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Gadgets that Nag

September 05 2008 / by John Heylin
Category: Technology   Year: General   Rating: 6 Hot

To what extent are we going to let technology run our lives? I can understand wanting the Internet, a cellphone, even a bazillion-inch flat screen TV. But this latest gadget to come on the market, the iPosture, which screams at you whenever you sit in a hunched position, well, it’s just plain silly.

If you thought your parents were nagging you pretty hard at the dinner table, imagine a device that watches your every move (“beep I saw you hide your spinach in the napkin, eat it or no dessert beep“) without the ability to judge when it’s over-stretching its boundaries. Scores of children would grow up hating both the device and their parents, wishing they had received more attention from them, swearing not to raise their kids the same way.

Sure, most people won’t buy these products (at least in the near-future) since it seems so insane and counter-natural, but what about those few who will? For example, parents who think their own parenting techniques are faulty may well wish for a family butler that can help teach their children proper manners. Just imagine if Calvin of Calvin and Hobbes had his own personal assistant, or had been forced to do his homework by an ever-watching guardian…

There are some folks already clamoring for robotic teachers which will teach our kids for us, or even robotic nannies for when parents want to go out on the town and leave the kids at home. But what such adoption mean for us as a culture and species?

This kind of technology may eventually produce better results than we ourselves, but in the end doesn’t it mean a departure from that which makes us human? While striving for perfection is human, does the same go for attaining it in every aspect and crevice of our lives?

Image: genewolf (Flickr,CC-Attribution)

Comment Thread (3 Responses)

  1. Great intro to ideas related to the Post PC era of computing and technology. Esp. love the iPosture!

    These interfaces and new tech-human-tech relationships could be the foundation of growth in the next two decades. Embedding systems into objects – designing software for everyday situations – those are big ideas!

    I’d love to see a road map of drivers – sensors and low power chips- and the software that makes it all seamless. I can only imagine the creative applications once these things line up and the cost of innovation drops.

    The marketplace opportunities are limitless – from aging populations, to children—and across all environments from schools to homes and offices.

    And—your applications raise some great questions…

    Will young kids continue to have ‘imaginary’ friends – when their dolls and toys seem just as alive to them as a pet or parent? Wondering how this might change our cognitive development?

    This is definitely a topic to start talking about now…

    Touch is growing quickly.. but what about seamless voice interfaces?

    Just today I activated my Microsoft Vista Speech Recognition program- and am now on Day One of talking to my laptop. (And it works surprisingly well!)

    Thanks- G

    Posted by: Garry Golden   September 05, 2008
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  2. Maybe we’ll get to the point where parents aren’t needed to raise children. People will just have the kids (natural or unnatural), go back to their jobs, and let society raise them. Is this where we want to be headed?

    Posted by: martymcfly   September 05, 2008
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  3. I do agree that new technology seems a bit ridiculous. iPosture reminds me of the WiiFit and its ability to read your stance and your weight distribution. I suppose people enjoy these gadgets because if you really don’t want to follow their instructions, you can just turn them off.

    Posted by: jvarden   September 05, 2008
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