Emails: permanent written record I can refer to later

Can reply in my own time

Low labour

Low resource use

Phone call: Times/dates mentioned will be forgotten often

Active demand of time

I don’t pick up because that phone number looks weird but also my phone’s vibrate function is weak

High labour

High data cost per information

My shrink’s office seems to want to keep billing information and past/present appointments secret. (This also seems to be worse in local industry, everything has to be a meeting instead of a two line email)

  • 12022081631 [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    10 days ago

    this is probably my brain worm talking but after degoogling i have been left with the sense that people in aggregate have lost an understanding of email in general. like i feel like a goddang nerd for hyping up email in a world where people prefer text or phone calls. am i alone in this. am i on worm pills

    • Wertheimer [any]@hexbear.net
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      10 days ago

      I prefer to email, almost exclusively. It’s so convenient and unobtrusive, and leads to more thoughtful conversation, but no one wants to check their email anymore because it reminds them of work.

      Sally Rooney’s novel Beautiful World, Where Are You? is partially an epistolary novel in the form of long emails and that gave me some hope that there are perhaps some other emailists still out there.

    • keepcarrot [she/her]@hexbear.netOP
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      10 days ago

      I feel like a text is like a short email, or email is like a long text. But it feels like a more professional/legal thing compared to in person chats/chatroom/messenger.