As the user experience, designer, this “singing“ of electronics, and other such devices has been prevalent for the last decade or so. It’s an attempt to humanize the electronic devices who interact with every day. I question its effectiveness or validity, but, nonetheless, it has become extremely popular in both the medical device field and the field of home appliances. Buying an LG or a Samsung appliance, and it will, very annoyingly, play little songs when it’s done doing whatever it does.
I find this a particularly interesting emergent, cultural application of anthropomorphism to everyday objects. I wonder how it will progress over the next decade or so.
OutlierBlue@lemmy.ca 5 weeks ago
I find it fascinating how we’re so willing to ascribe thoughts, feelings, and motivations to inanimate objects or forces of nature and on the other hand we’re so quick to remove all of those attributes from other groups of humans to justify horrible acts done to them.
jol@discuss.tchncs.de 5 weeks ago
We’re hella cute. But pareidolia is seriously gonna be the end of us when the AI takes over 😂
OutlierBlue@lemmy.ca 5 weeks ago
It’s already responsible for religion and all the nonsense it’s spawned.
leisesprecher@feddit.org 5 weeks ago
Even ascribing consciousness into others or ourselves is actually pretty stupid if you think about it.
Stemming from religion there’s this idea that human “souls” are somehow special and exist on a plane outside reality. But that’s not the case.
We are just semi-rigid blobs of mostly water that grew into weird shapes.
JimmyMcGill@lemmy.world 5 weeks ago
Because our collective we is composed of many different people. You have brilliant scientific minds and genius artistic people and everyone in between. At the same time you have very empathetic people and others who would not hesitate to hurt someone for their gain.
Diversity is both a blessing and a curse.
OutlierBlue@lemmy.ca 5 weeks ago
That is true, but people are capable of holding both views at the same time. Soldiers on the battlefield go out and do horrific things to enemy soldiers and civilians, and come home and are loving fathers and husbands who wouldn’t hurt anyone. Or how many times have people been caught for horrible crimes and all their friends and neighbours say it isn’t possible because they’re the kindest and most helpful people they know.
This isn’t a matter of “some people are capable and some are not”. It’s a case of “most people seem to be able to set aside someone else’s humanity to do horrible things”
ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de 5 weeks ago
Or that everyone everywhere pictures a little robot the size of like Wall-e, when curiosity is really 10 feet long, 7 feet high, and 2,000 pounds.
Speiser0@feddit.org 5 weeks ago
That’s exactly what @OutlierBlue@lemmy.ca was talking about. They cut off the feet of like 5 humans, just to measure the size of a damn robot.
zante@lemmy.wtf 5 weeks ago
Probably the biggest and most important question in the world.
dumbass@leminal.space 5 weeks ago
I dropped my phone the other day and started apologising to it for dropping it again.
MonkeMischief@lemmy.today 5 weeks ago
Beautifully (tragically?) put. Well done. It’s worth pondering…
I think maybe it’s because when something lacks human qualities, we’re more able to project our wishes onto it, whether that’s its “personality” or “story” or “feelings”, whatever. Maybe in a way it makes it feel predictable and “safer”, like we know it somehow. It will behave the way it behaves regardless of the little projections we put on it that can sometimes be a remnant of our own egos.
…People, on the other hand, are much less predictable, and tend to highly dislike being projected upon. Maybe removing relatable qualities and generalizing groups of them is a selfish way of turning them into an “object” that “feels more predictable” and the one projecting feels like it satisfies their need for control, even though it dehumanizes others who are, in actuality, just like themselves.
Empathy tends to be such a prevention AND a cure…