Letter from the UK: No longer love technology
If there is no technology, what will we do? Well, it may be more sensible and will not be distracted by information from all directions. More energetic, maybe because we didn't take the highway and stared at the "screen of all human life", but were squashed by Mike Truck. It is conceivable that we are richer because we save money instead of buying the next large electronic product.
How many traffic accidents have been caused by inattentive drivers thanks to in-car technology?
Tech Trajectory
Addiction & Affliction
High Tech Fatigue
Man Versus Machine
Tech Trajectory
In the UK we have laws against driving while on a cell phone or even – much worse – sending text messages at the wheel or scrolling across a tablet. These laws are largely unenforced because we don’t have nearly enough traffic cops to cope with modern demands, so they are largely ignored until, that is, the inattentive driver plows into a crocodile line of school children.
Technology in cars is nothing new of course. In the beginning there was actual singing; often after leaving a bar. Then, the car radio gave us something to fiddle with and sing along to while driving. That was followed by the dashboard 45rpm vinyl record player. Then came eight-track and cassettes and compact discs and MP3 and currently Bluetooth; all gaining in complexity as sophisticated science accelerated.
And that’s just for music. There’s also climate control, navigation, WiFi, and the appallingly named ‘infotainment.’
Photo: Unsplash.
Addiction & Affliction
As automobile makers look for ever more inducements to make us buy this or that car, so the level of infotainment intricacy increases. There’s an old adage that states that ‘drivers should keep their eyes on the road.’ We neglect this ancient sage advice at our peril. Certainly cars have more safety features and automation than ever before, yet we still crash.
Admit it: We’re addicted to tech.
The British as a nation have, over the last twenty years, bought into technology with a will. Along with Japan we must be up there as a leader in buying pointless contraptions and contrivances, and some of them are killing us. The good news is that there is a hint, just a scintilla of hope, that this technology love affair is slowing down, like passion in a long-term marriage.
High Tech Fatigue
Sales of smart technology for home, work, and automobiles are stalling, it is reported. The slavering night-zombie queues outside of stores at launch time are getting smaller. Ask Apple. The trend is downwards across the board and it is not down to UK Brexit either, especially now that Nissan has announced they will build two important new models at their Sunderland plant in the UK. The importance of this cannot be understated for the British car industry.
It is also not to do with income. The British economy has bucked the trend and shown growth since that fateful UK vote in June. So if it is not the economy and not Brexit fear then what is the problem?
I believe it is because we are finally sated. We have grown up technology-wise; we have matured as users. My smart, internet-connected, music-loaded, app-using, travel-oriented pocket telephone has everything I want, except reliability obviously. When I finally threw away my old Windows phone and bought the latest Android, I thought a great weight had been lifted from my shoulders. How naive I was. If only I had known the trouble I would see.
Witness the amount of new stuff that you can wear on your face or wrist that is falling by the wayside, largely ignored by a more – dare I say it – sophisticated buying public. Witness the ignored upgrades. The Next Big Thing is so last week. Where’s the buzz? Where’s the charge? We have reached the summit and, like recovering addicts, we’re coming down.
Photo: FirmBee
Man Versus Machine
This is why I look for simplicity in cars as well as life. My love for a great car is undiminished. Nothing has changed. What has changed is my total ambivalence to the on-board technology. Why do we need technology to park a car? We are supposed to be able to do that for ourselves – and so on.
There is a more or less forgotten English writer by the name of E. M. Forster. In 1909 he published a short story called The Machine Stops which tells of a dystopian future where the human race is totally dependent upon machines – until the day the machines stop and humanity is lost and unable to fend for itself, so reliant were they upon machines.
It seems to me we are becoming a bit like that now.
Driving a car is all about operating machinery not relying on it to pilot your life for you. On that depressing note, like a tired traveling snake-oil salesman at the end of a long day, I rest my case.
Geoff Maxted is a motoring writer, photographer, and author of our Letter From The UK series. Follow his work on Twitter: @DriveWrite
Cover photo: Unsplash
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