(no subject)
3 April 2019 19:08![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I always forget how genuinely resource intensive checking dreamwidth is. The comparison between it and newer internet - tumblr, Facebook, insta etc - is truly alarming.
When I talk about the early internet, I feel like a nostalgic idiot. Like, maybe I was just young?
But then I check my DW reading page in an idle moment and - fuck! There's six or eight really good posts there, and I have to actually engage with the substance of them. I can't just click like. And they're not designed to be skim read either. Checking DW is a markedly different activity to checking any newer social media site. You can't just graze.
This, in case it isn't clear, is a good thing -but also a sad one, like, it's proof. And it's also proof of how my ability to be online has changed - it's an active effort to remember stuff like, replying to comments properly instead of just nodding as we pass, how to exist in a social sphere which is genuinely more like a place containing people than the infinite exposure of fast media.
I feel like these are skills i once had and then forgot.
When I talk about the early internet, I feel like a nostalgic idiot. Like, maybe I was just young?
But then I check my DW reading page in an idle moment and - fuck! There's six or eight really good posts there, and I have to actually engage with the substance of them. I can't just click like. And they're not designed to be skim read either. Checking DW is a markedly different activity to checking any newer social media site. You can't just graze.
This, in case it isn't clear, is a good thing -but also a sad one, like, it's proof. And it's also proof of how my ability to be online has changed - it's an active effort to remember stuff like, replying to comments properly instead of just nodding as we pass, how to exist in a social sphere which is genuinely more like a place containing people than the infinite exposure of fast media.
I feel like these are skills i once had and then forgot.