seem really silly now, even as I think many of us are actually pretty disappointed (if not because we don’t have robot housecleaners than because we still – unbelievably – haven’t prioritized finding and implementing solutions to things like poverty and climate change).  And yet, this ever-increasing digital world we are living in feels pretty dang amazing. So, at the end of this year, I’m thinking a lot about past-future hopes, present disappointments, and the magic of my lived reality.

Compounding all of this is a general feeling of elation that we’re leaving behind the aughts, or the zips, or the zeroes, or whatever we want to call this last decade.  Yes, I know that the new decade won’t officially start until 2011.  But I don’t really want to slog through another year of the 2000s.  Most people I know don’t really want to, either.   (Some of my friends have, in fact, declared the 2000s The Worst Decade Ever, although I don’t feel entitled to make that judgement.)  The catalog of horrors feels almost endless: Bush, 9-11, evangelicalism, torture, class divisions, the worsening state of public education, wars on two fronts, the swelling of the prison population, natural disasters exacerbated by climate issues… Blarg, blarg, blarg, and BLARG.  When I stood on the National Mall and watched Barack Obama deliver his inaugural speech at the beginning of this year, I experienced as much relief as I did hope.  Finally, it seemed, someone had the courage to tell us that there are no good and fast answers to our problems, but that it is our job to undertake the difficult task of making meaningful change, anyway.  That commitment is what really gives me hope, after all.

So as much as I don’t have dreams anymore about my life on Saturn (yes, it has rings, so it MUST be the best planet), I also don’t have any illusions that life in this new decade will be that much easier or better.  As Buckaroo Banzai, that pivotal figure from the world of early 1980s cult sci-fi said, “No matter where you go, there you are.”

So here we are.  And it feels good to hit the reset button (even symbolically) and start a new decade (even if it’s not really) and get started with the hard work of reinventing our present and re-imagining our future.  I’m elated about this!  And I hope you are, too.  So let’s make and achieve some big goals, and let’s do some real good in the universe.

Happy New Year, readers and friends!

A Girl & Her Kindle: A True Story of Book Borrowing, Buying, and Loving

Tammy & Kindle McMurtryI’m a Kindle owner. Most of the novels I read these days are in electronic format. My brain likes e-books, as does my back and my budget.

I’ve taken my Kindle to book clubs, answered questions about it on the subway, and found myself in countless conversations about the aesthetic and economic implications of the growing e-reader market. I’ve stopped being surprised at how passionate people are about their reading preferences, their fears about the digital future, and their suspicions about the pleasures of reading electronic ink. I think these are exciting conversations to have, and in the course of talking so much about e-books, I  realized that even though I’ve always been a book lover, I stopped being a book buyer a long time ago.  What’s more, I’ve realized that I have a much more enjoyable relationship with e-books now than I’ve had with real books for years. ok

“The Death of the Novel has Been Greatly Exaggerated”: Kathleen Fitzpatrick Says it All

Just wanted to pass along this short and thoughtful interview with Kathleen Fitzpatrick, associate professor of media studies at Pomona College and one of the founders of the digital scholarly network MediaCommons recently published in the NEH Humanities Magazine.  Fitzpatrick is one of a growing number of scholars who are embracing the changing media landscape instead of pushing back on it with fear and anxiety.

It’s not a lengthy interview, and I’d encourage you to read the whole thing.  However, there are two parts I want to zero in on… ok