You think life can't get any easier? Think again. There's always someone ready to revise the definition of suffering and develop a technology to alleviate it.
You know we're living a ludicrously easy life when a
sufficient number of our peers have apparently complained loudly and frequently
enough about the physical toll of changing TV channels that forces have been
mobilized to make it easier.
No kidding. Hitachi Corporation, for one,
has apparently determined that the act of pushing buttons on a remote control so
taxes a large enough segment of consumers that a viable mass market exists for a
less-strenuous alternative. And, as one might expect of a consumer electronics
company scrambling to keep pace with customers who have officially surrendered
themselves to their unrestrained gluttony for self-indulgence, Hitachi has its
engineering and science staffs working overtime to ease the burden on those
watching TV.
So get ready to celebrate, all you delicate flowers out
there, because easier it will be, easy to such an extent that changing channels
will literally be effortless—as in requiring zero effort, as in the
logical next step after this will be technologies designed to mitigate TVNSS (TV
Neck Strain Syndrome), a soon-to-be-diagnosed musculo-skeletal affliction
brought on by being forced to lift one's chin off one's chest for hours on end
in order to watch one's favorite programming. Inhuman.
At present, there
are two competing channel-changing technologies in development, only one of
which requires any discernable muscle movement. Due to this design flaw, it is
destined to be obsolete even before its forecasted launch three years from now.
Basically, instead of pushing remote control buttons, this technology
requires the user to make distinct hand gestures, which are monitored and
translated by a remote device into instructions that can control the TV, the DVD
player, the stereo, and a range of other gadgets.
The "thumbs up" sign,
for instance, will move the TV channel up. (One can only imagine the
channel-changing pandemonium that would ensue in a house full of optimists.
There needs to be a note in the owner's manual advising against asking questions
like "How's it going?" within range of the monitoring device.)
An
upraised clenched fist controls some other function, a sideways peace sign
another, a handshake gesture another, and on and on. Call me a spoiler, but I'm
thinking that if you're looking for a low-impact way to turn your TV on, flip
through a few channels, and pipe it all through your home theater system,
pushing a couple buttons on a remote seems a whole lot easier than performing
the kind of tai chi this technology requires.
And just think about the
stress those gyrations will put on various elbow, wrist, and shoulder tendons.
Why, it makes me want to drop everything and call a personal injury lawyer this
very minute.
Thankfully, though, Hitachi is well down the road to
perfecting what promises to be the perfect Christmas present—a perpetual
anti-motion machine, if you will—for those individuals who, through no
effort of their own (pun intended), have earned a place of honor in the
pantheon of the laziest human beings ever to exist in the history of time.
Are you ready for this? Three words: Thought-Activated Television. A
silly-looking, sensor-covered cap will measure changes in blood flow to key
areas of the wearer's brain and send signals through optical fibers to a small
computer, which will then "interpret the person's intentions." It then triggers
the remote control, changing the channel or volume or switching the TV on or
off, as desired.
I'm a little uneasy about the whole "reading intentions"
thing. I don't know about you, but when I'm channel surfing, my intentions are
couched more in terms of content than numbers. In other words, I'm not thinking,
"Gee, I would like to go to Channel 118 now." I'm thinking (hypothetically,
dear wife), "Gee, I would like to find Pamela Anderson running down a beach
in slow motion now." That would seem to be a fairly major drawback to
this channel-selection-by-blood-flow technology. I fear that doors accessing the
deep recesses of the cap-wearer's psyche will be involuntarily thrown open to
whoever else happens to be in the room at the time. With today's push-button
remotes, a desire to watch Jerry Springer can be kept to oneself. With
thought-controlled TV though...if you want to watch Jerry, you
will be watching Jerry, by golly, even if your Mensa pals are sitting on
the sofa right next to you.
Obviously, I'm more than a little skeptical
of these technologies, but then I'm pretty skeptical of any technology. So I
asked no less an authority than a member of an average American
household—one who atrophies in front of the television for over eight
hours per day—if he would ever consider replacing his remote control with
hand movements or thought-controlled technology. "Don't be crazy," he said.
"Now if Hitachi could come up with some technology that would allow me to watch
TV without having to lift my chin off my chest, well, then we'd have something
to talk about. See, I've got this pain in my neck..."
Surely we
shouldn't be required to suffer such hardship. Will technology step forward to
spare us this anguish? Stay tuned. Michael
Stuhlreyer is a business writer, a graphic designer, and president of
Stuhlreyer Business Instruments, LLC., a Nashville-based firm specializing in
the creation of marketing and sales support materials, as well as articles, case
studies, and product profiles for technology companies. Contact Mike at
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
or visit his Web site, www.bizinstruments.com.
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