Subj : Fountain Pens & Notebooks
To   : Ogg
From : Atroxi
Date : Thu Apr 01 2021 12:20 pm

Og> When I am home and I need to remind myself of something to to do
Og> at the shop when I get there, I email my self a note to a
Og> special account with TODO in the subject.  And then the
Og> reverse.. it I need to finish some biz work at home in the
Og> evening, I email myself to my home account with TODO in the
Og> suject. For private things, I would use PGP.  I could not manage
Og> that shit with a phone; I'd often to forget to take the phone
Og> with me some days!

It's really interesting how people find vastly different solutions to
similar problems.

Lucky you though, I wish I can stay away from my phone for extended
periods of time. Well, to be honest, I know how I would do that but
smartphones really are gripping and addictive devices.

Og> Most of my journaling was during grade-school. I discovered that
Og> my dad had a radio that supported the SW bands. He only used it
Og> for AM.  But when I discovered SW it was like the world opened
Og> up for me. Some ham operators offered "confirmation postcards"
Og> for anyone who would write to them with date/time of broadcast.

Oh wow. That's interesting. I'm not sure whether people had that kind
of thing in my country. Maybe I'm not just aware of it, but nonetheless
it's certainly interesting.

Og> Grade school also had us participate in a pen pal program to
Og> exchange letters with students in another school.  That seemed
Og> fun when the letters arrived. But I never maintained any lasting
Og> connections there. I was too young and getting distracted with
Og> the girls at hand.  ;)

Haha! I wish I had that kind of thing when I was growing up.

Og> Yes.. the modern ones have the cartidges. A nice solution. And
Og> they don't dry up as fast? I really haven't tried those. My mom
Og> took up calligraphy in her 60's and onward. That's when I
Og> learned about the cartridge versions.  I still have a bunch of
Og> those supplies.  But she still appreciated the convenience of
Og> composing a letter using a word-processor.  She'd decorate the
Og> printed product with some flourishes of calligraphy.

I'm not sure if they don't dry up as fast. Maybe it depends on the ink
itself. I haven't played around with how fast an ink dries in the
cartridge but I assume that as long as you keep the nib capped
the ink should not dry that fast.

Og> I tried keeping a grocery list using a phone app. But that did
Og> not work for me. I just use a piece of paper with a grid that I
Og> duplicate 4x on an 8.5x11" sheet of paper, rip that sheet into
Og> its respective quarters and have a little stash that I use like
Og> this:

Og>  https://photos.kolico.ca/tmp/groc-list.jpg

Og>  ..and work my way column by column from right to left until it
Og> is full.  It's pinned onto the fridge where I can always find it
Og> and grab it.

This is an interesting system. Would you mind if I copy this and use
it for my own journal? :-)

Og> This might be a digression of the actual subject of journaling
Og> and notebooks at the start, but except for signing cheques and
Og> amassing other notes on pieces of paper, this is the extent of
Og> handwriting right now.

To some extent, I'd have to agree with you. Most of the people that
I know rarely keep notes and journals anymore. Though, I'd argue
that this is perhaps one of the reasons why people tend to appre-
ciate handwriting more nowadays.


... {gemini,https}://rtr.kalayaan.xyz -- visit me! :-)
--- MultiMail/OpenBSD v0.52
� Synchronet � Vertrauen � Home of Synchronet � [vert/cvs/bbs].synchro.net