Thursday, March 19, 2015
The Apple Watch
Technology forums and geeks across the globe were abuzz a few weeks ago when Apple released new details about its latest product—the Apple Watch, scheduled for release on April 24. The watch, like other smartwatches that have come before it, pairs with your smartphone to keep you connected. It’s a music player, a fitness tracker, a virtual wallet, a remote for other smart household devices, a sketchpad, a calendar, a deliverer of messages and emails; and, on top of that, it tells time within 50 milliseconds. It is definitely not a pizza; if you find yourself stranded on a desert island or stuck in traffic because of a disabled construction vehicle and starving, you will find the stainless steel or 18-karat gold tough to bite through. It’s also not so much a watch as a smaller, square smartphone strapped to your wrist.
Image courtesy of redmondpie.com
Apple advertises the watch as a way to “start a whole new
kind of conversation.” It pairs with other Apple Watches so that you can sketch
pictures transmitted directly to your friends’ wrists, tap gentle pattern’s to
get their attention, and record and send your heartbeat, all to let the special
people in your lives know you’re thinking about them. “With Apple Watch,” the
Apple site reads, “every exchange is
less about reading words on a screen and more about making a genuine
connection.” But aren’t the connections that people make with one another
face-to-face, at happy hour or cooking dinner or shrieking and swimming as
quickly as possible away from a jellyfish that has been floating three feet
from your legs while snorkeling in the Florida Keys (What, everyone doesn’t
want to experience that terrifying encounter with their friends? It’s a real
bonding moment), the most enjoyable and the most memorable?
We as a society are only now starting to realize how
technology affects social interactions and feeds the human urge to feel
validation and less alone. Recent
studies have shown that when asked to unplug from computers, cell phones,
and social media for a day, volunteers started experiencing symptoms akin to
drug withdrawal—cravings, anxiety attacks, depression, and irritability. One
college student described the cravings as similar to “itching like a crackhead”
(crack cocaine—not healthy, but also not a pizza). The pervasive use of
technology has spurred a social movement to disconnect from our devices. The National Day of Unplugging
recently celebrated its sixth year, and the Internet abounds with lists like “5
Reasons to Disconnect” and “8 Reasons to Unplug and Enjoy Life.” There are consultations you can
undergo with professionals to evaluate your level of overuse or addictive
behaviors and rehabs for
technology addition.
It is neither realistic
nor beneficial to shun technology entirely in the current era. The sheer
amount of information available via the Internet (including but not limited to vital
facts about things which aren’t pizza), the ease with which ideas can be
disseminated, the ability to stay in touch with people that live across deserts
and oceans and that busy interstate you don’t have time to navigate today
because you had to stay late at work—these advantages have facilitated and
advanced meaningful connections and collaborations beyond restrictions of time,
space, and social status. But when pictures of cats and animated smiley faces
and videos of us jamming out to our favorite songs (I know that’s not just me)
start replacing, rather than enhancing, our in-person interactions—that, I
believe, is a damn shame.
Thursday, March 5, 2015
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