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Culture War Roundup for the week of June 26, 2023

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This strikes me as yet more technology for the "smart home enthusiast" type of person.

I look down on such people who fawn over their nonsense gadgets and have the gall to call themselves "tech people". All that rubbish does is introduce many more points of failure (both human, in the case of Amazon destroying a guy's smart home for an imagined slur, and technological) for extremely minor or questionable fringe benefits. Great, I can pre-heat my oven remotely on my way back from work, but it can also sometimes also decide to blaze to 400 degrees F in the middle of the night on its own.

Technophiles have all the latest privacy invading smart home rubbish that will brick itself within a year when the company either goes bust or decides to start charging you for features that previously were standard.

People who actually understand and work in technology have exactly one mid-2000s printer.

Technology is like karate; you ideally want to use it as little as possible. Over-engineered smartrubbish either breaks, bricks or takes 2 hours on the phone to tech support to make work in the first place... before it breaks or bricks anyway.

Technology is like karate; you ideally want to use it as little as possible.

I like this take. That being said, without the crazy technophiles how would boundaries be broken? How would we advance the state of the art, to let people like you get even more out of your tiny piece of technology?

See also: Hypebeasts as Honeybees, a post exploring the topic of bleeding-edge adoption, albeit from the firearms-and-accessories perspective.

I suppose in that sense they do serve a purpose.