Four Tech Answers ----------------- Here's my contribution to the "Four Questions: Tech" theme currently making the rounds. I heard about it from Anna's phlog [1], who heard about it from Ben Collver. But no one tagged me, I'm just elbowing my way in. 1. When did you first get interested in technology? Before I got interested in computers, I was what you might call a "painting geek." I don't know what they're teaching in art school these days, but back then they'd just show you a bunch of examples of different kinds of painting and let you figure out what you wanted to do and how to make it, and then critique the heck out of your floundering attempts. My teachers really frowned on the idea of teaching classical painting technique, fearing it would lead us innocent souls away from developing our own unique style or artistic statement. Also, most of my teachers had themselves been taught according to those principles, so they didn't really know much about classical technique to begin with. This approach never really worked for me, so eventually I thought I'd try teaching myself technique from books, starting with Ralph Mayer's classic "The Painters Handbook of Materials and Techniques (4th edition)," a 730 page tome which I basically had memorized at one point. I studied what you might call the "kitchen chemistry" of painting, learning all about the different pigments and their various properties; how to make a proper painting medium with damar varnish, stand oil, and turpentine; how to properly stretch a (linen) canvas with rabbit skin glue, carpet tacks, and a lead-based primer; and on and on. It didn't make me into a great painter, but it did make me a better painter, and it was interesting and a lot of fun. One thing I remember was how, even 35 years ago, it was getting harder and harder to find all the things you'd need to paint in a traditional way. Some of the pigments beloved of earlier generations were either unobtainable or incredibly expensive, and so had been replaced by more modern synthetic equivalents that didn't behave quite the same. It was surprising to learn that even very traditional technologies like oil painting were still evolving. 2. What's your favourite technology? I think agriculture was a great idea. 3. What's your current favourite? Two early loves that have lasted to the present day: print books (in my day, you whipper snappers, we just called them "books") and my bicycle. 4. Name cool tech we'll have in 25 years! As the saying goes, it's hard to make predictions, especially about the future. I'd love to see the advent of practical, liveable buildings grown from living trees, as envisioned in Rebecca Campbell's "Arboreality." References ---------- [1] agk's diary gopher://sdf.org:70/0/users/agk/2025-04-16-4q.txt Sun Apr 20 16:17:51 PDT 2025