←back to thread

Why I hate the index finger (1980)

(pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
255 points consumer451 | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.201s | source
Show context
DiggyJohnson ◴[] No.42184584[source]
Worth the read.

I am so worried that we as a society have lost the ability to write well, and risk losing the ability to recognize and appreciate good writing. Rote professional written communication skills are changing and diminishing. The written word is generally seen to be a burden. Anyways, bittersweet thoughts from a really funny article.

replies(7): >>42185100 #>>42185215 #>>42185926 #>>42187271 #>>42187701 #>>42189885 #>>42189964 #
codexb ◴[] No.42187701[source]
Up until recently, there always seemed to be a marked difference between the way people spoke vs how they conveyed thoughts in writing. These days, it often feels like most writing is just conversational and stream of consciousness and differs little from how many people speak.

It always makes me curious how we generally view the people of antiquity as speaking very eloquently and properly, but that's probably because we only have writings from their time, not recordings of how they actually spoke.

replies(2): >>42189842 #>>42194749 #
1. grahamj ◴[] No.42194749[source]
tbf with the advent of text messaging and the internet a much greater proportion of text is conversation