The horror, the horror - computer meltdown, by Elizabeth Kay
I remember the old days, when I used to write everything in
longhand, and then type it up on a manual typewriter with a sheet of carbon
paper underneath, sometimes even two, and the Tippex at my elbow. A mistake
often meant re-typing the whole of a chapter, and editing was literally a
cut-and-paste job, which could get both messy and confusing. You posted
something off with your heart in your mouth, as your top copy was the only one
worth sending out. The photocopy shop charged by the sheet, and the expense was
prohibitive.
Then along
came the ZX81, with its little silver strip of printout paper, followed by the
Spectrum. And then, suddenly, there were Amstrads and Amigas and a revolution
had taken place. Writers had deep philosophical conversations about whether
writing straight onto a computer somehow hi-jacked the creative process, and whether
our work would be the worse for it. And then along came PCs and Apple Macs, and
no one worried about that any more because they were editing heaven – you
could keep as many versions as you liked, and print out as many copies as you
wanted. And better still, you didn’t have to head off to the library for odd
bits of information either. The internet was there at your fingertips, and it
was free. Of course, there were a lot more conversations about the accuracy of
the information you found, and plagiarism, but we all learned to cope. Not just
cope – rely. Rely absolutely on that keyboard and screen, and the touch of a
button contact with agent and editor and publisher.
And now it’s
gone one step further still, and we publish our books ourselves for all sorts of reasons. The ones I've done from scratch, rather than the ones for which I've been handed back the e-rights are Ice Feathers, and Beware of Men with Moustaches.
I’ve had
two potential disasters over the last two years, which is pretty lousy luck.
The first occurred two days before I was due to head off to Rwanda. I had a
two-year-old two-in-one desktop, with a 27 inch screen and Windows 7. And yes,
the screen just went blank. A workaround with a plug-in monitor revealed that
the data was still all there, but the square screen couldn’t properly
accommodate what was intended for a wide screen, and it was unreliable and
infuriating. Quite apart from which, it shouldn’t happen to an expensive piece
of equipment that was only two years old. So off it went to the computer
hospital, and off I went on holiday, leaving the whole issue in the hands of a
long-suffering friend who was house-sitting. Nice hospital did many tests, and although
it initially looked like a virus they came to the conclusion that it was a
hardware failure. What followed were series of texts from Rwanda, Uganda and
Kenya
whenever I had a signal, which was infrequent. The upshot was that the computer was declared unfit for purpose, and I was offered a 50% refund, as the shop concerned deducted 50% for two years' wear and tear, and as long as I bought my replacement from them. Not a terribly good deal, but better than nothing. It still took a few days to get the new one on my return and everything back up and running, although I had to have Windows 8, which I loathe.
whenever I had a signal, which was infrequent. The upshot was that the computer was declared unfit for purpose, and I was offered a 50% refund, as the shop concerned deducted 50% for two years' wear and tear, and as long as I bought my replacement from them. Not a terribly good deal, but better than nothing. It still took a few days to get the new one on my return and everything back up and running, although I had to have Windows 8, which I loathe.
So imagine
the horror when first of all Skype stopped working… then Chrome…then Internet
Explorer. It was like watching a set of dominoes toppling. Uninstalling various
programs resulted in the computer refusing to boot at all, so off this one went
to the nice computer hospital down the road. Windows had corrupted, and it took
four days to get things more or less back to normal. We don’t know why – I have
good virus protection, and I opted for a swift return rather than a
comprehensive analysis of what went wrong. I also have a back-up disc, so I
knew my writing was not irretrievably lost although I wasn’t overwhelmingly
pleased at the prospect of buying Microsoft Office for a second time. I felt
like a headless chicken for those four days, even though I realised I could
work on the garden with a clear conscience…
It’s a
shock coming to terms with how entwined my life with the computer has become. I
haven’t tried writing anything in longhand for a while, so discovering that the
arthritis in my wrists wouldn’t let me do more than a few sentences was
upsetting. I couldn’t manage my money, claim teaching expenses, check traffic
before a journey, upload or access my photos… It’s too fiddly doing that sort
of thing on my phone, as all smart phones are designed for people with agile
fingers.
Eventually,
of course, the nice computer hospital fixed the problem at a very reasonable
fee, and re-installed all the programs I thought I’d lost. So here I am again,
sitting at the keyboard and feeling whole once more. You don’t have to have an
implant in your brain to feel that you’re half human/half machine. It’s a fact
of life already.
Comments
Remember, the chances of your PC going schplung are so very much higher than the chances of your cloud drive disappearing (which is so unlikely barring major geopolitical upheaval that if they did disappear, your book wouldn't be your priority anyway).
That's why all my master docs are now in the Cloud, and the ones on my PC are just there to reassure me.