I'd probably have to subscribe, even though I'm a terrible conversationalist.
Shit, What's the fee?
No fee =) Just won't give my address out to anyone I'm not reasonably familiar with online.
I wonder sometimes, if using computers and the internet like I do is making me a less complete/effective person. I know I spend a good chunk of my days playing video games, chatting online, and watching silly videos... but I also look up a great deal of interesting information, write and read narratives, and keep updated with what's going on in the world with computers too. At the very least, it'd be an interesting experiment, to not use computers for a month or two, and I know of others who plan to do the same. I might try it at some point, but once I graduate I'm going to be at sea without technology for several months at a time... at least until I start Grad school. I'll get plenty of chances to check then, I bet.
To be honest, I want to learn how to live without relying on electronics. I have this recurrent fear that I'm going to end up in the wilderness with nothing but a knife (or perhaps not even that) and ... well, simply not know what to do. Or maybe mutant zombie apocalypses, or WWIII, or an earthquake, or whatever. I think it's important to be able to survive, nice modern contrivances or no. It's also a very interesting thought problem, as one extends the "time of survival without x amount of infrastructure" and considers the possibility of rebuilding society from the ground up.
I think the internet can be extraordinarily useful, but when I look at things realistically, most of my time spent on the computer is fairly wasteful and doesn't even make me all that happy. It's easy, and it's fun, and I have been learning a lot--but soon enough, I'm going to be at a university filled with millions of fantastic books and tens of thousands of interesting people. Do I really want to take my crutch along with me, leaning on it rather than forcing myself out of my comfort zone? Not really.
Besides, I need time to learn how to maintain my typewriter, darn my socks, and sew myself clothing. I'm also hoping to learn how to build furniture. Somewhere along the line, I realized I'd rather own less and make it myself, so that all the decisions in the process are really mine. It's nice to polish one's shoes up and oil them when they look worn, rather than closeting them when they become "unpresentable" in fine society. Thinking about all this stuff encourages one to buy things that are made to last...