(Credit Photo: Dossy Blumenthal)
Showing posts with label 1984. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1984. Show all posts
October 13, 2023
May 2, 2018
Computer Sentiment 1984
It's called: "The Unofficial I Hate Computer Book".
It was written in 1984, and like the George Orwell's book by that name, it is a dystopian view of technology.
The back cover says:
Computer haters of the world unite: It's time to recognize and avenge the wonderful advances we've made thanks to computers--excessive eyestrain and headaches, irritating beeping noises, a one-ton printout where once there was a six-page report, a "simple" programming language you can't understand without five handbooks, a dictionary, and a math degree.The book goes on with illustration after illustration of unadulterated computer hate and associated violence.
- Dogs dumping on it (see cover)
- Contests to smash it with a hammer
- Hara-kiri (suicide with a knife) into it
- Skeet shooting computers that are flung into the air
- Shotput with a computer
- Tanks rolling over them
- Sinking it in water with a heavy anvil
- Boxer practicing his punches on it
- Setting it ablaze with gasoline
- And on and on, page after hate-filled page.
So in the last 34-years, have we solved all the annoyances and complexity with computers and automation?
Do the benefits of technology outway the costs and risks across-the-board?
How do security and privacy play in the equation?
I wonder what the authors and readers back then would think of computers, tablets, smartphones and the Internet and apps nowadays--especially where we can't live without them at all. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
Computer Sentiment 1984
Labels:
1984,
Addiction,
Annoyance,
Automation,
Book,
Complexity,
Computers,
Cybersecurity,
Dependence,
Design,
Dystopian,
Hate,
Illustration,
Information Technology,
Photo,
Privacy,
Sentiment,
User-centric
February 6, 2011
Apple: #1 Super Bowl Commercial Of All Time
Rated the #1 Super Bowl Commercial of all time, this advertisement was used by Apple to introduce its Macintosh computer in 1984 during Super Bowl XVIII.
Apple showed the world their understanding that:
- The "drone" nature of how we did business--"just follow the leader"--was not going to make us great.
- The other "blah"--not user-centric--technology offered by the "Big Brother(s)" of the time was seducing the masses into a blind morass--a kind of an enslavement of our productive energies.
Apple was not, and is not afraid, to come out and break the paradigm and that what makes them a great company.
Innovate, innovate, innovate for a better future for mankind.
In life, there is always choice between what is and what could be and that 's what drives our competitive juices.
Apple: #1 Super Bowl Commercial Of All Time
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