Digital Detoxing

Something I have been thinking about a lot lately is how to get back to an analog lifestyle

24-02-2026 - 3 minutes, 27 seconds -
Technology

I have long thought about going back to the way things were. It could be that I'm really close to level 50 and a half-century of existing living on this planet. It could be nostalgia, it could be overwhelm, it could be a rampant ego. Back in my day! things were different. We didn't have the Internet growing up. My family were early adopters, we had dial-up in 1994 or 1995. 14.4kbps. That kind of speed was pretty quick but nowhere near acceptable today. I have more bandwidth than I need now, and I often think that 10Mbps is enough for most things. Though my internal network is 1Gbps for wired devices. I see literally no need to upgrade to 2.5Gps or higher.

Anyway, I have been thinking a lot about going back in tech use. I am more aware of my reddit and youtube habits and find myself stopping and doing something else instead of refreshing the page or closing the apps and then opening them right back up. Digg is back and I really missed it. I like that it's smaller than it was and part of me really hopes that it stays that way. Reddit is large and full of nice and not so nice people. My tech use started with stopping to journal and collect notes on my iPad. I have moved to a small sketchbook for daily notes and a proper journal for journalling. I still make digital notes for side jobs where applicable, and I'm using this platform instead of social media to share with whomever happens to read this.

My partner and I have been casually looking into less smart phones as she's not keen to continue giving her information to Google and I'm not keen to stick with Apple. I still enjoy my apple devices, despite being less enamoured with the company and the not quite honest portrayal that they are privacy focussed. I am really annoyed that my carefully ripped CD collection is not available on my iPhone becuase some of the content is region locked. This lead me to two devices, one from a small Brooklyn firm and a seemingly Polish firm who both make distraction free handsets. There is trepidation in moving away from Apple, even though I am familiar with the alternatives. When my iPhone is no longer supported with maintenance OS updates, I will put more effort into finding an alternative handset.

I am qutie comfortable in linux and am anxiously awating the release of the Steam Machine to replace my laptop-come-desktop setup that I use when at my desk. I want the capability to move it to my TV for gaming which will be a minor task, as all I would need is power and HDMI in both places, easy for someone with my skill and knowledge. Some research needs to be done to manage music and video.

I am working toward moving back to my iPod for music and am also considering a dedicated MP3 player, though I prefer to use AAC for music. Another alternative is to use my recently brought out MiniDisc player. That is really cool tech too. I have enough MiniDiscs to have variety and found a seemingly decent app for putting music on it quicker than manually recording from the CD player. Though analog recording method has a certain appeal to it. It's similar to making mixed tapes back in the 80s and 90s.

When my iPad battery and support finally die I will have to find another way to get my RSS feeds. Perhaps I'll hack my Kobo with KOReader or pick up a second hand Kobo specifically for RSS feeds. I had the thought that I would go back to digial nottaking and get a Remarkable or Kobo Clara Colour as a notebook/eReader/RSS device. This seems less likely as my Kobo can be made to do two of these tasks and I already am making notes on paper with success.

In writing this I almost forgot the point. I wanted to share an article via Kotke with a theme that has been popping up in my various feeds.