Pages
▼
Making mistakes in public
If you tweet something clever that gets picked up and retweeted by an account with 500,000+ followers, you may rest assured that it will contain 1) a spelling error, or 2) a mistake in your math.
||| Comments are welcome |||
Help keep the words flowing.
||| Comments are welcome |||
Help keep the words flowing.
Twitter and the Ten Thousand Character Mistake
If Twitter is truly going to expand tweets to 10,000 characters, it will mean the death of the service. Brevity is not merely the soul of wit. It forces editing of any comment - funny, insightful, evocative, provocative, profane, or inspiring - into its purest form.
Limited space forces people to think carefully about word choice, about phrasing, about tone. Opening it up to a half-acre of text will encourage meandering, mushy, diarrheal verbosity. Verbosity is not necessarily the soul of poor speech, but it is certainly its handmaiden.
For example, here are the first 10,000 characters of a book you should buy, a book that has a few pointed things to say about verbosity and the type of people who engage in it.
||| Comments are welcome |||
Help keep the words flowing.
Limited space forces people to think carefully about word choice, about phrasing, about tone. Opening it up to a half-acre of text will encourage meandering, mushy, diarrheal verbosity. Verbosity is not necessarily the soul of poor speech, but it is certainly its handmaiden.
For example, here are the first 10,000 characters of a book you should buy, a book that has a few pointed things to say about verbosity and the type of people who engage in it.
“VERBOSITY’S
VENGEANCE - A GRAMMARIAN ADVENTURE NOVEL” BY TONY NOLAND. Chapter One. A gruesome sentence flew toward the
Grammarian, blasted from the barrel of Professor Verbosity’s latest weapon, the
Concept Cannon. Festooned with a dozen hook-like prepositional phrases, the
complex construct spun widely to ensnare the superhero. Anticipating the
attack, twin thunderclaps exploded from the Grammarian’s gauntlets as he fired
a powerful pulse of parentheses from one hand and a simultaneous shower of
semicolons from the other. The punctuations found their marks, creating nodal
points that shattered the sentence into a cloud of fragments. With an electric
shriek of memetic energy, the construct collapsed like an accordion. Discrete,
unconnected phrases bent and flexed harmlessly around the Grammarian. “Give up,
Professor Verbosity,” he said. “You should know by now that sheer weight of
words is no match for the power of punctuation!” He shifted into a fighting
stance and faced his opponent, who had backed to the far side of the room.
Professor Verbosity lifted the Concept Cannon and pulled a lever. The barrel
swiveled into an angular projection. Blue sparks shone along the length of the
weapon as electronic circuits reconfigured themselves. “Is that so, hero? Let’s
see how well you can withstand my Redundancy Ray!” “You need a new bag of
tricks, Verbosity. I’ve already seen that a dozen times. Now, give up!” The
supervillain smiled in response. “You always try to bluff your way out of
difficulty, don’t you, Grammarian? I can’t say I don’t admire the attempt to
win with words instead of brute force, but in this case, I’ll use both.” The
weapon in his hand was now shaking with barely contained power, long plasma
streamers flowing from end to end. “True, my Redundancy Ray is an old favorite,
but I haven’t shown it to you since I added the Rephraser Refractor!” Blue
lightning exploded from the weapon. In less than a second, a million
microfilaments of memetic concept energy wrapped themselves around the
Grammarian. Knocked to the ground by the force of the impact, he had no chance
to react before the energy coalesced into a single, coherent sentence. Within
the densely convoluted word-construct, the Grammarian was immobilized. It’s
about time he pulled out a real weapon, the hero thought. If I’d had to duck
and dodge much longer, he surely would have begun to realize that I was holding
back. Professor Verbosity laughed in triumph, delighted to see his foe
struggling in the grip of the memetic energy his weapon was projecting. The
Grammarian struggled even more vigorously and threw in a growl of frustration
to enhance the effect. For a moment, he thought he might have overplayed the
acting, but the hero could see that Verbosity was convinced of his triumph. Supervillains
are suckers for cliché, the Grammarian thought, every one of them. “You’ll
never win, Professor Verbosity!” He spit his archenemy’s name with obvious
contempt. Pinned to the floor under the weight and complexity of shimmering
word-memes, he fought for breath as his bonds grew ever tighter. Now, his
gasping was only partly exaggerated for effect. Although allowing himself to be
captured was part of the Grammarian’s plan to trick Verbosity into revealing
his latest plot, Lexicon City’s smartest hero feared that that he’d
underestimated his foe. Professor Verbosity laughed. “Ah, my dear Grammarian,”
he replied, “I have already won, insofar as the first and most crucial step in
winning is to render you utterly and completely helpless. These sentences are
not only long and complex enough to entangle you completely while you try to
parse out subject and object amid the subtending and supporting prepositional
and participial phrases, they are also perfectly correct grammatically, which
renders you powerless to break free!” Under the triumphant gaze of his nemesis,
the Grammarian was indeed struggling, completely snared in the thick ropes of
words. He tried to find some flaw, some grammatical mistake that he could
exploit. With all his super-powered lexicographical might, he scanned and
rescanned the sentence, though it was blindingly painful to do so. Being
captured was part of the plan; being rendered unconscious was not. He wanted
some avenue of recourse if he needed to go to one of his backup plans. Unfortunately,
Verbosity had gone to great lengths this time, figuratively and verbally. If
only there were an inconsistent verb tense, a dangling or misplaced modifier,
even an intransitive verb used transitively, but there were no grammatical
mistakes to latch onto. The Grammarian needed to get to the bottom of his foe’s
plot and time was running out more quickly than anticipated. Stepped up your
game, have you, Verbosity? Well, you always fall for a taunt, you windbag. “You’re
insane! When I break free of this sentence, I’ll put a stop to your criminal
circumlocutions!” “Typically valiant words from my typically valiant nemesis,
or rather, a defeated and broken man who once was a worthy adversary to my
rhetorical skill and encephalitic eloquence... you mustn’t try to -” “AHA! An
ellipsis! If only I can grab it in time!” “- struggle so, for as you can see,
my confounding concordances of verbal envelopment are employed without flaw, a
condition which encompasses the little ellipsis you spotted, as well as the en
dash you forced me to use - entirely against my will, but without consequence
to the strength of the bonds holding you - as well as the em dashes I just
threw in, purely as a lark, not in the sense of a bird preparing to take
flight, which would be completely inappropriate in this context, given your
utterly earthbound condition, but in the sense of a jest, a jape, a witticism
at your expense, Grammarian, for as my memes move to muffle the mouth you
muster to mock me, you are now naught but an object of ridicule and contempt,
the highest of the high made the lowest of the low, the mightiest of the mighty
made the -” With a tremendous explosion, the skylight in the ceiling of the old
factory burst inward, cutting off the flow of words threatening to choke the
life out of the Grammarian. A gleaming, armored man did a graceful back flip
through the rain of glass shards and landed perfectly in front of the
supervillain. His sleek, silvery armor was airbrushed with an iridescent
pattern that was part sunrise, part moonlight. Verbosity recoiled. “No, not
you! Not when I was so close to -” “Yes,” the newcomer interrupted, “it is me,
the Avant Guardian! Now, Professor Verbosity, face the might of the Champion of
Chic! I’m here to stop your evil plans, whatever they are!” On the floor, the
Grammarian was furiously trying to shout at the armored hero, to tell him that
his interference was going to ruin everything. Unfortunately, as the Grammarian
was completely muffled by interlocking clauses, sub-clauses and parenthetical
asides, his words were unintelligible. The Avant Guardian glanced down at the
bound superhero and puffed his chest out a little more. “I shall also rescue my
colleague, the Grammarian. There’s no way to escape, Professor Verbosity! At
all!” The villain sneered, but shifted his memetic energy projector gun away
from the Grammarian to point it at the Avant Guardian. Without the flow of
energy, the sentence-bindings lost focus, and the Grammarian felt the bonds
start to loosen. “Au contraire, you metal-clad buffoon,” Verbosity cried.
“Among the many ways to escape are -” “Save your speeches for prison,
Professor!” Punctuation marks erupted from the giant hero’s silver gauntlets, a
blinding cascade of periods, question marks, hyphens, and exclamation points. A
glittering stream of memetic energy flew like a Pelikan blue-black hurricane
into the sputtering face of Professor Verbosity; the venal viceroy of verbiage
stumbled backward, shouting a short, sharp sentence. The great splash of
punctuation rained onto the prone form of the Grammarian. With a crackling
release of energy, the serpentine syntax snare fell apart into discrete phrases
and clauses as the terminal punctuation marks lodged among the tangle of
word-memes. Each new sentence fragment glowed and hissed with latent memetic
energy. Verb forms collapsed from gerund to infinitive to simple, while prepositional
phrases folded back in onto themselves and evaporated. The Grammarian diverted
his intelligence to augment his physical strength, thrashing violently. If he
could get a hand free in time, he might yet be able to salvage the situation! Verbosity
crouched in a defensive stance and deflected another verbal assault from the
Avant Guardian. With a snarl, the Professor responded with a tight string of
overheated metaphors that caught the Avant Guardian in the thigh. His
molecular-mesh nanotech armor flashed into a shower of molten metal as the beam
raked across its surface. Sparks exploded as his armor short-circuited. The
Guardian shouted and dodged, leaping sideways across the room. He landed
heavily against a rack of tools and equipment, which collapsed on top of him.
Professor Verbosity aimed his beam to follow, clearly intending to finish off
the Avant Guardian. Before he could fire, he was knocked sideways by a wild
accusation flung by the Grammarian. The Avant Guardian pushed away the debris
and clambered to his feet. He drew a complicated-looking weapon and aimed it at
the villain. “You don’t have a prayer against me, Professor Verbosity. And once
I free the Grammarian with this sentence diagramming gun, you’ll be trapped
good! And by that I mean bad! Trapped bad!” On the floor, the struggling
Grammarian moaned with frustration. “Uh, badly! I meant badly!” His weapon
hummed in a rising pitch as it charged, green and orange indicator lights
winking along its length. Professor Verbosity didn’t respond, but swiveled his
aim and blasted the floor underneath the Avant Guardian. A rebounding wave of
energy threw the slab of concrete up to smash into the hero’s legs. He fell
back into the debris as dozens of electric discharges erupted from the knee and
ankle joints of his armor. The diagramming gun flew into the tangle of verbal
bonds around the Grammarian where it was completely caught up in the argument.
The weapon discharged, but with no rationality guiding it, the gun’s
grammatical formalism only made the sentence structures more complicated
without increasing clarity. Professor Verbosity aimed at the wordcloud and
shouted quickly, pulsing memetic energy into the bonds to renew their strength.
“Like two sides of the same coin, aren’t you? Two peas in a pod! Two birds of a
feather! Well, this will take care of two birds with one stone!” Reinforced by
the power of overused metaphor, the tangle of grasping memes grew heavier and
more leaden with every second. The Grammarian tried to speak, but the
tightening bonds were again crushing the breath out of him. From across the
room, a wrench flew in front of Professor Verbosity’s face. Startled, the
villain turned sideways, ducking under another flying tool. Half-buried amid
the wreckage of the steel shelving and obviously not yet able to stand on his
damaged legs, the Avant Guardian was grabbing and throwing anything within
reach. A fusillade of hand tools rocketed across the room; Professor Verbosity
dodged most and batted the rest away. His opponent’s concentration broken, the
Grammarian felt the bonds around his arms shift. He clawed away the muffling
memes that masked his mouth. Through a gap in the energy bindings, he brought
up his right hand and shouted, “Full stop, Professor!” He sprayed a wide stream
of terminal punctuation marks, striking the furious villain a glancing blow.
The Avant Guardian took advantage of Professor Verbosity’s partial immobility
to grab another tool and drew back for a throw. “Guardian! No!” The
Grammarian’s shout was too late. The heavy framing hammer tumbled end over end,
flying forward. The Grammarian shot another
||| Comments are welcome |||
Help keep the words flowing.