Think of the computing products and services you would select for one of your elderly family members. It must be simple, intuitive, and integrated. You don't want a television that takes 5 remotes to operate, because grandma can't keep track of that. You look for something that has one remote to cleanly control everything she has, saving her the pain and confusion of delving into the specifics of each device. Our societal relationship to new technologies is the same situation, just look at the massive efforts of google to integrate as many different services as possible into one experience. One presence. This is even a google website right here. As technologies become increasingly more complex, we, by comparison, become ever more like this hypothetical grandmother.
Think of any stories you have read or watched that take place in a technological dystopia. The preeminent cliched feature of the technological dystopia is the single omnipresent tech company that has expanded to, and synthesized, every aspect of life that can be digitized. This fantasy is the continuation of the current trend of ignorance in the face of ever increasing technology, allowing companies to entice individuals into trading privacy and control for easier user experiences.
I'm amazed that such a large number of people are content to not even understand any of the devices or technologies that now rule our human interactions. Sure it's easy to write off, humans don't always like getting into the nitty gritty back end of things of they are already working well, but why isn't this something that we take seriously enough to educate ourselves on, or at the very least our children. I attend a school that clearly realizes the significance of computer technology in the digital age, it would be nearly impossible not to. Every student at this school is required to purchase a laptop, yet the same institution doesn't offer a single computer science related course. How many of the people who will read this, of course on a computer, will know what a transistor is?
"Complex structures beget simple behaviors and simple structures beget complex behaviors." You imply a powerful truth here, Chris. Your grandparent image works well, and the closing observation about SPA is too true Now, what outside ideas, images, sources might support or contradict this? And where do you fit here? This is casual and thoughtful, but not personal or connected.
ReplyDeleteThis is very well written, and you bring up a great point. However, it makes me wonder...do YOU know how all this crap really works? Why do you care enough to learn about it, if you do know? Why should I care? It's not going to change the way my technology works. I'm not a computer-sciencey person (for lack of a better term...) so where is the benefit in learning about something that will continue to benefit me whether I know the workings behind the curtain or not? I think it's a question worth discussing...Here's what'll happen: I am going to go home, and log into my computer using my fingerprint. Frankly, I don't care at all how that little silver thing recognizes my thumb print. I'm just going to log in, watch a little Netflix, and move along with my Internet playtime, blissfully ignorant and not bothered with the complexities of numbers and software and confusing electrical connections or whatever it is that goes on in a laptop. Why should I do any different?
ReplyDeleteLove Ava