hapticity » lameness http://hapticity.net Wed, 16 May 2012 14:41:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 #/?v=3.5.1 Among journalists, technology breeds fear of obsolescence, corporations /2010/01/24/among-journalists-technology-breeds-fear-of-obsolescence-corporations/ /2010/01/24/among-journalists-technology-breeds-fear-of-obsolescence-corporations/#comments Sun, 24 Jan 2010 16:34:29 +0000 Dave /?p=3821 Another NYT article about technology anxiety, this one by Brad Stone. Some excerpts:

I’ve begun to think that my daughter’s generation will also be utterly unlike those that preceded it.

Well, it’s better to begin to think than to never start. There’s plenty of room for more people to contemplate and write about the future of technology. We are a friendly bunch! Let me be the first to welcome you, Mr. Stone.

But the newest batch of Internet users and cellphone owners will find these geo-intelligent tools to be entirely second nature, and may even come to expect all software and hardware to operate in this way. Here is where corporations can start licking their chops. My daughter and her peers will never be “off the grid.” And they may come to expect that stores will emanate discounts as they walk by them, and that friends can be tracked down anywhere.

I see, so even though technology will lift people out of poverty and make life longer and more enriching, technology is really just a vehicle for capitalist oppression. And like mad, salivating dogs, corporations will lick their chops. Right.

But the children, teenagers and young adults who are passing through this cauldron of technological change will also have a lot in common. They’ll think nothing of sharing the minutiae of their lives online, staying connected to their friends at all times, buying virtual goods, and owning one über-device that does it all. They will believe the Kindle is the same as a book. And they will all think their parents are hopelessly out of touch.

Of all the mind blowing changes that technology will bring to our society, the real thought-provoker is that those crazy young’uns will think a Kindle is the same as a book!

Mr. Stone: elevate your perspective. If you need help, read my blog, and read what I link to. Anticipate the future. Integrate it. Do develop a grounded, holistic understanding of where we’re going as a technological society. Don’t develop sociological theories based on your marvel at incremental steps like the Kindle. It won’t help you see the big picture.

]]>
/2010/01/24/among-journalists-technology-breeds-fear-of-obsolescence-corporations/feed/ 1
The Gray Ditz discovers augmented reality /2009/12/04/the-gray-ditz-discovers-augmented-reality/ /2009/12/04/the-gray-ditz-discovers-augmented-reality/#comments Fri, 04 Dec 2009 23:56:49 +0000 Dave /?p=2881 I must speak up on this one. Recently in the New York Times Sunday magazine, Rob Walker wrote a foolish article about augmented reality. The first half deals with introducing augmented reality, the Avatar movie, and the Yelp app. But this is his description of the future of this incredible technology:

Core77, the online design magazine, suggested one amusing possibility earlier this year: fold in facial-recognition technology and you could point your phone at Bob from accounting, whose visage is now “augmented” with the information that he has a gay son and drinks Hoegaarden. More recently, a Swedish company has publicized a prototype app that would in fact augment the image of Bob (or whomever) with information from his social-networking profiles — and they aren’t kidding.

Your silly example wrecks the already floundering article, whose original purpose, I assume, was to inform us about an incoming technology. So how and why did you come up with the idea that Bob would be marked with a note saying his son is gay? It implies that augmented reality entails a violation of privacy, which it does not.

How about: “Fold in facial-recognition technology and you could point your phone at Bob from accounting and see him enwrapped in a digital ecosystem—video tattoos bloom across his body like Ray Bradbury’s Illustrated Man, while around his head swirls a halo of tweets, emotions, and memories. It may all be virtual, but the way you see him is augmented in a very real way.”

But instead of offering a creative example to show that the possibilities are endless, you make up an offensive scenario and then sarcastically write “they aren’t kidding,” which subtly attributes your idea to the people who are developing augmented reality. It’s dishonest.

If this sounds off-putting, it’s worth noting that most assessments of the augmented-reality trend include the speculation that the hype will fade.

So you’re trying to put us off to augmented reality, and then reassure us that we have nothing to worry about since it won’t happen anyway. Then why write about this topic in the first place? If it’s not news, and it’s not interesting, what’s the point? And, “most assessments” is weasely. If you’ve got the goods, link to them, or at least name your sources.

…Why just look at a restaurant, a colleague or the “Mona Lisa,” when you can you can “augment” them all?

The scare quotes around the word ‘augment’ make it sound like you’re uncomfortable with using the word; as if it’s jargon. Expand your horizons! You don’t need to use quotes every time you learn a new word!

I don’t mean to pick you, NYT, but your articles about new technologies are sometimes rather irritating. Instead of writing with genuine interest and optimism about exciting new trends, you project a cynicism that hints at fear and confusion just beneath the surface.

(via DUB For the Future)

]]>
/2009/12/04/the-gray-ditz-discovers-augmented-reality/feed/ 0
Telepresence: a good excuse to stay on Earth? /2009/09/05/telepresence-a-good-excuse-to-stay-on-earth/ /2009/09/05/telepresence-a-good-excuse-to-stay-on-earth/#comments Sat, 05 Sep 2009 15:53:39 +0000 David Birnbaum http://tactilicio.us/?p=532 In the New York Times, an article that cites the beautiful dream of telepresence to squash the equally beautiful dream of space colonization. Lame.

]]>
/2009/09/05/telepresence-a-good-excuse-to-stay-on-earth/feed/ 3
Third party haptic keyboard for iPhone /2008/03/02/third-party-haptic-keyboard-for-iphone/ /2008/03/02/third-party-haptic-keyboard-for-iphone/#comments Mon, 03 Mar 2008 03:35:34 +0000 David Birnbaum http://tactilicio.us/2008/03/02/third-party-haptic-keyboard-for-iphone/ A downloadable haptic keyboard for the iPhone.

Totally missing the point, Gizmodo asks, “Does anyone care?”, noting that users are already accustomed to the iPhone’s non-tactile keyboard, and that this particular haptic keyboard is buggy. Whatever; research clearly indicates that vibrotactile feedback for surface keyboards enhances interaction. Kudos to these folks at the University of Glasgow for beginning an open project on a popular platform to develop this much-needed software.

]]>
/2008/03/02/third-party-haptic-keyboard-for-iphone/feed/ 0
From the Painfully Obvious Department of Future Studies /2008/02/16/from-the-department-of-the-painfully-obvious/ /2008/02/16/from-the-department-of-the-painfully-obvious/#comments Sat, 16 Feb 2008 18:42:45 +0000 David Birnbaum http://tactilicio.us/2008/02/16/from-the-department-of-the-painfully-obvious/ It seems like gender studies professor David Levy has been reading some Kurzweil: Are robots the sex partners of the future?

The short answer is yes. The long answer is available in his book, Love and Sex with Robots: The Evolution of Human-Robot Relations.

]]>
/2008/02/16/from-the-department-of-the-painfully-obvious/feed/ 0