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A friend of mine called Mark Alexander is in prison, wro...
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A friend of mine called Mark Alexander is in prison, wrongly convicted of murdering his father. I know Mark from my IBM days, which means our mutual friends include the wonderful Andy Stanford-Clark and Matt Whitehead.
He’s been in prison for quite some months (good lord, they went fast :/ ), and we’ve primarily been staying in touch via a service called Email a Prisoner. You type your letter into an online form, pay 30p and hit ‘send’. It gets printed in the prison in question, popped into an envelope and delivered to the prisoner, who of course can reply by snail mail.
(Andy and I have been discussing related issues of latency — for example, hearing bad news by phone one day and receiving a happy letter from before that news the next. I believe he may write about this shortly.)
Email A Prisoner is a nice service, and has been complemented by us visiting Mark, and by phone calls between Mark and Andy (in which Andy often ends up relaying greetings!). Still, these communication mechanisms are a world away from the fast-paced world of social media, even if Email A Prisoner does make things easier: as an expat living in the Netherlands, I have much more contact with my online British friends than the offline ones.
So I was absolutely delighted when Andy and Matt implemented Tweet A Prisoner! As you might imagine, it rather does what it says on the tin — Mark has a Twitter account (tap_MA), and with a bit of technological and social jiggery-pokery is able to update it from prison. Andy’s written an excellent explanation of how the system works.
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<p><span style="font-family: arial;">A friend of mine called Mark Alexander is in prison, wrongly convicted of murdering his father. I know Mark from my IBM days, which means our mutual friends include the wonderful <a href="https://twitter.com/andysc">Andy Stanford-Clark</a> and <a href="https://twitter.com/matthew101">Matt Whitehead</a>.</span></p> <p>He’s been in prison for quite some months (good lord, they went fast :/ ), and we’ve primarily been staying in touch via a service called <a href="http://www.emailaprisoner.com/">Email a Prisoner</a>. You type your letter into an online form, pay 30p and hit ‘send’. It gets printed in the prison in question, popped into an envelope and delivered to the prisoner, who of course can reply by snail mail.</p> <p>(Andy and I have been discussing related issues of latency — for example, hearing bad news by phone one day and receiving a happy letter from before that news the next. I believe he may write about this shortly.)</p> <p>Email A Prisoner is a nice service, and has been complemented by us visiting Mark, and by phone calls between Mark and Andy (in which Andy often ends up relaying greetings!). Still, these communication mechanisms are a world away from the fast-paced world of social media, even if Email A Prisoner does make things easier: as an expat living in the Netherlands, I have <em>much</em> more contact with my online British friends than the offline ones.</p> <p>So I was absolutely delighted when Andy and Matt implemented Tweet A Prisoner! As you might imagine, it rather does what it says on the tin — Mark has a Twitter account (<a href="http://twitter.com/tap_ma">tap_MA</a>), and with a bit of technological and social jiggery-pokery is able to update it from prison. Andy’s written an <a href="http://stanford-clark.com/tap_ma/">excellent explanation of how the system works</a>.</p> |
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