• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    152 months ago

    Anytime I have to replace a device I find it incredibly frustrating. It certainly seems like technology is regressing. I’ve had the same phone since 2016 because nothing I’ve looked at has enough of it has to replace it and doesn’t offer anything better to make up for those deficiencies. My mouse recently developed an issue that had me looking at potential replacements and again almost nothing currently available matches it or was even close. I found two that were potentially not a downgrade and one of those had awful reviews. Instead I’m just buying the part to fix it and hopefully I’ll be able to keep limping it along for the foreseeable future. Same goes for my car. Nothing new that I’ve seen appeals to me. They’re all loaded down with infotainment bullshit that’s just a pain in the ass to deal with. Those were just 3 off the top of my head. At least with software you can usually find something open source that does what you want, but if it has to be manufactured by someone else you can forget about it.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      42 months ago

      My mouse recently developed an issue that had me looking at potential replacements and again almost nothing currently available matches it or was even close.

      I used the exact same Logitech MX518 mouse from ~2009 until ~2020. Then I went through one every 9 months or so until they succumbed to same problems with the scrollwheel failing until I finally had to stop buying their crap.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        42 months ago

        Yea, this one is actually a Logitch 602 I’ve had for years, and it’s my 3rd one after two warranty replacements so the build quality has always been questionable but I love the button layout on this mouse and the software is usually pretty good at doing what I want so I’m dreading having to replace it. There was apparently another similar one that came out a couple years ago but they don’t make them anymore and from what I was reading the quality was garbage too. I still have the one from the second time I replaced it through the warranty so I’m going to replace the problematic switches on it and see how that goes.

      • Captain Aggravated
        link
        fedilink
        English
        12 months ago

        On my small fleet of Logi M570 trackball mice, I occasionally have to crack them open and tweezer out the wreath of hair that has built up in the mouse wheel which obscures the sensor. It’ll be a mix of mine and my cats hair.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    62 months ago

    I think this headline is slightly misleading. Here are some better ones:

    • Reclaiming Humanity in the Age of Overbearing Technology
    • When Convenient Tech Becomes a Burden: A Call for Human-Centric Design
    • How Modern Tech Erodes Human Interaction
    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      52 months ago

      Wait. Is this satire? Like these suggested versions have been generated by running through a LLM AI?

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      5
      edit-2
      2 months ago

      This is weird take on an op-ed. OP didn’t alter the title. The only ways I can conceive of a headline being “misleading” is when it declares a falsity (this doesn’t; it’s an opinion) or doesn’t match the content of the titled text (this doesn’t; it matches the text).

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    92 months ago

    Tech could make our life easier, if only the fruits of increased efficiency would go towards us all instead of the few rich people at the top.

    • Darren
      link
      fedilink
      English
      22 months ago

      If only the goal of the tech firms was to make the world better while making enough money to achieve this, rather than their goal being to make as much shareholder value as possible while ekeing out improvements on a schedule that fits their need to maximise profits.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      12 months ago

      People weren’t willing to pay with money. Usually every tech product with ads has an “insert coin to remove” option. If you don’t insert coin, advertisers will.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        62 months ago

        Paying for the product and paying to not be inconvenienced by ads have become separate things. The first is standard business, the second is extortion.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          22 months ago

          Paying 80 for a product that is worth 100 and have ads is standard practice nowadays, to the point that not doing this puts you in competitive disadvantage. You are than asked to pay the remaining 20 or put up with ads.

          You see this in every lemmy discussion about smart TVs. People complain that TVs have ads and there’s always someone that suggest getting a “dumb” TV but complain that they are more expensive. It’s almost like ads subsidize the purchase price or something…

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            42 months ago

            I disagree, I think the removal of ads is often painted as a benefit that had inherent value. Look at YouTube premium or Prime video. Both haven’t actually improved their offering, just made it worse by introducing ads and insisting users that don’t want to see ads have to pay for the privilege of not being advertised to.

            This means the total price adds up to higher than 100% of the product value, because it’s a ‘premium’ version that comes without advertisement inconvenience.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              12 months ago

              Prime video I don’t know so well, but YouTube was free without ads in the beginning, for something that is incredibly expensive to run. They had to introduce any monetization or shut down the service. They went with ads because 99% of users prefer that to payment. Later they gave the option to pay to remove the ads, only as an extra, because very few people are ready to do that.

              There are some ad-free video platforms out there but they have a tiny fraction of the user base of YouTube. Most people couldn’t even name one, let alone considering using it, when YouTube is “free”.

  • KillingTimeItself
    link
    fedilink
    English
    82 months ago

    technology has the potential to make life so much better, there are two problems.

    Tech that makes life better, usually doesn’t create much value. Because it’s either, already been created, and if it has, it’s probably enshittified by now.

    Go use open source FOSS tech, it’s great. Contribute to the improvement of society by not using terrible technology and begin using good technology, it’s free!

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    522 months ago

    “In some parts of the city, you can’t even park your car anymore without downloading an app.”

    Omg, this. I left my phone at home by accident and quickly found out that I could not pay a meter on the area I went to … You had to download an app to pay or use you phone to register a phone number and manually enter a plate and credit card.

    No phone…meant no parking.

    Good luck too if your phone happens to run out of battery.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      2
      edit-2
      2 months ago

      Times change. I see nothing wrong with it. Same as you used to be able to park without paying, then you started to pay, and now it’s moving from those machines to phone apps. And in the future there may be other form of pay, or maybe parking is directly forbidden o who knows what but there will be a change, for sure. Because things change.

      It’s just nostalgia working. Things change. You were more capable of dealing with change at a younger age and that’s why you see the older the people get the more they complain about everything.

      But is just a change, like many other that came before that.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      132 months ago

      Yeah but parking has always been bad.

      You had to carry change. Meters were always out of order or would just eat your change without issuing a ticket, and the people checking never gave a shit and would give you a fine anyway.

      My only complaint is the app, everyone should offer a website or an app, but if you’re going to park there a few times an app does make sense.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        142 months ago

        Neither a phone nor website would work if your phone battery is flat. The meter should at least have a way for someone to park their car if they don’t have a functioning phone, or internet access, even before the hellscape of needing a separate app for everything.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          102 months ago

          You’re in a car. There’s probably a charging port there. Sucks if you don’t have a phone, but it sucked before when you didn’t have change.

          Parking has always been a privilege not a right, and if you’re not prepared you’re going to get a ticket.

          I get that it’s annoying but if my phone broke and I suddenly had to pay for parking with coins, I don’t know what I’d do either. Everything is cashless now, where would I get coins from?

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            32 months ago

            Woo! Let’s make this artificial biome that much more inhospitable for the very creatures that build and live in it!

            We must imagine Sisyphus fucking miserable! Ants in an anthill made of broken glass and depleted lion batteries!

  • SuiXi3D
    link
    fedilink
    92 months ago

    God, same. I’m to the point where I don’t even want a phone at all anymore. I’m so tired of just… everything.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    662 months ago

    For the past 20 years, tech has promised to make things more efficient while making almost everything more complicated and less meaningful. Innovation, for innovation’s sake, has eroded our craftsmanship, relationships, and ability to think critically.

    I feel this in my bones.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      22 months ago

      Yeah, just watch what AI does. The generation after Gen Alpha is going to be unable to imagine the concept of being self sustaining, and problem solving without machines. The same way Gen Z today can’t imagine the concept of just NOT having internet. Or any internet connected devices.

    • htrayl
      link
      fedilink
      English
      62 months ago

      Tech has made things more efficient - the rewards of such are simply being funneled from the average person to the wealthy.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        12 months ago

        Maybe some tech has increased efficiency (although, when it does that increase is more often than not temporary and short lived), but there is even more “tech” that swarms that space rent seeking any time, money, or other resource saved by that increased efficiency. After the efficiencies degrade, the tech-as-a-scam persists and you end up with less efficient systems than you started with.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      192 months ago

      They’re conflating tech with tech bros.

      Tech can and does make lots of things that make our lives longer and better. Just not most of the consumer level shit that is constantly peddled by snake oil sellers. That tech is not meant to make your lives easier, it’s meant to get more money out of you without giving it up to the little people at service level.

      The problem isn’t the tech, it’s the people who are controlling the tech.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        12 months ago

        The problem isn’t the tech, it’s the people who are controlling the tech.

        The tech is literally made by those by people. The tech itself is in fact the problem. You will never have a version of something like social media that’s actually healthy. One way or the other someone with power will get their hands on it and abuse it.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      24
      edit-2
      2 months ago

      For many things I completely agree.

      That said, we just had our second kid, and neither set of grandparents live locally. That we can video chat with our family — for free, essentially! — is astonishing. And it’s not a big deal, not something we plan, just, “hey let’s say hi to Gramma and Gramps!”

      When I was a kid, videoconferencing was exclusive to seriously high end offices. And when we wanted to make a long distance phone call, we’d sometimes plan it in advance and buy prepaid minutes (this was on a landline, mid 90s maybe). Now my mom can just chat with her friend “across the pond” whenever she wants, from the comfort of her couch, and for zero incremental cost.

      I think technology that “feels like tech” is oftentimes a time sink and a waste. But the tech we take for granted? There’s some pretty amazing stuff there.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        2
        edit-2
        2 months ago

        There’s magic and then there’s complexity in tech (at least this is how I think about it).

        Video calling, pure magic, simple to use with major benefits.

        Complex business management software that requires a degree to use? Complexity almost for complexity’s sake to lock an organisation into a support contract.

        Web stores? Usually magic, especially with refined payment processing and smooth ordering. Can verge into over complex coughAmazoncough.

        Internal network administration (Active Directory) and cloud tech, often complexity for complexity’s sake again.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        4
        edit-2
        2 months ago

        for free, essentially!

        Say that to the Facebook Portal: a fantastic product five years ago that is now having its features gutted because Meta couldn’t figure out how to make money off of it.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        3
        edit-2
        2 months ago

        Tech tends to goes through stages:

        A need or idea is created. Usually by a small independent entity.

        A proof of concept is developed and starts to gain ground.

        Investors pour money into the concept to an extreme degree. Tech grows in functionality, matures and develops into a useful tool.

        The the investors demand a return on the investment and the money dries up.

        Company either goes bankrupt or their product goes to shit.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      52 months ago

      I feel this every time I just want to see a restaurant’s menu and instead I have to pretend I’m making an online order.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        22 months ago

        Yeah, just print it and stick it on the table. Or have a tablet or something at the table if it changes frequently.

        Don’t make me use my phone to look up your menu, that’s just tacky.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    232 months ago

    Technology absolutely helps advance science and helps the disabled, It’s greedy fucks that destroyed good tech

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      52 months ago

      Yeah I think blanket statements either way are misguided. Some tech does help the disabled, other tech makes their lives much more difficult. It’s like any other tool, when it’s used at scale by something aiming for optimizing profit it will have terrible side effects

      • KillingTimeItself
        link
        fedilink
        English
        12 months ago

        sure, some tech makes life more difficult, but it’d be weird to require it’s use, so you’re either going to go through a bad government structure (different problem) or choose to use bad products for some reason.

        I guess the secret third answer is working somewhere that requires you to use shitty tech, but like, same problem as no 1.

        I find the bigger problem to be implementation and support, shit like QR codes and phone based payment taking over things like paper, and card based payment, that’s objectively worse. Though both QR codes and phone based payment are in isolation, explicitly good and beneficial things.

  • venotic
    link
    fedilink
    192 months ago

    I’m tired of the people who are the ones that have taken tech to the direction it has gone in for a long while now. Making up problems that weren’t ever there before that suddenly now need a stupid app or a feature to fix but adds in its own problems.

    I’m tired of big tech deciding when we should upgrade because they deliberately create things that break, degrade and becomes obsolete far shorter than whatever should have.

    I’m tired of unnecessary things like added fees for ‘convenience’. I’m tired of things like fucking google flipping back accounts on me when I need to see a number to another account.

    So much shit is that I’m tired about with tech. Tech is supposed to be exciting, easier, friendlier. Now it’s just manipulated into a problem of its own, simply because of those who are behind it.

    • Darren
      link
      fedilink
      English
      32 months ago

      I’m tired of big tech deciding when we should upgrade because they deliberately create things that break, degrade and becomes obsolete far shorter than whatever should have.

      I think about Apple quite a lot in this regard. Not because of planned obsolescence or anything so nefarious, but because they genuinely make some of the best consumer hardware you can buy, and because it’s so good it costs a decent wedge. Then, five years later, when that good hardware is still as good as the day you bought it, they quietly drop OS support for it because they need you to buy another one.

      And most people will smile and thank them for the trade-in discount they’ll get to help them spend more money, while that older, still perfectly usable hardware is shipped off to a massive shredder to take it off the used market.

      I use Macs, I understand this process very well. But I’ve also done my fair share of putting OCLP on older hardware in order to wring a few more years out of it, and of putting Linux on even older Macs because they still work perfectly well. I mean, I have a 2011 MacBook Pro that’s running Linux Mint so well that you wouldn’t have any idea that it’s a 14 year old laptop.

      The second best thing Apple are good at is convincing their customers that the equipment they own is old and knackered. And that’s kinda sad.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    35
    edit-2
    2 months ago

    Tech =/= megacorps

    That’s like saying food doesn’t make the world better where you mean food industry megacorps producing hunger & poverty.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    352 months ago

    The internet peaked in utility around 2004. Most, if not all, developments since then have only made things worse

    • Darren
      link
      fedilink
      English
      12 months ago

      I was thinking about this the other day, while loading music onto my modded iPod. If I could go back in time and stick a pin in tech growth, it would be 2006, before the iPhone came along. Don’t get me wrong, I think the explosion in smartphones that came after the first iPhone is broadly good and has the ability to be democratising. But that’s not really what shook out.

      The world in 2006 had digital cameras and small, portable music players. We had SMS for easily staying in touch with each other, and we did have smartphones - just not as smart as they are now. From a communication perspective, we mostly had what we needed. Hell, by 2006 3G connections were pretty universal, so we could do video calling if we had a phone that supported it. Having a bunch of devices that all did specific things meant that we spread our reliance around a number of companies. Now, with our camera, MP3 player, computer, and communication device all being controlled by one company, if that company turns to shit we have to jump to a less shitty firm, but we have to abandon all of the conveniences to which we’ve grown accustomed.

      As someone who recently jumped from 15 years of iOS to GrapheneOS, this last one is particularly painful.

      And sure, everything has gotten a lot faster since then, but there’s a part of me that kind of enjoys the inconvenience of slower, finicky hardware that sometimes needs a nudge in the right direction.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      102 months ago

      I think in terms of cultural exchange of ideas and the enjoyment of being on the internet, 2005-2015 or so was probably the best. The barrier to entry was lowered to where almost anyone could make a meme or post a picture or upload a video or write a blog post or even a microblog post or forum comment of a single sentence and it might go viral through the power of word of mouth.

      Then when there was enough value in going viral people started gaming for that as a measure of success, so that it no longer was a reliable metric for quality.

      But plenty of things are now better. I think maps and directions are better with a smartphone. Access to music and movies is better than ever. It’s nice to be able to seamlessly video chat with friends and family. There’s real utility there, even if you sometimes have to work around things that aren’t ideal.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      32 months ago

      This era was before smartphones and always-online lifestyle. Being always online is a prerequisite to the attention economy.

      So, yes, you’re right that the best internet was back then. Back when we could leave it at home and go out into the world knowing everybody else had also left it at home.

      Laptops are an obvious exception back then, but almost nobody took their laptop to the bar with them, or to a concert, or on a hike, or to the grocery store. And the trouble of pulling it out and trying to find WiFi meant that it wasn’t easy enough to distract the majority.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      122 months ago

      I do think you’re right. Friendster and MySpace were pretty much the peak, then when real social media took over, it all went to shit. Since then, tech exists not to perform some function but to justify its existence specifically to earn money.

  • mox
    link
    fedilink
    English
    14
    edit-2
    2 months ago

    I’m tired of people saying “technology” when they mean an application of a narrow subfield of technology. Even worse is when they’re not even talking about the tech at all, but instead the practices, leadership, or stock market performance of some corporation that happens to apply some technology in the course of its business.

    I do share the sentiment in this article, though. There’s way too much stuff that we don’t need, often making our lives worse, being pushed at us in order to extract wealth or power.

    • tiredofsametab
      link
      fedilink
      42 months ago

      Agree. I think a lot of tech just isn’t directly visible to consumers in most cases. I’m specifically thinking of medical applications, robotics, manufacturing, etc. Some more visible applications would be transit (maglev trains are in trials now) and a number of similar things. There’s also biotech stuff about which I know little.

      • mox
        link
        fedilink
        English
        42 months ago

        Water treatment, thermal insulation, textile fabrication, pharmaceuticals, air filtration, construction techniques, signal processing… the list goes on.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    82 months ago

    Tech doesn’t make the world better. It’s a tool that’s been used to make rich people richer. Everyday people coming together for a greater cause makes the world better.