Christmas, 2015 |
During the first ten years of the 21st century,
the World Wide Web bloomed with many ways to communicate simply and
economically. Because I lived with Don Starnes, who is particularly tech savvy,
I was often on the “cutting edge” of these new ways of communicating. (We joked
that Don himself was on the “bleeding edge,” suffering because he often tried
to do things with computers that were theoretically possible, but not quite
available.)
In 2001 I put up an MSN community for the Kronlokken family.
It was intended to replace a newsletter I had been editing called The
Intercoastal Hobbit. The children of my siblings were the first to sign up.
I wondered why others didn’t, but my brother reminded me that I was surrounded
by high-speed DSL lines. Others weren’t! It did limp along for a few years,
however.
By November 2002, Don made a space on his website and wrote
the HTML code for us to begin a weblog, or blog. We called it “Living in the
Flatlands,” because we wanted to write about our daily lives and some of the
ideas we had about them. I did most of the writing, though Don edited each
essay, trying to make them more universal. It was an exercise in learning how
to write for other people, though I loved the freedom of not caring who read
it, or when. When Jesse, Don’s son, graduated from high school and our lives
changed, I stopped writing for the blog and published the articles as a book,
which you can see here.
My nephew Peter Taylor, who lived with us during the early
2000’s, wrote down his experiences in a weblog he called “The Random
Englishman,” thus keeping his family and friends in England posted on his
exploits.
Google came up with its Blogger software in about the middle
of the decade, which gave anyone the space and ability to post a blog. It came
in handy for all of us when my sister Ruth and her husband Don Evans rebuilt
the family cabin in Minnesota. They used a Blogspot to keep us posted on what
was going on. The original cabin was bulldozed in 2006 and a fine new log home
was built in its stead. In my journal for June 27, 2007 I wrote, “The rafters
are going up on the cabin at Kabekona today. Every day I look at the new
photographs Ruth and Don put up. The progress is dramatic; they are ahead of
schedule. ‘We just love to go over and smell the wood!’ Ruth says.”
In May of 2008 I “succumbed” to Facebook. It was the easiest
way to communicate with a friend in Hong Kong. I loved it at first, as more and
more of my family signed on. It was thrilling when new family photos showed up
in living color. Facebook still retains some of its ability to disseminate
family news, but you do have to plow through a lot more ads and re-posts than
at first.
About the middle of the decade, I began to call my sister
Solveig in England using Skype. We set up a schedule for speaking each week
correlating our time zones. Solveig hasn’t been able to travel much, and it has
helped immeasurably to keep in touch with that part of the family. We even read
books to each other on Skype! I used Skype for other phone calls, of course,
enjoying the ability to see into someone’s life with a camera.
Don and Jesse got their first iPhones about 2008. In the
summers, I often drove Jesse from place to place, so I got a little Korean
pre-paid phone on which I learned to text (taught by Jesse) and keep in touch.
At least ten years later, I still have this little phone, which has faithfully
worked ever since. It can’t connect to the web, but it also doesn’t cost an arm
and a leg every month!
Other amazing uses of the web began in those years,
including wikipedia.org and youtube.com. It is now hard to imagine the world
without these knowledge-bases. By 2008, I had published two of my books with
iUniverse, and was outlining the characters for the series of books I called So
Are You to My Thoughts. This blog details the background and progress of
this series, which, at this writing is within sight of completion. I have just
finished a first draft of Chapter 10, with fifteen chapters to go.
I’m grateful for the advances in inexpensive personal
communication over the web in recent years. I believe the Kronlokkens are in
better touch with each other. And I am very happy to be able to use Createspace
to publish my family saga. Don is still out there, ahead of the pack, helping
me at every stage. It would be nice if I could help him. But, “I can’t be
helped,” he tells me.