64 lines
3.3 KiB
Markdown
64 lines
3.3 KiB
Markdown
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---
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layout: post
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title: "Inky and the Brain"
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tags:
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- opinion
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---
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You might not be surprised to know that among my many views and opinions, I
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have given serious consideration to writing instruments. While much of my day
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is consumed by typing away on the keyboard, I carry no fewer than three
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notebooks with me at all times, filling each with tasks, ideas, designs, and so
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on. The paper notebook for me is a scratchpad for my own thought process. There
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are numerous spiral bound pages in my office which hold early designs for many
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of the products I have built, and probably more from those more crazy designs
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which I was not able to build.
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What makes writing enjoyable for me, depends on a number of qualities which
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aren't found any pencils nor in most pens:
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* _Wet_: since I'm right-handed and don't run the risk of dragging my hand
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through my own writing, I find that a very fluid and wet pen allows me to
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comfortably scribble notes as fast as I possibly can.
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* _Smooth_: Related to the wetness of a pen, a smooth roll is very important. I
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find that ballpoint pens don't glide as effortlessly across the page as I
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would like. With pencils, I always feel like I have to etch the page to get a
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decently thick stroke.
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* _Clicky-top_: While I can work with capped pens, I abhor those pens which
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screw outward. I've never understood their appeal. I most often see them in
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hotel rooms, which leads me to believe they're intentionally dysfunctional to
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prevent theft, just like those curve-less hangars in the wardrobe.
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* _Comfortable_: I consider my hands to be very dextrous but they are large
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and my fingers long. The strain from holding a narrow writing utensil
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results in too much frustration to be worth the trouble. Pens with a larger
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section towards the point tend to sit more comfortably in my hand for
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extended periods of time.
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For over a decade, I have been a big fan of the **Pilot G2** "Gel" pen. I would
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purchase boxes of these pens and then snarl at anybody who attempted to pilfer
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one for their own uses. Consistently, I would use a single G2 all the way until it
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had expended its last bit of ink. Then, assuming nobody else had exhausted my
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supply, I would start in on the next pen sitting in the box.
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Recently however, I have adopted a simple fountain pen. One which I purchased at an
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office supply store over a year ago, with which I hadn't previously bothered
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spend time.
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The flow on the fountain pen is **phenomenal**. It is strong enough that I
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intentionally purchased some new notebooks with a bit more thickness in the
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page in order to reduce bleed-through. The heavier weight of the fountain pen
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also feels much nicer in
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my hand, and in turn makes my notes feel much more consequential, even the
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trivial scribblings in between meetings.
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One aspect of the fountain pen which I didn't fully appreciate, when compared to the G2
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and other such pens, is that the fountain pen results in _far_ less waste.
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Rather than throwing out a 7" piece of plastic every few weeks, I'm plopping a
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little cartridge into the same pen over and over.
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If you're not already happily writing notes, don't consider this an endorsement
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for a specific type of pen, but instead, a challenge to explore the wide variety
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of pens and pencils out there. Even with poor quality hand-writing like mine,
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the right tool will make your written words that much more enjoyable to write.
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