Wednesday, November 14, 2012

The New Mind of Technology


Johnny 5 from Short Circuit


In the article Artificial Minds Jason Holt discusses the implications of artificial intelligence. He questions if it does already exists and if we are, as we tend to think, better that it. Artificial intelligence has been discussed for many years, and we have all seen the movies where robots take over the world and destroy humans, although I believe there is a different side to the story. In movie Short Circuit a robot made to be a soldier and to kill gets hit by lighting and gains consciousness. Now I believe that some of you are a ready scared about what this robot does, but it might surprise you to hear that he wanted nothing to do with violence. There is a scene where he is content to do nothing but roll down a road and look around. This is an example of what artificial intelligence could be. Having robots as companions might actually be a good thing, a friend that we can depend to be on whenever we need them. However, I do believe that having robots replace humans would be negative; we do need contact with our own kind. This knew fear of artificial intelligence reminds me of a story that I once heard about the people in Italy being afraid to eat tomatoes, which we know to be in hundreds of Italian dishes today. Humans should not necessarily be afraid of having computers that can think like we do, there may be a silver lining in disguise in the improvements of this science.

The Children of the Future




The opening to the movie A.I Artificial Minds is certainly an attention-getter. The very first thing you see is waves rolling up and down while a man states in a rather matter-of-fact manner that the polar icecaps melted, causing the seas to rise and erase many cities. As natural resources dwindled strict regulations were placed on pregnancy, which led to the rise of robots. Robots seem to be a wonderful solution because they don’t need any resources to sustain them. Soon we see what seems to be a board meeting; the members discuss creating the perfect robotic child, for the couples who now cannot have a child of their own.  Personally I am torn between two opinions. The first is that they should never make a robotic child because it goes against nature; the second is that they should, because it would help the many couples who are sure to desperately want a child. The child that would be created would never age, get sick, or fall and scrape its knee as all children do, which I would find almost eerie. I feel that, in addition, one of the greatest parts of being a parent is seeing what your child comes to be, like watching a seed that you have no idea what kind it will be turn into a beautiful flower. On the other hand, the couples out in the world are sure to feel a loss, a place in the house that should be filled but they can’t but is this really parenthood? Yes the robot love you but it will never grow.

Monday, November 12, 2012

How We Are Cyborgs

Friend or Foe?
In the article "Can You Hear Me Now?" Sherry Turkle discusses how people in general have become dependent on technology and how it has permeated our lives. Now it is common place to see people walking down the street e-mailing or texting away. Our culture now uses technology to make childhood safer, but that could also damage their independence when the children get older. Our culture now uses technology to provide companions and to define us. To contrast, in the article "Gin, Television, and Surplus" Clay Shirky argues that because or technology we now have the time and the ability to be a part or the media. Shirky Believes this is better than merely watching it.

"Can You Hear Me Now?" has a negative tone to it, as if technology would soon become the bane of our society. From her viewpoint technology is bad, but Shirky thinks it is grand. Shirky is positive toward technology and thinks it is better than the alternative.

I believe that Turkle does the better job of arguing her point although I agree more with Shirky.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

The veldt




In the futuristic short story “The Veldt” two wealthy parents live in a mechanized house with their two children. One of the features of the home is a computerized nursery that makes the children’s every wish reality. When the nursery starts to display an all too real and death-filled African veldt, the mother starts to worry. Once she finally gets the father to realize that there is trouble they call the psychiatrist  too look at the nursery and they shut they house off, meaning they have to clean, bathe, and even tie their own shoes. The children through a fit and look the parents in the nursery in with the lions, and once the psychiatrist returns, do the same with him.
For some time I have seen children be spoiled rotten. You see them everywhere, in your family, grocery stores, toy stores, most stores, and their tantrums can get on everyone’s nerves sometimes. This story takes it to a new level, murder. I found it interesting how they children, with the help of the house, could be pretty much independent. The children have the means to go places they want too, get their own food, get wash, and live in a very comfortable environment. I believe that this could have interfered with their mental state, making it partially adult, but still very child-like. This is dangerous to the parents in the end and kills them. The abundance of technology in the house makes the children dependent on it, so when the parents go around and turn everything off it is a huge shock and pushes them over the edge. For months before, when the children started to be dissatisfied with their parents, the children had been creating facsimiles of their parents and feeding them to the lions. This shows that having so much given to them had altered the children’s minds and had made them dangerous. I believe in a way this is the parent’s fault, but the parents did it with the best intentions. This story shows that sometimes we can nurture too much, and if we give everything to our children without making them work it damages them in a way. The story shows that you can indeed be spoiled rotten.
“The house is wife and mother and now nursemaid. Can I compete with an African veldt?” pg. 10
This interested me because the mother is first to see a problem, the father shrugs it off.
“Those screams- they sound familiar.”
 This line was a little creepy to me because the parents didn’t go check out the screams, no matter how familiar.