Recently our local newspaper printed an article explaining how the
appliance manufacturers plan to drive consumers insane. Of course they don't SAY they want to drive us insane. What they SAY
they want to do is have us live in homes where "all appliances are on
the Internet, sharing information" and appliances will be@1 "smarter
than most of their owners." For example, the article states, you
would have a home where the dishwasher "can be turned on from the
office" and the refrigerator knows when it's out of milk" and the
bathroom scale "transmits your weight to the gym." I frankly wonder whether the appliance manufacturers, with all due
respect, have been smoking crack. I mean, did they ever stop to ask
themselves WHY a consumer, after loading the dishwasher, would go to
the office to start it? Would there be some sort of career benefit? YOUR BOSS: What are you doing? YOU: (tapping computer keyboard) I'm starting my dishwasher. YOUR BOSS; That's the kind of productivity we need around here! YOU: Now I'm flushing the toilet. Listen, appliance manufacturers: We don't NEED a dishwasher that we
can communicate with from afar. If you want to improve our
dishwashers, give us one that senses when people leave dirty dishes
on the kitchen counter, and shouts at them: "PUT THOSE DISHES IN ME
RIGHT NOW OR I'LL LEAK ALL OVER YOUR SHOES!" Likewise, we don't need a refrigerator that knows when it's out of
milk. We already have a foolproof system for determining if we're
out of milk: We ask our wife. What we could use is a refrigerator
that refuses to let us open its door when it senses that we are about
to consume our fourth pudding in two hours. As for the scale that transmits our weight to the gym: Are they
NUTS? We don't want our weight transmitted to our own eyeballs!
What if the gym decided to transmit our weight to all these other
appliances on the Internet? What if, God forbid, our refrigerator
found out what our weight was? We'd never get the door open again! But here is what really concerns me about these new "smart"
appliances: Even if we like the features, we won't be able to use
them. We can't use the appliance features we have NOW. I have a
feature-packed telephone with 43 buttons, at least 20 of which I'm
afraid to touch. This phone probably can communicate with the dead,
but I don't know how to operate it, just as I don't know how to
operate my TV, which has so many features it requires THREE remote
controls. One control (44 buttons) came with the TV, a second (39
buttons) came with the VCR, the third (37 buttons) works the digital
satellite decoder, because apparently they felt that I did not have
enough buttons. So when I want to watch TV, I'm confronted with a total of 120
buttons, identified by such helpful labels as PIP, MTS, F2, JUMP and
BLANK. There are three buttons labeled POWER, but there are
times...especially if my son and his friends, who are not afraid of
features, have changed the settings.. when I honestly cannot figure
out how to turn the TV on. I stand there, holding three remote
controls, pressing buttons at random, until eventually I give up and
go to turn on the dishwasher. It has been literally years since I
have successfully recorded a TV show. That's how "smart" my
appliances have become. And now the appliance manufacturers want to give us even MORE
features. Do you know what this means? It means that some night
you'll open the door of your "smart" refrigerator, looking for a
beer, and you'll hear a pleasant, cheerful voice telling you: "Your
celery is limp." You will not know how your refrigerator knows this,
and what is worse, you will not know who else your refrigerator is
telling about it (Hey Bob! I hear you celery is limp!") And if you want to try to make your refrigerator STOP, you'll have to
decipher the Owner's Manual instructions written by and for nuclear
physicists ("To disable the Product Crispness Monitoring feature,
enter the Command Mode, then select the Edit function, then select
Change Vegetable Defaults, then assume that Train A leaves Cape Town
travelling westbound at 75 kilometres per hour, while Train B...") Is this the kind of future you want, consumers? Do you want
appliances that are smarter than you? Of course not. Your
appliances should be DUMBER than you, just like your furniture, your
pets, and the boss of Paramount. So I'm urging you to let the
appliance industry know, by phone, letter, fax and e-mail, that when
it comes to "smart" appliances, you vote NO. You need to act
quickly. Because while you're reading this, your microwave is voting
YES.