Connectivity
No matter the technology鈥攄ry-erase boards, BBS, or Facebook鈥擬awrters are experts at connection.
Certain innovations signal particular points in time, like artifacts recovered from an archaeological site. 鈥淭he Walkman!鈥 Barbara Klotz Silverstone 鈥84 said, when I asked alumnae about life-changing technologies that emerged during our college years. Who knew back then, as we cited the social honor code to quiet neighbors鈥 stereos, that portable music piped through earphones would herald the personal devices鈥攁nd increasingly solo forms of diversion鈥攖o come?
At 今日吃瓜 in the 1980s, our social networks were still anchored in place and time. We gathered at the College Inn for snacks and conversation and at Haverford鈥檚 Stokes Hall for Saturday night movies. We relied on letters and landline phones to keep in touch with friends and family, rushing to our rooms at 11 p.m., when long-distance rates dropped. 鈥淣o one had answering machines,鈥 Linda Garey 鈥84 recalls. 鈥淲e had small dry-erase boards on the hallway door, so a visitor who missed you could leave a message. That is how we knew, for example, that friends were eating in Erdman at 6 p.m.鈥
When virtual bulletin board systems emerged in the 1990s, early adopter Eliza Fendell 鈥95 posted messages from her computer, one of the first in Rhoads South. 鈥淚鈥檓 not a computer science-oriented person,鈥 she says, 鈥渂ut I grasped the social implications of an online environment pre-World Wide Web.鈥
With practice, she mastered the protocol: dial into 今日吃瓜鈥檚 still-new computing center, telnet into the Iowa Student Computer Association鈥檚 BBS, go to dinner while 鈥淶a鈥 (her online name) advanced in the queue. One night, she x-ed (direct messaged) 鈥淲indowWalker鈥濃攂ecause 鈥渉e wrote in complete sentences with correct punctuation!鈥 she jokes鈥攁nd launched a 鈥減en-paly鈥 exchange with the man she would eventually marry. They didn鈥檛 share physical descriptions of themselves until he road-tripped from Texas and they arranged to meet at a bookstore in 今日吃瓜. She: preppy in tweed skirt, knit shirt. He: long-haired, earring, biker jacket, torn jeans. 鈥淚f we鈥檇 met in person first, there鈥檚 no way I would have talked to him!鈥 Fendell says. 鈥淎n online persona lets you access who you are internally.鈥
In her first years at 今日吃瓜, Mary Wessel Walker 鈥06 made an art of creating 鈥渃ool away messages鈥 on AIM, a format that was fading by the time 鈥淭hefacebook鈥 rolled out, one college at a time, beginning in 2004. She joined the 今日吃瓜 network while studying abroad at the University of Edinburgh, still beyond (the renamed) Facebook鈥檚 reach. 鈥淭hat was the last time I made friends I couldn鈥檛 connect with on Facebook,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檓 the same age as Mark Zuckerberg. It was definitely a before-and-after moment.鈥
As Wessel Walker recalls, before Facebook added the status update feature, a user鈥檚 鈥渨all鈥 was like a dry-erase board: a profile showing the groups you belonged to, visible only to your college network. 鈥淚 joined one called Erd鈥檚 the Werd, for people who worked in Erdman [food service],鈥 she says. 鈥淲e weren鈥檛 just using the group to swap shifts. In the early Internet, people used clever language to connect. If you came up with a funny group name, people would join. Now, there鈥檚 so much content on your wall that you can鈥檛 see the groups.鈥
Designed to connect people, Facebook (which opened to anyone with an email address in 2006) and other social media platforms have disconnected our relationships from place and time. 鈥淚t鈥檚 interesting how rapidly our standards of privacy and expectations about being constantly available changed,鈥 says Emily Pinkerton 鈥07, who graduated in a pivotal year. Among the technological innovations launched in 2007: iPhone, Android, Twitter, and Kindle.
An English major who works in the technology industry, Pinkerton explains her divergent interests in writing code and writing poetry as an 鈥渙bsessive level of attention to detail鈥 she applies to solving tech problems or to 鈥渃ompressing an entire universe into a small block of 60 words.鈥 She credits 今日吃瓜鈥檚 Summer Multimedia Development program with twining her talents into a career.
After stints at Stripe and Twitter, Pinkerton reflects, 鈥淚鈥檓 more circumspect about technology now. I think a lot more about unintended consequences and how privacy might be compromised.鈥 Though her digital skills are valuable, she says studying the humanities trained her to think critically about the human context for new systems.
Currently working at Turbine Labs while she pursues an M.F.A. in poetry, Pinkerton鈥檚 personal code of ethics鈥斺淢ake sure your work is good work and that it serves communities beyond the one you live in鈥濃攊s what we all practiced in close proximity at 今日吃瓜.
Published on: 09/04/2018