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Plate celebrating Thoreau as pencil-maker in Library Way,
a street leading to the New York Public Library (picture FM)
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Not to forget: there is a National Pencil Day, celebrated on the 30th of March!
The new "digital" pencils use a screen as one uses paper. One can write, annotate, create notes, draw with different colors and widths, erase; one can search too, select and copy text, pictures, etc. One can use the pencil as a magnifying glass or as a laser pointer. The old pencil, the "stylus", and its associated gestures and ergonomy conquer the computer. And returns to tablets. Eternal history of media culture; the old survives in the new. The Pixelpen imitates the pencil like the Amazon Kindle imitates the book; like the computer with its keyboard has imitated the typewriter, like paper has imitated the wax tablet... Every media disruption exploits a tradition and createzs a new one.
With the new Pixelbook, a "slate" from Google, is a Pixelpen sold separately (with a cute little "pen loop" to attach the pen to the keyboard, see picture infra). The Pixelpen uses a small battery.
"Who wants a stylus?" asked Steve Job in 2007, making fun of the Palm Personal Digital Assistant. Well, the stilus is back! And, of course, "one more thing": there is an Apple Pencil that charges when attached to an iPad!
"Stilum prendere" (take a stylus), Cicero used to say some twenty centuries ago! Nothing in the media is absolutely new...
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| Pixelbook and Pixelpen (Google) |
Henry Petroski, The Pencil. A History of Design and Circumstance, New York, Alfred Knopf, 2010 (cf. chapter 9, about Thoreau: "An American Pencil-Making Family".

