Wireless Postcards

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The reason that my blogs are a little depopulated this week is that I’m on holiday in Nimes in the South of France. We’re staying in the tiny pedestrianised old city centre that dates back to Roman times. The marble like flagstones of the little narrow medieval streets are shiny clean and the pale stone of the buildings glare white against a blue cloudless sky. Used to weak English light, my eyes are tired from the brightness and my skin is tingling from the blaze of the sun.

I love the contrast of the ancient medieval streets and the trendy boutiques along them, sparking with the latest lifestyle "objets" for the 21st century shopper - including a PC shop and a Mac shop. I also love the grandiose Roman buildings that that ancient imperial power left behind here, as they did throughout much of Europe. The arena that used to host gladiatorial combats and Christians being fed to the lions is one of the best preserved in the world - and now hosts concerts (we just missed French pop singer Vanessa Paradis) and bull fights. The remaining central section of a Roman temple built around 2000 years ago is now an air-conditioned cinema. I can never get my head round how old some of these still-functional Roman edifices are, with their intricate hand carved decorative motifs that are so alive and fresh.

A few years ago I would be browsing through postcards and sitting down at cafes to write notes about all these sights to post to friends back home. But technology has changed all that. I’m texting my family little snippets every day: what we refer to as "blow by blow" accounts. I’m snapping photos on my phone to email to a few friends and to my Flickr account. And I’m writing this blog post on my phone, too - as an email to my Utterz account which should automatically upload to my two blogs.

Now all I need to do is find a free wireless hotspot so I can despatch these "wireless postcards" - which shouldn’t be too difficult as the whole city seems to be flooded with wireless networks, according to my phone.

Mobile post sent by yangmayooi using Utterzreply-count Replies.

4 Responses to “Wireless Postcards”

  1. Monica Surfaro Spigelman Says:

    I love your description here and your utterz post (I saw Barbara G twitter comment)…but I don’t completely agree — there still needs to be a place for postcards which provide another dimension to communication. we can’t lose this talent for crafting prose with different tools (pen, ink, stamp, etc.) I am an IABCer for years, now quasi-retired in Tucson AZ, but still freelance and love my craft. Good luck to you. I subscribed to your feed.

  2. Yang-May Ooi Says:

    Hi Monica, it’s true that there is definitely something lovely about having a tangible object coming through the door in the handwriting of a friend or family member. I use postcards people send me as book marks so they always remind me of my friends whenever I’m reading.

  3. Melanie Crowe Says:

    You also can’t stick a wireless postcard on the fridge.

    I’m so impressed that you have the inclination to blog while on holiday. Compared to you I’m a hermetic luddite.

    I’m such a slacker I’ve been known to get my digial photos printed off 2 years later and then it’s taken another year to get them in a frame and on the wall. Tsk, Tsk! I should just take a photo and send it to family right then and there. So much more organized!

  4. Yang-May Says:

    Melanie, we gave up on hard copy photos shortly after three rolls of film we sent to a mail order photography company was lost by that company and a whole holiday was wiped from record. It was so depressing.

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