The difference over twenty years, in the making of ET since 1985,
includes the vanishing away of paper files. In a cabinet beside my desk
I have A–Z files for the many people who literally ‘wrote’ – that is,
typed – to me on paper. I almost never consult any of those files now,
and don’t remember when I last added a sheet to them. Instead, of
course, I check my email, which piles up electronically in non-real
space somewhere inside this machine in front of me. And, though I
strive to keep my records straight, I seldom check back very far or go
into e-files of old e-mails. And, most days, whether in Cambridge or in
Hong Kong, I read daily e-abstracts from my much-prized Edinburgh
newspaper, The Scotsman, and don't recall when I last saw, leave alone
bought and read, a conventional paper edition of it.