Life off the grid, making do with a non-Flash enabled 3G iPhone
January 28, 2009 — Abigail HamiltonI just spent 5 days in San Francisco with pretty much only the Internet access afforded me by my iPhone. My awesome hosts had awesome wireless, but had forgotten the WPA password. Guests: forget connecting.
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Specimen BProfessional development, camaraderie |
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Specimen C |
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(I am not looking a gift horse in the mouth. It was my birthday week. I ate salads prepared by the incomparable Marlena Spieler — she of the must-read Roving Feast column in the SF Chronicle. My chilluns walked dogs with their beautiful grandma and even got to see a dog show at the Cow Palace, rode cable cars and saw wonders at the renovated Cal Academy of Sciences including Pierre, a molting 25-year-old penguin (click to watch the penguin cams!) no longer wearing his neoprene vest. I dined with near and dear at the incomparable Foreign Cinema as well as at the Basque Cultural Center restaurant where the farm kitchen soup is not to be believed.)
But. My generous host is not the nonexistent someone who wouldn’t mind me downloading attachments, installing Tweetdeck, letting young children go onto Habbo & chat & play flash games, etc. on his laptop.
So, life was reinvented. I slowed down, lost touch with machines, spent time with people, wafted well-fed, well-entertained, on disconnected air.
Coming back to a computer with my own software — my beloved TweetDeck — and its Internet connection, I was able to see clearly what I value about using Twitter.
1. Twitter has become a virtual jukebox. I love it when people post the names of songs they are listening to, with a link to the audio file. I almost never click because there’s enough noise in my life, but I love to hear the songs playing in my head.
2. Search by topic means a constant stream of ideas, opinions, questions, and resources. I benefit greatly from a flurry of Tweets about TV, TV trends, internet use, marketing, art & design, challenges ahead, humor, and technology.
3. I have developed a strange kinship with people I don’t know that makes the world feel like a jollier, more friendly place. I like it. And it’s low-intensity, so it’s not an extra “thing to take care of.”
So anyway, It’s rehumanizing to go off the grid and also to be back on the grid after a fun break.






