An update.
So paper continues to be on the way out in our daily lives. Or so it seems, perhaps reinforced by the need to be more contactless, surfaceless and storageless in this Age of Technological Revolution.
It can be interesting we are not always offered the paper receipt or invoice at cafes, newsagents, produce outlets and eating places, as the transaction is already captured online. If you want a copy of the receipt, you have to give an email address - and such email addresses can be further possibly be spamned or hacked.
Paper based products are still gooxld to blow a nose, absorb the excess oil after a deep fry and in demand for our delicate bums after answering Nature's call. Yet the wheels of contemporary commerce discourage paper trails with their consumers, embedding the writing in the wall for printers and the use of the still pervasive suburban post box.
Paper shredders can go the way of the extinct Dodo bird. People may still enjoy the feel of the ever shrinking daily newspaper and love their grilled fish served on printed paper. The disposable virus protector face mask is essentially crafted from paper layering. Magazines are no longer the companions on rainy days, long train rides and at afternoon tea sessions at home that they once were. Are trees being saved with a reduced usage of paper, or trees are depleted anyway for other stronger reasons?
Electronic screens are increasingly held more than paper pages. Libraries and street bookshops are still significant custodians of knowledge on paper despite it all. The vulnerabilities of holding knowledge and information on paper are highlighted by the storage of things and data on virtual clouds and internet files, but the latter has other risks inherent and subject to hacking, contamination and identity theft.
Butcher paper, art materials and Origami still retain an elegance and usefulness about paper. The historical transformation of paper originating from papyrus reeds to its important role in spreading knowledge and equity, as accessible printed items can never be underestimated.
Contemporary technology has led us to increasingly abandon paper as a medium, but perhaps paper will still be utilised for other but more niche purposes. The role of paper as money in currency circulation has also been questioned, as governments moved to plastic at the close of the 20th century and then to digital monies in the 21st.
Paper has served to facilitate the societal arrangements and needs of humankind for a long time. Their creation, destruction and disposal has meant various things in different cultures and religions. Paper has been laminated, bound and preserved. We used to put down our innermost thoughts, write our qualifying exams and declare our economic transactions mostly on paper.
Stationery still comes in countless forms on paper despite the advent of the digital age. Our writing instruments still require paper instead of non paper materials. It may be still too early to witness the demise of paper use.
#yongkevthoughts
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