Future Shock

Pliablemoose

Lifer
Oct 11, 1999
25,195
0
56
I'll have more to say on the iPad later but one can't help being struck by the volume and vehemence of apparently technologically sophisticated people inveighing against the iPad.

Some are trying to dismiss these ravings by comparing them to certain comments made after the launch of the iPod in 2001: "No wireless. Les space than a Nomad. Lame.". I fear this January-26th thinking misses the point.

What you're seeing in the industry's reaction to the iPad is nothing less than future shock.


For years we've all held to the belief that computing had to be made simpler for the 'average person'. I find it difficult to come to any conclusion other than that we have totally failed in this effort.

Secretly, I suspect, we technologists quite liked the idea that Normals would be dependent on us for our technological shamanism. Those incantations that only we can perform to heal their computers, those oracular proclamations that we make over the future and the blessings we bestow on purchasing choices.

Ask yourself this: in what other walk of life do grown adults depend on other people to help them buy something? Women often turn to men to help them purchase a car but that's because of the obnoxious misogyny of car dealers, not because ladies worry that the car they buy won't work on their local roads. (Sorry computer/car analogy. My bad.)

I'm often saddened by the infantilising effect of high technology on adults. From being in control of their world, they're thrust back to a childish, medieval world in which gremlins appear to torment them and disappear at will and against which magic, spells, and the local witch doctor are their only refuges.

With the iPhone OS as incarnated in the iPad, Apple proposes to do something about this, and I mean really do something about it instead of just talking about doing something about it, and the world is going mental.

Not the entire world, though. The people whose backs have been broken under the weight of technological complexity and failure immediately understand what's happening here. Those of us who patiently, day after day, explain to a child or colleague that the reason there's no Print item in the File menu is because, although the Pages document is filling the screen, Finder is actually the frontmost application and it doesn't have any windows open, understand what's happening here.

The visigoths are at the gate of the city. They're demanding access to software. they're demanding to be in control of their own experience of information. They may not like our high art and culture, they may be really into OpenGL boob-jiggling apps and they may not always share our sense of aesthetics, but they are the people we have claimed to serve for 30 years whilst screwing them over in innumerable ways. There are also many, many more of them than us.


People talk about Steve Jobs' reality distortion field, and I don't disagree that the man has a quasi-hypnotic ability to convince. There's another reality distortion field at work, though, and everyone that makes a living from the tech industry is within its tractor-beam. That RDF tells us that computers are awesome, they work great and only those too stupid to live can't work them.

The tech industry will be in paroxysms of future shock for some time to come. Many will cling to their January-26th notions of what it takes to get "real work" done; cling to the idea that the computer-based part of it is the "real work".

It's not. The Real Work is not formatting the margins, installing the printer driver, uploading the document, finishing the PowerPoint slides, running the software update or reinstalling the OS.

The Real Work is teaching the child, healing the patient, selling the house, logging the road defects, fixing the car at the roadside, capturing the table's order, designing the house and organizing the party.

Think of the millions of hours of human effort spent on preventing and recovering from the problems caused by completely open computer systems. Think of the lengths that people have gone to in order to acquire skills that are orthogonal to their core interests and their job, just so they can get their job done.

If the iPad and its successor devices free these people to focus on what they do best, it will dramatically change people's perceptions of computing from something to fear to something to engage enthusiastically with. I find it hard to believe that the loss of background processing isn't a price worth paying to have a computer that isn't frightening anymore.

In the meantime, Adobe and Microsoft will continue to stamp their feet and whine.
http://speirs.org/blog/2010/1/29/future-shock.html

I've honestly been shocked at the response to the iPad, and I think this guy nailed it...

Jobs made an "everyman" PC, and I suspect they're going to sell the hell out of it, it's going to be in every soccer mom's medium sized purse, and it's a device my 80 year old mother will be using and loving after a shallow learning curve.

I'll buy one because I want something I can use on the go, likely a WiFi model that I'll tether to my phone to avoid yet another monthly fee. I'll use it as a portable email device, web browser, stock trading/market watching platform. Heck, I may go back to a traditional cell phone that just makes phone calls and get an iPad with a 3G data plan.
 
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Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
48,518
5,340
136
I'll buy one because I want something I can use on the go, likely a WiFi model that I'll tether to my phone to avoid yet another monthly fee. I'll use it as a portable email device, web browser, stock trading/market watching platform. Heck, I may go back to a traditional cell phone that just makes phone calls and get an iPad with a 3G data plan.

I've been thinking the same thing - I ditched my iPhone a couple months ago and have been using a regular run-of-the-mill phone, but that iPad with 3G for $29/month sounds extremely reasonable. imo they nailed the unlimited price just right - I said that if it was $30/month, I'd probably go for it. And to be honest, though I miss my pocket-sized iPhone, I think I've adjusted pretty well to not having one - I feel like my head's not in the cloud all the time :\
 

TheRickRoller

Member
Dec 2, 2009
164
0
0
What you're seeing in the industry's reaction to the iPad is nothing less than future shock.

Sorry, no. The industry isn't afraid of tablets, they just expected something more. An everyman computer that costs $500-800 isn't an every man computer, its a computer for those that can afford it. Implying that the population is too stupid, too afraid, too lazy to use technology in its present form; that they need a special fisher price My First Computer is rather insulting.
 

Pliablemoose

Lifer
Oct 11, 1999
25,195
0
56
Sorry, no. The industry isn't afraid of tablets, they just expected something more. An everyman computer that costs $500-800 isn't an every man computer, its a computer for those that can afford it. Implying that the population is too stupid, too afraid, too lazy to use technology in its present form; that they need a special fisher price My First Computer is rather insulting.

Just out of curiosity how old are you and if you're old enough to work, what do you do for a living?
 

Tegeril

Platinum Member
Apr 2, 2003
2,907
5
81
Just out of curiosity how old are you and if you're old enough to work, what do you do for a living?

I had the same thought pop into my head the moment $500 is too expensive was part of that argument. The market for this, at that price, is humongous.
 

TheStu

Moderator<br>Mobile Devices & Gadgets
Moderator
Sep 15, 2004
12,089
45
91
I really hadn't looked at it from this perspective before reading the article, but honestly... I think the author is a little right.

OS X is a joy to use, straightforward and intuitive for me. BUT, not everyone is me, and even other people that I would consider to be intelligent don't always use OS X 'correctly'?

My grandmother is a brilliant woman, one of the top attorneys in her field in Tennessee, but she doesn't really know how to use computers. But, she does know how to use her iPhone. I might actually be able to get emails with vacation pictures from her if she had an iPad. She could actually update her own Facebook page (I think what is restricting her now is the small size of the iPhone).
 

TheStu

Moderator<br>Mobile Devices & Gadgets
Moderator
Sep 15, 2004
12,089
45
91
Sorry, no. The industry isn't afraid of tablets, they just expected something more. An everyman computer that costs $500-800 isn't an every man computer, its a computer for those that can afford it. Implying that the population is too stupid, too afraid, too lazy to use technology in its present form; that they need a special fisher price My First Computer is rather insulting.

Out of curiosity, did you read the article?

Now, next questions, do you run Windows or OS X?
---How much time do you spend 'tinkering' with the OS?
Do you have family members or were you spontaneously created?
Are you the 'computer guy' for said potential family members?
How much time have you spent fixing their computers?
How much time have you spent explaining their computer to them?

This isn't about hand holding, or a 'My First Computer' experience, this is about abstraction and distraction. If I hand an iPad to someone and tell them to send an email they will click the email icon (which will open the app almost instantly) and go on their way. Now they are done, back to home, Ooh, let's search the web for a recipe (or a joke, or an article about how the iPad could change the game, or an article about how the iPad is overpriced cruft) hit the Safari button and the browser opens almost immediately.

Netbooks are great because they are portable, but Windows is a horrible OS choice for them, and the fact that they don't have SSDs (and those that do have SLOW SSDs) so anything you do on them takes time. The ultimate way to remove distraction is to have a system react instantly and the iPad can (much like the iPhone 3GS before it).

Now for Abstraction. I have read articles from people in corporate IT, people complaining about files not being where they used to be, worried that a new version will delete all their stuff, lots of worries about underlying stuff. The iPhone and iPad remove that. They abstract it away by masking the file system from the user (much like how the file system on a linux computer will look inherently more complex than on an OS X computer, both are Unix based if you look back far enough, but Apple abstracted that stuff away) such that files created on the iPad are stored where-ever... it really DOESN'T matter. Much like how with Windows Media Player and iTunes you don't have to know where your music is to play it.
 

Pliablemoose

Lifer
Oct 11, 1999
25,195
0
56
I'm an RN and have my ass kicked by corporate IT daily...

We have these miserable COW's (computers on wheels), that are cobbled together pieces of shit, I spend a considerable amount of time getting the locked down things to even work. At the moment, we have about 60 of them in my work area, my co workers move them constantly, and they're printing shit all over the hospital because they're set up for 1 or 2 printers, and it's impossible to set them up for my co-workers to figure out how the hell to make them print to the nearest printer.

We have Bluetooth scanners, and we're required to scan the patient and the drugs, we have 1 of the 20 BT scanners that works in a mission critical application...

It's amazing how fucked up corporate IT really is...
 

u3laptoper

Member
Oct 25, 2009
63
0
0
The article lacks a central focus, nonetheless,

You should ask yourself does this piece of machinary (iPod, iPad) enhance the standards of living.

Personally, I dislike electricity, TV ownership, or the so-called electronic gadgets. With each technological advances, there is often a drawback or multitude of. A major illusion people have in common is how reliable electronics are, in fact these devices are subject to disturbances as we humans are. However, since we as humans as a whole are going the wrong directions, it's best to make use of whatever resources invented, whether it's made by Apple or other corporations available.
 

Pliablemoose

Lifer
Oct 11, 1999
25,195
0
56
The article lacks a central focus, nonetheless,

You should ask yourself does this piece of machinary (iPod, iPad) enhance the standards of living.

Personally, I dislike electricity, TV ownership, or the so-called electronic gadgets. With each technological advances, there is often a drawback or multitude of. A major illusion people have in common is how reliable electronics are, in fact these devices are subject to disturbances as we humans are. However, since we as humans as a whole are going the wrong directions, it's best to make use of whatever resources invented, whether it's made by Apple or other corporations available.

Yet you own a computer and feel driven to post this nonsense?

I think your thesis needs some work, dude...
 

redbox

Golden Member
Nov 12, 2005
1,021
0
0
I'm an RN and have my ass kicked by corporate IT daily...

We have these miserable COW's (computers on wheels), that are cobbled together pieces of shit, I spend a considerable amount of time getting the locked down things to even work. At the moment, we have about 60 of them in my work area, my co workers move them constantly, and they're printing shit all over the hospital because they're set up for 1 or 2 printers, and it's impossible to set them up for my co-workers to figure out how the hell to make them print to the nearest printer.

We have Bluetooth scanners, and we're required to scan the patient and the drugs, we have 1 of the 20 BT scanners that works in a mission critical application...

It's amazing how fucked up corporate IT really is...

^^^ This, I too worked in a hospital field for about 5 years. The amount of time spent dealing with computer problems is enormous, let alone trying to teach people who aren't computer savvy how to be self sufficient.

If the Ipad can be embraced by the hospital IT groups it's amazing what could be accomplished.
 

Red Squirrel

No Lifer
May 24, 2003
67,915
12,379
126
www.anyf.ca
I'm an RN and have my ass kicked by corporate IT daily...

We have these miserable COW's (computers on wheels), that are cobbled together pieces of shit, I spend a considerable amount of time getting the locked down things to even work. At the moment, we have about 60 of them in my work area, my co workers move them constantly, and they're printing shit all over the hospital because they're set up for 1 or 2 printers, and it's impossible to set them up for my co-workers to figure out how the hell to make them print to the nearest printer.

We have Bluetooth scanners, and we're required to scan the patient and the drugs, we have 1 of the 20 BT scanners that works in a mission critical application...

It's amazing how fucked up corporate IT really is...

lol that's funny since I work in IT at a hospital and we are actually preparing about 40 new cows to be deployed for PCS (Patient Care System).

And yeah Corporate IT *IS* screwed up. There's so much red tape and other political BS, it's brutal.

Speaking of the Ipad we have a few tablets that were part of a "trial" to see if people would like them, they run windows xp and are basically like a standard PC... they're also like 5k!
 

Pliablemoose

Lifer
Oct 11, 1999
25,195
0
56
lol that's funny since I work in IT at a hospital and we are actually preparing about 40 new cows to be deployed for PCS (Patient Care System).

And yeah Corporate IT *IS* screwed up. There's so much red tape and other political BS, it's brutal.

Speaking of the Ipad we have a few tablets that were part of a "trial" to see if people would like them, they run windows xp and are basically like a standard PC... they're also like 5k!

I know you guys are understaffed and ordered to do shit that makes no sense, am really glad I don't have your job...
 

Eug

Lifer
Mar 11, 2000
23,752
1,309
126
Actually, most of us were anticipating future shock. The disappointing part was that we didn't get it. What we got was exactly what a most of us predicted, albeit a bit cheaper than we were expecting.
 

KeypoX

Diamond Member
Aug 31, 2003
3,655
0
71
Articles like that make me sad and embarrassed that i run osx and have an iphone.
 

KeypoX

Diamond Member
Aug 31, 2003
3,655
0
71
Actually, most of us were anticipating future shock. The disappointing part was that we didn't get it. What we got was exactly what a most of us predicted, albeit a bit cheaper than we were expecting.

I thought it would be much more expensive because i thought it would be a tablet. Not an oversized ipod touch, touch screen device.

Its certainly not the worse product ever, but its nothing revolutionary.
 

Eug

Lifer
Mar 11, 2000
23,752
1,309
126
To be honest, my prediction was:

It can't be just an oversized iPhone, because that would be lame.

It can't be just an underspec'd MacBook, because that would be lame.

It can't be just in-between, because that would be a mixed up kludge from both worlds.

So, I actually didn't accurately predict it. I suspected it could be something like #1, but I also didn't want to believe it, because I wanted something to shock me into seeing the future. Unfortunately, that wasn't it.

It's just an evolutionary product, but one that isn't all that compelling for a lot of people. It could be in a few generations, but right now it's a bit of an odd duck IMO.
 

Eug

Lifer
Mar 11, 2000
23,752
1,309
126
I almost hope Apple is sandbagging. Or some would call it "strategic marketing".

Release the iPad and see how much sales they're getting, and see what type of competition appears. If they get half-way reasonable sales and little competition, then they can continue to give us limited functionality in the iPad.

If the sales tank and/or competition heats up, they can trickle out those unreleased future upgrades as needed.

They kind of did that with the iPhone, and they could get away with it since the iPhone was so much better than anything else in the market. The problem here is that the iPad isn't really in the same calibre of uber-coolness that the iPhone was compared to the competition.
 
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Pliablemoose

Lifer
Oct 11, 1999
25,195
0
56
I almost hope Apple is sandbagging.

There are hints in the SDK that there's more to come, but not much...

Camera, handwriting recognition, hints of some new apps TBA are in the SDK.

Also since this is a familiar platform, I think it'll get jailbroken pretty quickly...
 
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