Terry Godier’s thought provoking post on how modern gadgets don’t stop talking.
This watch [Casio F-91W] costs twelve dollars. It weighs twenty-one grams. It has an alarm that sounds like a microwave in another room. It has told time the same way since 1989.
It doesn’t know my heart rate. It has no opinions about whether I’ve stood up enough today. It will never need a firmware update.
When the battery dies in seven years, I’ll press in a new one with a paperclip.
That will be the entirety of my obligation to it.
This watch [Applet Watch] costs four hundred dollars. It also tells time.
It also tracks my steps, monitors my blood oxygen, measures my sleep quality, logs my workouts, reminds me to breathe, reminds me to stand, nudges me to close my rings, alerts me to unusual heart rhythms, pings me with notifications from six apps, and dies every night.
One of these is a product. The other is a relationship.
And a very insightful take on screen time.
Screen Time gives you a report card. And if the grade is bad, the design makes one thing clear: That’s a YOU problem.
It measures YOUR usage. Tracks YOUR behavior. Gives YOU a weekly report card. If the numbers are too high?
You picked it up too much.
You spent too long.
You failed your limit.
Try again next week.
Try harder.Screen Time is a blame shift dressed in a soft font.
Ha!

You must be logged in to post a comment.