I recently
read an article about intelligent cars, and how they’ll make driving in the
future much easier and safer. They’ll be able to read street signs and traffic
lights, evaluate the traffic to decide if you need to change your route, change
lanes if necessary. They’ll practically drive for you and you’ll be the
passenger. Even some of today’s cars are already capable of slowing down if the
distance between your car and the car in front of you isn’t big enough, or warn
you if you’re crossing over to another lane and some even park the car for you.
Maybe it’s just me but it would bother me if my car decided when I should slow
down or when to change lanes. Of course humans are prone to mistakes but
machines too. And I would really hate it if I crashed into a wall because my
car decided to accelerate due to a technical problem. I guess I just don’t like
to lose control. Maybe I’m being too cautious and not future-oriented.
And cars
aren’t the end of it. I read about a prototype of an intelligent house and it
reminded me a lot of things I’d read about in dystopian books. The house does
everything for you. The fridge is connected to the internet and orders food
once you’re running out of certain things, it informs you about your calorie
intake if you want, and suggests menus. Everything is electronic. There’s even
some kind of robot that does the cleaning and, though that is very tempting
since I detest cleaning, I’d be freaked out if I had a semi-intelligent machine
running around my house. Am I being stupid? Have I watched “I, Robot” once too
often? I don’t know.
I guess it’s
important to ask ourselves if we really need a machine that takes care of every
little thing. I’m not sure if that would make our lives easier. Maybe we’d
be relieved of physical work, but is that a good thing? I think our bodies want a certain amount of physical work. If I don't move enough or don't really exert myself once in a while, I get restless and can't sleep, and my mind has too much energy to worry and think about strange things. And that's never ever a good thing.
What do you
think?
(As you
might have guessed: revision brain makes me feel philosophical, and that’s
never a good thing)
3 comments:
Maybe because I'm an engineer I love progress so I'm thinking its wonderful.
Have you seen Demolition Man (1993), starring Sylvester Stallone and Sandra Bullock (before she was a star)? Anyway, Sandra circa 2032has a car that plans her route, drives for her, and talks to her.
Good for a laugh, but I wouldn't want one.
I do have two electronic cats, Petster Deluxe (tm), and they are lots of fun. I should attach a dust cloth to their tails or something, so they'll be useful!
"Have a peachy day!"
I'm really looking forward to the Google cars--I'll finally be able to work during those long road-trips for author events!
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