HudsonHawk
I'll Lock Up
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Analog clocks.
I recall seeing digital clocks going back more than half a century, and I’m guessing they were seen in certain industrial and professional contexts well before then.
But they certainly haven’t made the analog clock obsolete. Judging from their continuing ubiquity, I’m left to conclude that people generally prefer analog clocks over digital readouts. What’s at the heart of it, I suspect, is the knowing at a glance just where over the course of the day we find ourselves at a particular moment, as it provides a map of half the day and says “you are here.”
Is it that the analog clock is itself modeled on the sundial? It would seem so.
A few years ago there was a thread about public clocks...the kind you'd see on the corner of a building or on a pedestal in a public square or market. They used to be everywhere. I enjoyed that.
At any rate, I can't stand to read time digitally. I refuse to wear a digital watch, because when I read it's 7:12, I have to translate that in my mind to "the little hand is on the seven, the big hand on the twelve". Plus, I like mechanical things. I like seeing moving parts, wheels turning, buttons to be pushed, etc. It's the same reason I like turntables and reel-to-reel tape players.