Subject: If it aint broke, don't fix it
Author:
Posted on: 2011-03-05 22:05:00 UTC
While it's true that spelling and grammar can change, that doesn't necessarily mean that they will.
We are well past the conception of the English language, the point where it stopped being a corrupted mishmash of a half-dozen intermixed languages and became a language in it's own right. Nor are we in the Shakespearean era, where a single man could sign his name in twelve different ways and still be recognized as the same person.
The English language today has hundreds of years of standardization, which I think has only been strengthened by the availability of relevant technology. What we have has been formed, tried, tested, and kept because it was effective. The language has been, for the most part, debugged, and major changes - in my opinion - are unlikely.
Roman monuments - the ones carved in stone - had no punctuation. Why? Because when it takes you a half an hour to carve any given punctuation mark, it's not really worth the effort.
Documents from the age of the printing press had both punctuation and lowercase letters because written communication was primarily done by hand. large numbers of identical documents could be produced, but all the originals were done by hand. What you didn't see a lot of were italics, because italics were expensive - you had to pay for an extra set of letters in order to have them in your document. Expense equals rarity, so italics were only added when something was really, really important.
These days, with word processors and laser printers, italics are commonplace; so common, in fact, that they have effectively replaced quotation marks for internal dialogue. Someone - I don't know who - got tired of pointing out that half the quoted dialogue in his book was internal and went Hey, what if I use a different format to indicate internal dialogue? Well, it worked. In fact, it worked so well that it's hard to find a novel that doesn't use italics to indicate internal dialogue.
Ease creates complexity, and complexity requires structure.
So then why isn't chatspeak more complex than the written word, since it's easier? Except that it's not, because chatspeak isn't the use of the written word to convey information, chatspeak is the art of using the written word as verbal conversation. It's an attempt to simulate the spontaneity of the spoken word in written form, and the interfaces used to do so are not really designed for it.
Chatspeak isn't really the next step in the evolution of the English language it's an entirely new facet of the language, built for a medium that the world has no precedent for. I suspect that as interfaces become more intuitive, the complexity of chatspeak will come closer to that of the written word, rather than vice-versa.
Or at least I hope it will.