In James Cameron’s sci-fi classic “The Terminator”, we are warned of an impending future when the machines will take over and rule us. Well, for what it’s worth, I don’t think the machines are waiting for the future anymore.
Technology was created by man with a very simple aim: to help him reduce his work. Telephones, refrigeration, automobiles, air travel, microwave ovens, the internet – all were supposed to reduce his efforts and enrich his life. So at which point of time did they start governing our lives?
Technology was created by man with a very simple aim: to help him reduce his work. Telephones, refrigeration, automobiles, air travel, microwave ovens, the internet – all were supposed to reduce his efforts and enrich his life. So at which point of time did they start governing our lives?
Certainly, life is easier today
than it was a hundred years ago because of technology. Travelling is easier,
health care is better, communication is simpler. Yet look deep into your heart
and tell me – when was the last time you felt the Facebook actually lessened your work; or has browsing
through it become another addition to your daily tasks? Has your Blackberry
made your life comfortable by bringing you e-mails everywhere, or has it
allowed the ghost of your office to haunt you anywhere, anytime? Has the
microwave made heating food up less of a hassle, or is it creating a lazy
generation who is always on the hunt for a quick solution?
In case you have not been able to
guess so far, I am not really a technophile. I like books that are made of
paper, I like seeing lips and teeth convey a smile rather than a colon and a
bracket, and I can’t imagine how cloud computing functions in the monsoon. And,
at the risk of being slaughtered, I must confess that I don’t worship Steve Jobs.
I believe that technology,
instead of making life simpler for us, has created a whole new system of rituals,
customs and manners that has superimposed itself over our existing order of
codes and conduct. Life isn’t necessarily simpler – it is just different,
albeit equally complex.
The truest proof of anyone
getting engaged is the facebook relationship status changing. We only believe
someone is married when we see the photos on facebook. More than the holiday
itself, we look forward to the comments our holiday photos will get when we
post them online on the first day back at work.
My weekend must have better than yours because my photos got more
‘likes’. The mid-morning stroll to the water cooler to chat up our colleagues
has given precedence to the quick mid-morning scan through facebook updates
when our bosses are busy – probably doing the same.
Yes, I concede that technology
has certainly made life quicker. However, the trouble with finishing off tasks
in increasingly lesser spans of time is that we then have to struggle even
harder to occupy what we have left over. A frenetic lifestyle leads to an even
more frenetic search for newer, crazier experiences – because we get tuned to a
perpetually rising bar. And after we are exhausted by the insane pace of our
lives, we all pop for a quick break into a relaxation or meditation spa, and
pay to slow our lives down.
My friends have often me that I
am inherently an old man. I have never bothered to understand the reason behind
that. Perhaps because I can sit in one spot for over half an hour, patiently,
without talking, getting frustrated, or – God forbid! – checking my phone.
Perhaps because I can get through a journey by looking out of the window,
instead of depending on my mp3 collection. Perhaps because when the internet
breaks down at my house, I don’t feel an empty, endless void in my life.
I am not sure where this leaves
me. I understand that I am a member of an increasingly endangered species of
people who don’t aspire for things that are prefixed with an ‘i’. I realise
that I am perhaps one in very few who still cringe at grammatical and
punctuation mistakes in an SMS. I know I am the only person left who misses the
kitschy value of a perfumed love letter.
Don’t get me wrong – this is not
a “good old days” rant. I have no hesitation in admitting that technology has
improved our lives in innumerable ways. However, I often have incredible
difficulty in calming a nagging feeling that we may be paying too high a price.
2 comments:
Nice Title.
And here I thought you were waaaay more tech-savvy than me.
Didn't know you felt that way about love letters!
Nice Title.
And here I thought you were waaaay more tech-savvy than me.
Didn't know you felt that way about love letters!
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