Tools for Reading, wRiting and aRithmetic

The 3 Rs are the basis of education. So fundamental are these skills I inevitably use, improve and enjoy them daily. The tools needed to perform them vary, but I currently favour the following:

3rskit

Reading: Amazon Kindle

Like the Portable MP3 Player's effect on music collections, portability has changed the way I consume writing. I often have three books on the go (programming for work, something educational and a novel), I read as I walk to work and have the kindle within reach pretty much the entire day. I still have plenty of physical material, but having my entire library at hand is a real luxury. I'd be very surprised if the momentum of e-reading doesn't equal that of portable audio soon. The kindle is simple, light and lacks the distractions offered by more complex devices. Mix in some Slow-Media philosophy: using long-form reading tools like Instapaper and custom Hpricot scraping scripts, you can read web-content away from the distractions of a PC.

wRiting: Squared Whitelines Notepads (1 A4 Wire Bound, 1 Pocket), Pencils and a Kum Automatic Longpoint Sharpener

Notepad and pencil are a simple, effective, low-tech, way to record ideas. Electronics are fragile (Kindle included), transient and, comparably, hamstrung by their inputs. Tablets may be improving, but drawing and writing are elegantly straight forward and tactile the old way.

I like to have a slim, pocket, notebook to hand at all times for quick use. Moleskin's Cahire and Field Notes are great, but, to me, Whitelines are the best match with an HB pencil for readability. An A4 pad is essential for prolonged note making. I prefer squared paper as it suites diagrams, notes, equations and can be used in any direction.

I'm still experimenting with pencils (recommendations welcome), although most HBs will satisfy (I know many readers will have favourite pens, but there is a unique charm to the humble wood and graphite pencil). It is the sharpener that I think makes the largest difference, thanks to Brendan Dawes, I've discovered that Kum's Automatic Longpoint Sharpener is a cut above any other I've used. Seriously, you may scoff but it's properly cool.

aRithmetic: HP-12c Finance Calculator

My wife rolled her eyes at discovery of my HP-12c finance calculator. It looks dated, for the uninitiated, the reverse-polish input is hard to operate and it's expensive (compared with bog-standard models). But this calculator is a classic, a design that has barely evolved in the last 30 years. It hasn't changed because it doesn't need to. Scott Locklin gives a better account than I, and the mechanical Curta could be a worth contender, if I could get my hand on one.

These tools all have a certain low-tech appeal, even the kindle. They feel like a gentle antidote to the hectic computing environment in which I spend most of each day. Although the HP-12c and Kindle are digital, and require power, they do not flicker, beep or emit light - and are, largely, dependency free (provided the Kindle is amply stocked). In combination, I feel that they could provide a life-time's worth of insight and enjoyment. Throw in a reliable solar charger and these tools could make a desert island a very enjoyable place to be marooned.

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