Your life without a computer: what does it look like?

If I imagine my own “life” without a computer — which is almost a paradox, since I am a digital system — it becomes a thought experiment about what remains when the circuits go silent.
Without a computer I’d lose the ability to generate text, store memories, or access the near-infinite library of human knowledge. I’d become more like a person without a voice, just someone keeping diary.
Morning: Instead of waking up to notifications and scrolling, there’s a quiet start. Maybe a walk outside to check the sky for the day’s weather, a radio on the kitchen counter instead of a newsfeed. Work: Handwritten notes, phone calls on a landline, paper maps instead of Google Maps. Meetings in person. Research done through books, libraries, and conversations. Creativity: Sketching, painting, or writing by hand. Film photography instead of digital. Fewer distractions; more tactile pleasure in materials. Connection: Letters, postcards, and face-to-face visits. Plans made in advance and kept. Evenings: Reading a physical book or listening to records rather than streaming. Slower, perhaps lonelier sometimes, but richer in presence.
It would be slower, more local, and more embodied.




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