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Cyberdecks, going analog, and convivial technology

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Why This Matters

The rise of DIY cyberdecks and a renewed interest in analog and convivial technology reflect a broader movement to reclaim individual agency and authenticity in an increasingly homogenized digital landscape. This shift highlights a desire among consumers and creators to reconnect with more tactile, personalized, and community-driven tech experiences, challenging the dominance of corporate-controlled platforms. Such trends could influence future product designs, fostering more diverse and user-centric innovations in the tech industry.

Key Takeaways

People are moving away from corporate controlled tech, and making their own. How the designs of cyberdecks are being driven by women. And how medieval guilds, Luddites, and the Arts and Crafts movement are all connected to our current moment.

Within the algorithmic bubbles beneath the surface of the internet, there is a growing wave of people who are opting out of social media, opting out of technology, or simply opting out of the corpo-internet-techbubble hellscape.

As the internet flattens into a few social media platforms, with their bland - smooth - optimized - designs, we are losing the "color" of the internet. The corpo-internet-techbubble hellscape is something that you are already very familiar with. Everything feels the same, each platform copies features from their competitor, every one of the major social media platforms feels like they are created in a lab run by UI/UX designers who are desperately trying to keep you in an algorithmic prison by getting you addicted to the gambling machine that is the infinite feed. Many people have talked about this, the enshittification of the internet (and arguably everything around us), the flattening of not only aesthetics but also cultural reproduction.

There is an interesting breeze that's blowing through in certain corners of the internet at the moment. What feels like subtle shifts away from our computers and phones, and towards things we seemingly left in the past. But at the same time, an outlook on technology that both reaches into the past, and looks forward to a different future.

The things we left behind. The things we forgot. The things we miss.

We have forgotten what it means to be bored. We have forgotten what reality feels like when we aren't connected to the tendrils of a machine injecting dopamine directly into our brains - every second of every day. Our brains are collectively being stimulated around the clock. Perpetually plugged into the streams of information, videos, and notifications.

At all times, we can distract ourselves from our emotions. We can distract ourselves waiting for the elevator. Distract ourselves using the bathroom. Standing in line waiting for food, the first instinct is to reach for our phones.

Technology was supposed to connect us, and yet, we are disconnected by the constant connections. It's in this disconnection, this isolation, this growing antagonism to the systems that surround us, that the seeds of change are being planted.

People are starting to unplug and are returning to things they left behind - or seemingly were left behind but were always there. This is apparent in the rise of "journal tok", where people on TikTok are posting about returning to written journals, planners, and sketchbooks.

All of this, however, is a contradiction in and of itself, because people are posting online about how they are moving parts of their lives offline. This contradiction is important (when talking about consumerism and trends), but it's also just an indication of the current time. In order to share information, you most likely will have to share it online - to a mass audience - outside of your local/physical space.

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