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    analogexperience

    Explore "analogexperience" with insightful episodes like "Ep. 223: Could This Meeting Have Been An Email?" and "#289: Revenge of Analog" from podcasts like ""Deep Questions with Cal Newport" and "The Art of Manliness"" and more!

    Episodes (2)

    Ep. 223: Could This Meeting Have Been An Email?

    Ep. 223: Could This Meeting Have Been An Email?

    Get your questions answered by Cal! Here’s the link: bit.ly/3U3sTvo

    DEEP DIVE: Could This Meeting Have Been An Email? [5:48]
    bit.ly/3EDcuZ0

    Questions for special guest host David Sax:

    - Is the Light Phone worth the money? [28:38]
    - How do I get started seeking higher quality leisure? [38:43]
    - How do I become a successful freelance writer? [49:01]

    - How do I make technical writing compelling?  [1:08:03]
    - How do I kick my podcast habit while trying to work? [1:15:06]
    - Do weekly plans have to cover exactly one week? [1:18:44]
    - Should I join the Overemployed Underground? [1:26:36]


    Thanks to our Sponsors:

    mybodytutor.com
    eightsleep.com/deep
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    zocdoc.com/deep

    Thanks to Jesse Miller for production, Jay Kerstens for the intro music, and Mark Miles for mastering.

    #289: Revenge of Analog

    #289: Revenge of Analog

    "Software is eating the world," or so we’re told. Products that once took up physical space can be contained in our smartphones and held in the palms of our hands. Instead of having a record collection, now we can stream any music any where and any time we want. Instead of shelves and shelves of books, we can have access to thousands of volumes in our Kindle app. Instead of stacks of photo albums, we can store a virtually unlimited collection of pictures in the digital cloud.
    But in the cultural background to this digital shift, there’s been a silent rebellion brewing.
    My guest tracks that rebellion in his book, "The Revenge of Analog." Today on the show, David Sax and I talk about why we’re seeing a return to analog products like vinyl records, hardcopy books, and pen and paper -- and it’s not because of nostalgia. David goes into detail about the sudden revival of vinyl and turntables and why it’s more than just some hipster fad, why hardcopy book sales are going up while ebook sales are declining, and why writing with pen and paper unleashes creativity compared to typing or writing on a screen. He then gets into how the internet is counterintuitively driving this upsurge of interest in tangible products and the benefits we get psychologically, culturally, and economically by living in an analog world.