No, it’s not 1960. So, why the hell am I calling paper a “killer app”? I mean, this is a technology that first came into being in 200AD. That’s almost as old as the Nokia 3310.
Well, despite being a Macbook Pro and Blackberry toting technologist, I still have a soft-spot for paper. I plan all my articles on , which I never leave the house without. I use it to design the architecture of web apps and software. I mock-up designs with it. I couldn’t work without paper
Whilst old-hat, Paper can be a more potent tool for productivity than a computer or a touch device, and shouldn’t immediately be dismissed. Not convinced? Here are six reasons why paper is still relevant.
It’s quick. Really quick.
I was at a local technology event, speaking to the founder of a technology startup. The night was approaching its conclusion, and we still hadn’t finished our conversation. It was decided to table our conversation for another day, and to swap e-mail addresses so that we could arrange to go for a drink later in the week.
I reached into my pocket and pulled out my trusty (and beloved) Blackberry Q10. After mistyping my device password twice, I eventually managed to log in, load up the contacts app and thumb in the email address. Two minutes later, my phone was back in my pocket. Mission accomplished.
Him? He reached out into his bag, took out a pad of paper and a pen, and wrote down my email address.
Guess which one took longer? Yep. You guessed it. Not paper. Sometimes the technological solution isn’t the quickest or most elegant solution. Crazy, right?
When Drawing and Designing, Paper Is Still King
Creating wireframes, preliminary designs and database diagrams on a computer is easy.
Just kidding. It’s a living hell. I mean, have you ever tried to design a database with all of its cardinalities and relationships ? Horrid. It’s just an accepted fact that the mouse isn’t a precise instrument in the way pen and paper is. There just isn’t the same degree of fine control when you have a pen gripped between forefinger and thumb.
You know what isn’t horrid? Pen and paper. You don’t need to mess with moving your mouse pixel by pixel. Sure, you could get a graphics tablet, but that’s expensive.
There’s a degree of craftsmanship with pen and paper that doesn’t really exist in the digital realm. Which is why paper reigns supreme here.
Technology-Driven ADD Becomes A Thing Of The Past
When I wrote the previous point, I had Firefox running in the background with ten tabs open. Then I heard the all-familiar ‘pling’ of Facebook letting me know someone had sent me a message. Then I looked at my timeline and saw an interesting article someone had posted from The New York Times. Then I forgot about the piece I was writing and checked Reddit to see if anything interesting had hit the front page.
Thirty minutes after checking Facebook, I finished that section.
The reality is, we live in a world where being distracted is the default. Focus is a thing of the past, as demonstrated by the ocean of and keeping us attentive and diligent. But in the world of pen-and-paper, there’s nothing really to distract you. No cute, captioned cat pictures. No Upworthy. Not even an outstandingly awesome technology blog (ahem).
Just you, and the page.
Momentum. You get it in buckets.
Have you ever been ‘in the zone’?
You’re unstoppable. Words flow from your hands to the page with the sheer force and determination of a salmon heading upstream. And then Windows tells you that there’s a new update to install and it’s going to restart in 10 minutes time, but not before Clippy shows up and asks if you need a hand. And then someone sends you an IM.
The momentum dissipates. You spend the next hour staring hazily into your screen, wondering what went wrong. You write 10 words, and you feel as though you’ve written 1000.
Sounds familiar? The great thing about using pen and paper is that when you get focused, it’s hard to lose it. There’s nothing to distract you, except yourself. You write and write, until you can’t write any more. Bliss.
You Can Write Whenever, Wherever.
I’m not happy if I’m not traveling.
Seriously. I live to be cramped onto a Ryanair flight, breathing recycled air, drinking £5 mini cans of Pepsi and fighting with whoever is sitting next to me for control of the arm-rest.
What I don’t enjoy is having to turn off my laptop and stow it away for no apparent reason at the start of a flight. No, I don’t. Moreover, very few airlines come with power sockets. Certainly not the budget airlines that are the mainstay of European travel.
You know what doesn’t require batteries and can be used during landing and take-off? You guessed it. Paper. You can work, and you can do so without being disturbed by the landing and take-off.
You Remember What You Write
When was the last time you wrote something? I mean pen-on-paper, old-school handwriting. Have you ever thought about how you focused on the page, watching each stroke of the pen combining with others to form words and meaning.
Just think about that motion. Just think about the connection between your mind and the page, and how you’re focused on what you write.
There’s a reason why we remember hand-written notes. It requires focus. There’s mountains of peer-reviewed evidence which conclusively shows that hand-writing notes ensures greater memory retention. From the
abstract of a paper on the subject:
Recent data support the idea that movements play a crucial role in letter representation and suggest that handwriting knowledge contributes to visual recognition of letters. If so, using different motor activities while subjects are learning to write should affect their subsequent recognition performances. In order to test this hypothesis, we trained adult participants to write new characters either by copying them or by typing them on a keyboard. After three weeks of training we ran a series of tests requiring visual processing of the characters’ orientation. Tests were ran immediately, one week after, and three weeks after the end of the training period. Results showed that when the characters had been learned by typing, they were more frequently confused with their mirror images than when they had been written by hand. This handwriting advantage did not appear immediately, but mostly three weeks after the end of the training. Our results therefore suggest that the stability of the characters’ representation in memory depends on the nature of the motor activity produced during learning.
If you’re trying to remember the finer-points of a university lecture, or just what you need to buy from the supermarket, you’ll do well to skip typing it up, and just write it down in a notebook.
Conclusion
More focused. More productive. More retention. The benefits of paper speak for themselves. Do they make up for the downsides, such as a slower writing speed and inconsistent legibility? That’s for you to decide. Let me know what you think in the comments below.
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