Jason Brown

@zota
78 Followers
395 Following
37 Posts
Software engineer, technology therapist, grey-hat historian, gonzo designer, ambient performer. Los Angeles.

One of the creepier tech-related incidents I remember was many years ago when I wanted the Sam's Photofacts (a third-party creator of device specs and schematics, etc.) for a very old portable TV. Way out of date, but I was trying to help someone with it.

I mentioned to a friend that I was looking for old Photofacts, but I did not say anything about the TV. He scribbled an address on a scrap of paper, an address locally here in L.A. "Try him," he muttered.

I drive over. It's a small unmarked storefront. I go in, the bell on the door rings. Sitting inside, like the caterpillar in "Alice in Wonderland", is this little guy perched on a stool, with immense stacks of paper surrounding him everywhere. Total mayhem.

I walk up to him -- knowing that this was a waste of time and really wanting to get out of there -- and asked if he had the Sam's Photofacts for that specific very old TV model.

Without saying a word, he reached over to the pile of papers right next to him, took the TOP item off the pile, and silently handed it to me. It was the ancient one I needed. Stunned, I paid him the amount marked on the item, and left with it, not completely sure what had just happened.

When I drove by there a month later that storefront was something else entirely. He was gone.

@colin

If you understood his point, think for a moment about the part where people stop caring enough to even offer a critique.

@slcw someone said that for their own personal mental health at this stage of their life, they find it better to disengage than have a public argument with someone.

You responded to that they should not do this for their own well-being, because it will essentially turn them MAGA.

I actually do feel this kind of reply is part of mastodon's culture. I'm not really a fan.

@slcw kinda proving the point by example here, bub

Slowly but surely journalists are finding their way to the Fediverse. These tech & digital media reporters are already active on Mastodon:

@couts — Wired

@caseynewton — Platformer

@mimsical — WSJ

@pierce — The Verge

@drewharwell — Washington Post

@harrymccracken — Fast Company

@jank0 — Lowpass

@joannastern — WSJ

@jr — Computerworld

@mathewi — Columbia Journalism Review

@stshank — CNET

@taylorlorenz — Washington Post

@willoremus — Washington Post

#FollowFriday #Journalists #Tech

#FollowFriday to these accounts from #PBS and #NPR, we are very glad you are here!

(and if i missed anyone add them in the comments and I'll add them!)

Local PBS stations:

@gbhnews
@kcts9
@azpm

NPR station:
@TPR

NPR folks here:
@timkmak
@nellgreenfieldboyce
@casey
@eric
@shannonpareil
@steveinskeep
@kairyssdal

And PBS folks here:
@laurasanthanam
@philmeyer
@skrishna
@petertubbs
@Trailanderror

And in Germany, we welcome public broadcaster @NDR

#BeFound

@nlarson830 yes, you've completely misunderstood.

But if you feel that averaging 100 posts a day is the way to use this tool, it's probably best that I disengage now.

@nlarson830 I'm genuinely confused about the point you're trying to make here and what it has to do with quote-post functionality. But it seems to be a self-referential example of replying without reading what you replied to?

@nlarson830 @gwensnyder

I don't think you're deliberately obscuring the pionts made, but you've missed them so completely the difference is hard to tell.

And the commonplace of kind of "well actually" is still the reason I find it hard to use and recommend Mastodon.