What if the only door you’ve ever used to enter your own home suddenly turned into a solid brick wall, and the locksmith told you that you should have eventually built a second porch?
It is a terrifying thought because it exposes the degree to which we outsource our agency to a single string of characters. We live in a world of digital shortcuts, a land of bookmarks and “saved” states where we assume that the path we took yesterday will exist tomorrow.
But what we’re actually doing is walking across a narrow tightrope and calling it a highway. We don’t think about the rope until the wind picks up, or until the rope simply disappears, leaving us hovering over a 404-error canyon.
The Porcelain Insulator
I spent three hours this morning comparing prices for vintage porcelain insulators-the kind they used on telegraph lines in . One seller wanted $18 for a chipped one, while another was asking $52 for a “mint condition” piece that looked suspiciously like a reproduction. It’s a lot of money for a hunk of fired clay.
But as I sat there looking at the glaze, I realized that the entire history of communication once rested on these small, heavy objects. If the
