#Punctuation

2026-02-12

typochondriac (noun): always believes they have made a spelling or punctuation error #typo #typochondriac #spelling #punctuation

Rajiv ChopraRajiv22
2026-02-10

Looking to enhance your writing skills? Look no further than Bill Walsh's book! A must-have for writers and editors, it's both informative and enjoyable. Check out a review here: goodreads.com/review/show/8267 and get your copy here: amzn.to/46dgKM0

Lapsing into a comma
2026-02-06

“They are alone together”*…

Andrew Trousdale and Erik J. Langer bridge the years between Robert Putnam‘s Bowling Alone and Jonathan Haidt‘s The Anxious Generation with a brief history of the trade-off between convenience and connection in America. From Zach Rauch’s introduction…

The Anxious Generation is best understood as a three-act tragedy. Act I begins in the mid-20th century, when new social and entertainment technologies (e.g., air conditioning and television) set in motion a long, gradual collapse of local community. Act II begins in the 1980s, as the loss of local community weakened social trust and helped erode the play-based childhood. Act III begins in the early 2010s, with the arrival of the phone-based childhood that filled the vacuum left behind.

This post, written by Andrew Trousdale and Erik Larson, goes deep into Act I. Andrew is a psychology researcher and human-computer interaction designer who is co-running a project on the psychological tradeoffs of progress. Erik is the author of The Myth of Artificial Intelligence, writes the Substack Colligo, and is completing the MIT Press book Augmented Human Intelligence: Being Human in an Age of AI, due in 2026. Together, they show how the isolation we experience today did not begin with smartphones but began decades earlier, as Americans, often for good and understandable reasons, traded connection for convenience, and place-based relationships for privacy and control.

Tracing these trade-offs across the twentieth century, Andrew and Erik help explain the problem of loneliness we face today, and offer some guidance for how we can turn it around and reconnect with our neighbors. Robert Putnam, who read a recent draft, described it as “easily the best, most comprehensive, and most persuasive piece on the contemporary social capital conundrum I’ve yet read.”…

Trousdale and Langer trace the social, cultural, economic, political, and technological forces that have played out from the the late 1940s to today. It is, at once, familiar and shocking. They conclude…

When we asked Robert Putnam what gives him hope, he pointed to history. In The Upswing, he reminds us that Americans faced a similar crisis before. The Gilded Age brought economic inequality, industrialization, and the rise of anonymous urban life. Small-town bonds gave way to tenements and factory floors. Trust collapsed. By the 1890s, social capital had reached historic lows — roughly where it stands today.

The Progressive reformers found this new world unacceptable, but they didn’t try to turn back the clock. Cities and factories were here to stay. Instead, they adapted, creating new forms of connection suited to their changed reality, from settlement houses for anonymous neighborhoods to women’s clubs that built networks of mutual aid. They didn’t reject modernity; they metabolized it, showing up day after day to create new institutions and communities suited to the industrialized world.

Decades ago Neil Postman observed in Amusing Ourselves to Death that we haven’t been conquered by technology — we’ve surrendered to it because we like the stimulation and cheap amusement. More recently, Nicholas Carr concludes in Superbloom that we’re complicit in our loneliness because we embrace these superficial, mediated forms of connection. Like Postman and Carr, the Progressive Era reformers understood where they had agency when technology upended their world. It isn’t in demanding that others fix systems we willingly participate in, nor is it in outright rejecting technologies that deliver real benefits — it’s in changing how we ourselves live with and make use of the tools that surround us.

There are already signs that people are willing to do this. In a small, three-day survey, Talker Research found that 63% of Gen Z now intentionally unplug — the highest rate of any generation — and that half of Americans are spending less time on screens for their well-being, and their top alternative activity is time with friends and family. And they found that two-thirds of Americans are embracing “slow living,” with 84% adopting analog lifestyle choices like wristwatches and paper notebooks that help them unplug. Meanwhile in Eventbrite’s “Reset to Real” survey, 74% of young adults say in-person experiences matter more than digital ones. New devices like the Light Phone, Brick, Meadow, and Daylight Computer signal a growing demand for utility without distraction.

Unplugging isn’t enough on its own. The time and energy we reclaim has to go toward building social connections: hosting the dinner party despite the hassle, staying for coffee after church when you’d rather go home, sitting through the awkward silence, offering or asking for help.

Ultimately, we can’t expect deep social connection in a culture that prioritizes individual ease and convenience. Nor is community something technology can deliver for us. What’s required is a change of culture, grounded in a basic fact of human nature: that authentic connection requires action and effort, and that this action and effort is part of what makes connection fulfilling in the first place.

We can form new rituals and institutions that allow us to adapt to technology, ultimately changing it to our liking. But it starts with the tools we use and the choices we make each day. If we all prioritize the individual comforts and conveniences we’ve grown accustomed to, no one else will restore the community we say we miss. No one else can. If we want deeper relationships and better communities than we have, we’re going to have to put more of our time, effort, and attention into the people around us.

History shows that we can adapt, building communities suited to changing times. The question is: Will we stay in and scroll? Or will we go out and choose one another?…

Eminently worth reading in full: “Scrolling Alone.”

In the spirit of the call for forward-looking determination, pair with “The Displacement of Purpose” from Peter Adam Boeckel (“If AI automates production, then humanity must automate compassion. Only then will progress remember what it was for.”)

[Image above: source]

* Robert Putnam, Bowling Alone (in which he also observed: “People divorced from community, occupation, and association are first and foremost among the supporters of extremism.”)

###

As we get together, we might spare a thought for Aldus Manutius; he died on this date in 1515. A printer and humanist, he founded the Aldine Press. In the books he published, he introduced a standardized system of punctuation and use of the semicolon. He designed many fonts, and created italic type (which he named for Italy).

source

And apropos the piece featured above, we might note that on this date in 1965 “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling,” the first major hit for the Righteous Brothers, simultaneously reached #1 on both the Billboard and Cash Box charts in the US as well as the UK singles chart. The song was produced by Phil Spector (who had discovered the duo at a San Francisco show) for his own label, Philles Records. All the songs previously produced by Spector for Philles featured African-American singers; the Righteous Brothers were his first white vocal act– they had a vocal style, blue-eyed soul, that suited Spector.

https://youtu.be/03iSUjHaUxY?si=OkkrUiId1p3KkMHY

#AldusManutius #AndrewTrousdale #anxiety #BowlingAlone #connection #convenience #culture #ErikJLanger #history #italic #JonathanHaidt #loneliness #music #PhilSpector #politics #printing #publishing #punctuation #RighteousBrothers #RobertPutnam #semicolon #society #Technology #TheAnxiousGeneration #YouVeLostThatLovinFeelin #YouVeLostThatLovingFeeling
Profile portrait of Aldus Manutius, a historical figure known for his contributions to printing and publishing, wearing a cap and displaying a thoughtful expression.
Sharing the best of humanity with the world, one story at a time.upworthy.com@web.brid.gy
2026-02-06

Woman's silly typo in a philosophical post is bringing thousands of people unexpected, pure joy

fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.upwo

2026-02-04

It's tragic that #AI has #colonized thoughtful #punctuation and #formatting so that now whenever we see a nicely #punctuated and #formatted piece of text, #doubt arises as to whether someone took the time to make it nice or whether it is #AIslop masquerading as fine #writing.

#enshittification

Rajiv ChopraRajiv22
2026-02-03

Looking to enhance your writing skills? Look no further than Bill Walsh's book! A must-have for writers and editors, it's both informative and enjoyable. Check out a review here: goodreads.com/review/show/8267 and get your copy here: amzn.to/46dgKM0

Lapsing into a comma
2026-02-01

Hey fedizens :FediverseSymbol:

Anybody know a trusted script¹ or extention² to automatically replace "smart" (aka "curly") quotation marks and apostrophes with straight ones?

  • Double quotation marks -- replacing “ and ” with ".
  • Single quotation marks -- replacing ‘ and ’ with '.
  • Apostrophe - replacing ’ with '.

Genuinely asking, but no reply guys please 🫶

Thanks 🩷

#AskFedi #punctuation #PunctuationMarks #QuotationMarks #apostrophe #GenuinelyAsking #NoReplyGuys

Edit: Apologies for any confusion caused. We're looking only for something basic and trusted that can replace certain characters or text strings with another. So long as we can easily configure it to replace the above, it doesn't matter if it's a more-general script or extension for replacing text.

Edit 2: We found an extention that could automagically do it for us. It's called FoxReplace. Took us a few moments to work out how it worked, but we ended up creating a rule for text only (ignoring URLs) to apply the desired substitutions automatically to the text output on any rendered web page on a page load/reload.

¹ Compatible with violentmonkey.
² Compatible with Firefox or Firefox-based browsers.

Public Domain Image Archivepdimagearchive
2026-01-30

Exclamation Point or Note of Admiration (1824) by Mr. Stops, from Punctuation Personified.

Source: Bryn Mawr College Library / Internet Archive

Available to buy as a print.

pdimagearchive.org/images/413e

Coloured engraving of punctuation
Rajiv ChopraRajiv22
2026-01-27

Looking to enhance your writing skills? Look no further than Bill Walsh's book! A must-have for writers and editors, it's both informative and enjoyable. Check out a review here: goodreads.com/review/show/8267 and get your copy here: amzn.to/46dgKM0

Lapsing into a comma
2026-01-25

The asterisk*.

 

* sometimes mistakenly called an asterick.

#punctuation #asterisk #fyp #humor #Humour #grammar #comedy

2026-01-24

The period or full stop.

#punctuation #fyp #grammar #period

Manic Pixie Dream Grandpampdg
2026-01-24
2026-01-22

The Guardian editors seem to have taken the day off... 😂

#Punctuation #Grammar #EatsShootsAndLeaves #Chuckle

Screenshot of the Science Weekly podcast page which uses incorrect punctuation. The headline reads "How positivity affects health, the rise of scabies and bovine intelligence"
IndieAuthors.Social Newsindieauthornews@indieauthors.social
2026-01-14

What Punctuation to Use With Bullet Points

And other tips related to writing, or editing, bulleted lists Continue reading on The Writing Cooperative »
writingcooperative.com/what-pu

#marketing #education #writing #punctuation #writingwell

Sharing the best of humanity with the world, one story at a time.upworthy.com@web.brid.gy
2026-01-08

My Gen Z kids see periods in my texts as 'aggressive.' Nope. They're really not.

fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.upwo

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