Interview Review: Barbara Glass
Barbara Glass is an energetic individual. Her office is covered in pictures of her children and grandchildren and post-it notes are stuck on most surfaces. A well-thumbed copy of Successful Writing at Work sits atop a filing cabinet, highly appropriate as Glass is Coordinator of the Professional Writing Minor at Ohio State.
Glass has worked in the publishing field in one way or another for the last twenty-odd years. She now coordinates internships for students minoring in Professional Writing. In an interview last week, Glass discussed her love for the personal computer as well her thoughts on the direction technology is taking the publishing field.
Much of the conversation revolved around the positives attributes of a technologically-focused work environment, but Glass has had her share of horror stories. “Sure, I’ve had a virus” that destroyed an entire harddrive, she said. Much of her work had to be recreated, but Glass chalked it up to the risk you take while using a computer.
In the computer world, patience truly is a virtue. While Glass says her husband gets easily frustrated when he runs into computer trouble, she tries to calm down and focus on what the problem might be, rather than turning to the phone and her twenty-six-year-old son (coincidentally the owner of a Computer Science degree)
Though Glass has had moments, like all of us, in which she curses the technology she depends upon, she does have high hopes for what new advances will come her way in the next few years. Glass described what she calls “e-books:” a tablet-sized computer that holds “an entire library:” a veritable iPod for books. “Books” would be purchased and downloaded for a mere fraction of the current textbook cost. In this scenario, shipping and energy costs would be drastically reduced. However, it may take more than one generation of students to throw away books and accept reading everything on a computer screen.
“The personal computer is the greatest thing in the world,” Glass declared when asked what her “desert island” technological item is. A quick look around her office, however, shows that while Glass relies heavily on the PC, she still uses some “stoneage” technologies: when she recieved a phone call during the interview, she used her planner, held open by many rubber bands, and wrote everything down on a yellow legal pad with a No. 2 pencil. During all this, she did not use the computer once.
Though the PC affords many conveniences, some things are best left to pencil and paper. Old habits die harder than technology would like them to, it seems.



