Ooh, interesting one! On the face of it (metaphorically, although the faces of our clocks are indeed analog[ue], including a 250 year old one), yes, Reg is BB's Fred Dibnah. Actually for many reasons Stu is a much better example as Fred. Maybe I'm Fred's mate Alf then.
Need much more time to think this through but I lean towards things that give me pleasure and maximum sensory input - what a hedonist eh? I'm the opposite of Spinal Tap, rather than my amp/speakers turned up to 11, I like my microphone turned up to 11. Not quite the right analogy (analogueology?) but it'll do.
So, I'm very interested in new stuff and how stuff works, but certainly with tools/equipment/experiences I'll choose what tickles all five (six?)
senses rather than just one or two (or none), and is probably 'simple' or at least not over-functioned, and that often means 'analogue':
Map (usually out of date

) over GPS etc.
Book over Kindle.
Vinyl over Stream.
Cooker over microwave.
Handsaw over electric saw.
'Real fire' (or jumper!) over underfloor heating.
Bike over e-ebike.
Brain over computer.
etc
Sometimes my choices are the possibly less 'eco' ones, so a guilt trip there, but often more so.
It raises the question of what
is analogue and what is digital? We seem to be equating analogue/digital with simple/technological (and this is time-based anyway; wheels and axes were cutting-edge (axe,geddit?) technology once). Sine wave, square wave? At the quantum level - wave or particle? Or both? Maybe it's like fractals,
no lines are 'straight'?
Everything is analogue?
I'm on dangerous ground as MuddyPete says: earned my crust dabbling in IT for a while. Even during my degree I got, apparently unprecedently, full marks for the Turing Machines part of one module - what a weirdo. However I'm very proud to say I never once used a spreadshite in all those years

.
Anyway, enough of all that. I reckon the trait answer can be easily and quickly determined using this question:
do you own a pencil sharpener?
Next new thread should be " do you like 'choice' "?
PS. 20th century Dave? What about the past 23 years?

.