Talk nerdy to me :D

  • Hemingways_Shotgun@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    Old mechanical things.

    The Japanese have a myth called tsukomogami. It’s the idea that things get a soul after 100 years.

    And while I don’t believe that’s technically true, per se. It’s fundamentally based on something that I adore, and that’s the fact that mechanical things all age individually and that it’s something that we’ve lost with modern technology.

    My go to examples are always typewriters and vintage camera lenses.

    Each typewriter will age differently. Different keys will become sticky, it’ll become misaligned in different places. They develop individual personalities as they get older. So much so that forensics can actually pinpoint when a specific typewriter typed a specific note.

    In terms of camera lenses it’s much the same thing. Different lenses will wear differently depending on what aperture/focal length, etc… that the photographer uses most often. Mold and discolouration between the glass elements will eventually form a unique look to a specific lense.

    It’s magical (to me) and something that I am sad that we are losing with modern consumer technology based on on “throw it away and get a new one”.

    Sorry. Longer than I intended. But you asked for it.

    • BurntWits@sh.itjust.works
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      18 hours ago

      I’m super into mechanical watches for the reasons mentioned. Quartz (battery operated), not so much. But I’ve got a growing collection of mechanical watches and they’re some of my favourite possessions. Not because they’re flashy and make me look rich or whatever but because of the mechanisms inside.