Too often real innovation is lost behind froth and grandstanding like this - too many excitable nerds and shiny toys, not enough introspection on the effects of technology on society. Not enough emphasis on problems that need solving, too much on how to raise more ad revenue or VC money.
I saw this talk live at NEXTBerlin, and while in the audience all I could think was 'wow, I don't care at all if you win - your life sounds like it must suck if you're competing for ridiculous minutiae - and what has this got to do with privacy anyway?'. Questions of privacy - an important pillar of digital policy in Germany and other EU states - were brushed aside at the prospect of faster airline tickets and 'competition for experience', whatever that means.
Really? Can Scoble not imagine a world where experience isn't a zero sum game? Is this the perception of the world we're being locked into by technology?
Google Glass has a lot of potential in some spaces - in teaching, in medicine, in law enforcement - but I am terrified that its evangelists and early adopters are brushing aside the concerns of a digital layer in front of real experiences so readily, as if more technology is automatically a good thing.
Sure. You win Scoble. You just go ahead and book that flight or grab that table. I'll be here in my log cabin in the mountains, looking at the stars, and losing.
Yeah, that rat-race competition bit really rubbed me the wrong way. As if we aren't already competing for enough things, now I'm supposed to worry that John Doe is stealing all my potential good experiences because of his Glass? Maybe this appeals to and motivates others to buy, but definitely not me.
Not sure how that does anything except reinforce his point. It's not about flights or tables. It's about taking advantages and using them. That you are sitting in a log cabin in the mountains, looking at the stars, posting to HN firmly demonstrates his point.
I think Scoble might be missing a very important point. Our ability to access information isn't the problem. We all already have (nearly) instant access to all the information we'll need.
The thing that worries me most about Glass is that it's solving the wrong problem. We're not running around in a world where it's too much of a bother to look at our phone, but instead that we're less and less capable of focus.
If you look at the nature of our technology, we've already (mostly) solved the problem of information search and retrieval at any time. We all have a very near the same quality experience when it comes to information.
But where we break apart is in the ability to focus and make new connections from the data. I wonder whether Glass users are drowning themselves in more noise, and not really getting the space to create new, meaningful, creative connections.
I wonder whether we need new ways to disconnect more intensely than we need a more subtle overlay of noisy information on our reality.
>Our ability to access information isn't the problem.
I disagree with you both on this point and your characterization of Glass as a "subtle overlay of noisy information".
Nowadays, although that information access is quick, it could be quicker and more seamless. There's a world of difference between:
1. Fishing out your smartphone from your pants/bag/wherever
2. Unlocking it (with requisite passcode, thanks corporate IT)
3. Bringing up the search app
4. And either saying what you want after invoking the voice search (and hoping it comes up right, or else you get to do it over again) or typing what you want (and hoping you made no mistakes).
And:
1. Saying, at any time, "Ok Glass, search for (thing)", and having the results played back so you can hear them.
The first one feels contrived and annoying, the second feels passive and natural in comparison.
Glass is unique in that the first two steps of that transaction are eliminated outright, and the third is reduced to saying some magic words. The fourth is greatly mitigated by the fact that Glass is likely in a better position to capture your voice than the speakerphone mic on your smartphone.
Passive access to information (and I'm saying access, not overlay, for a good reason)
is going to be the next big thing for precisely this reason, ease of use!
But let's take another example. I'm sure you've seen the posts decrying someone "missing out" on some event because they were too busy recording it. Now? That's not a problem anymore. "Ok Glass, record a video". You're done. You don't have to think about it, you just launch the recording and then go back to whatever you were doing.
Focus? You barely even see Glass unless you're actively looking up at it. Indeed, you need to "focus" on it to use it. The transaction is just reduced from messing with your phone to an upwards glance.
This is also why I disagree with your assessment of glass as being both an overlay (which it isn't), and noisy (which it isn't, and which would go against the guidelines anyways).
I'm finding more and more that people who feel they need to "disconnect" are simply failing at technology. You are no more connected than you let yourself be! If you are so wired in, by your own choices, that you feel the need to get away from it all for a length of time, how about just not wiring yourself in that tightly?
A point very well made - in fact there's a startup here working on that precise problem, that is how to disengage from the endless barrage of notifications from a billion services all vying for attention.
That facebook home ad with the distracted employee creeps me out for this exact reason
Privacy concerns are legitimate. Google Glass may not even be the problem. But the impact of the availability of ever more personal data in the hands of government and corporations for our society needs to be discussed. People have a legitimate right to know about their data trails.
PS: The #next conference "stole" their slogan¹ from the 26C3 Chaos Communication Congress²
I would add an 'if' to the headline to make it less inflamatory: 'If I am in competition with you for all sorts of experiences, you will lose'.
I am not competing with you, and I do not care if I take a late flight, or do not have a reservation to this restaurant because in my mind reality is not goal driven, but path driven.
Getting the answer or the data isn't really the biggest issue. The problem is understanding what that data actually means. I am pretty convinced (given the students I observe), that google helps with data and trivia, but doesn't help with the understanding of what that trivia means. Put another way, you can access data faster than someone without the glasses, but can you turn that data into information?
I am all for the demise of rote learning of names and dates, but I think we need more tools for explaining the how / why and not the what. You can lookup the API calls with the glasses, but not know how to do the design of those API calls.
It's funny how people here automatically start the reactionary rejection of a new technology taking over our current way of processing information.
It is not really a competition about who lives a better life, or what is the true experience. It is about how general people's life will be changed by the product. Scoble's point is very clear: the product gives users power through technological superiority and let them have a new mean of social display. When everyone starts to get Google Glass, its function no longer matters; it becomes a social device.
I think the sort of future where I need to buy and use a device from a corporation to modulate my experience and participate in society is a pretty shitty future, and we should be doing some thinking about that.
An experience mediated by technology is not the same thing as the original experience - we can debate whether it makes the experience richer or poorer, but it certainly makes the experience different.
Even a UI-less, effortless experience transforms the experience. For instance, passively recording what you see through Google Glass will cause you to view the world with a mind towards recording and archiving your experience.
While Scoble believes he is winning a competition, he is simply opting into a different set of experiences - one where he might get access to things like airline tickets or restaurant reservations a little faster than the rest of us, but also one where he's also constantly evaluating how to use the technology he's carrying to interact with the world. Some people will prefer this set of experiences, while others will prefer the originals.
Both types of people should be able to get what they want, but I worry that Google Glass will alter the experiences of everybody, not just its users. We all act and think differently when we're aware we're being recorded - it makes us more self-conscious, putting us in an 'observe ourselves' mindset that competes with the 'observe the world around you' mindset. In a world with a plurality of Google Glass-wearers, we'll have to assume we're constantly being recorded when around other people, and that's not something I particularly care to experience.
The examples mentioned in the article (plane flights, tables at restaurants) involve competition between people in the same place 'competing' because a given resource is scarce. I'm not making the link to privacy laws at nation state level. There are buses and trains as well as planes. There will be slightly later planes. There are plenty of places to eat where I live.
Wait until network effects take place and it creates a lock-in for a specific vendor. (Besides, congestion will strike and he will also loose a lot of his races.)
So, it is true, we are in a competition, but not the competition that Scoble is referring to.
The competition is more about open standards, patent laws and the future of freedom.
The future looks like people spending half their lives recording video and half of it watching the records. Recursion looks possible if you think of it!
All true. But we technophiles are better served by downplaying this aspect of technology's advance.
A large fraction of people are utterly freaked out by the idea that they'll be obligated to adopt new technology just to keep up.
Better to give many chances for people to discover on their own that they really want to use a new technology for positive reasons, rather than out of fear.
Many people will discover they don't. I have a mobile phone that is the first mobile phone I ever had (sucker! I never answered the damn thing anyway!); someone gave it to me because they were sick of not being able to phone me any time of the day or night. It's over a decade old and it spends most of the time switched off. If it does happen to ring, I generally ignore it. I live quite happily without carrying a phone or smartphone around with me; I suspect many people will quite happily live without being able to wear their google interface on their face.
[+] [-] DividesByZero|13 years ago|reply
I saw this talk live at NEXTBerlin, and while in the audience all I could think was 'wow, I don't care at all if you win - your life sounds like it must suck if you're competing for ridiculous minutiae - and what has this got to do with privacy anyway?'. Questions of privacy - an important pillar of digital policy in Germany and other EU states - were brushed aside at the prospect of faster airline tickets and 'competition for experience', whatever that means.
Really? Can Scoble not imagine a world where experience isn't a zero sum game? Is this the perception of the world we're being locked into by technology?
Google Glass has a lot of potential in some spaces - in teaching, in medicine, in law enforcement - but I am terrified that its evangelists and early adopters are brushing aside the concerns of a digital layer in front of real experiences so readily, as if more technology is automatically a good thing.
[+] [-] pi18n|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] hughw|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] daenz|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] infoman|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jasonlotito|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] burningion|13 years ago|reply
The thing that worries me most about Glass is that it's solving the wrong problem. We're not running around in a world where it's too much of a bother to look at our phone, but instead that we're less and less capable of focus.
If you look at the nature of our technology, we've already (mostly) solved the problem of information search and retrieval at any time. We all have a very near the same quality experience when it comes to information.
But where we break apart is in the ability to focus and make new connections from the data. I wonder whether Glass users are drowning themselves in more noise, and not really getting the space to create new, meaningful, creative connections.
I wonder whether we need new ways to disconnect more intensely than we need a more subtle overlay of noisy information on our reality.
[+] [-] Karunamon|13 years ago|reply
I disagree with you both on this point and your characterization of Glass as a "subtle overlay of noisy information".
Nowadays, although that information access is quick, it could be quicker and more seamless. There's a world of difference between:
1. Fishing out your smartphone from your pants/bag/wherever
2. Unlocking it (with requisite passcode, thanks corporate IT)
3. Bringing up the search app
4. And either saying what you want after invoking the voice search (and hoping it comes up right, or else you get to do it over again) or typing what you want (and hoping you made no mistakes).
And:
1. Saying, at any time, "Ok Glass, search for (thing)", and having the results played back so you can hear them.
The first one feels contrived and annoying, the second feels passive and natural in comparison.
Glass is unique in that the first two steps of that transaction are eliminated outright, and the third is reduced to saying some magic words. The fourth is greatly mitigated by the fact that Glass is likely in a better position to capture your voice than the speakerphone mic on your smartphone.
Passive access to information (and I'm saying access, not overlay, for a good reason) is going to be the next big thing for precisely this reason, ease of use!
But let's take another example. I'm sure you've seen the posts decrying someone "missing out" on some event because they were too busy recording it. Now? That's not a problem anymore. "Ok Glass, record a video". You're done. You don't have to think about it, you just launch the recording and then go back to whatever you were doing.
Focus? You barely even see Glass unless you're actively looking up at it. Indeed, you need to "focus" on it to use it. The transaction is just reduced from messing with your phone to an upwards glance.
This is also why I disagree with your assessment of glass as being both an overlay (which it isn't), and noisy (which it isn't, and which would go against the guidelines anyways).
I'm finding more and more that people who feel they need to "disconnect" are simply failing at technology. You are no more connected than you let yourself be! If you are so wired in, by your own choices, that you feel the need to get away from it all for a length of time, how about just not wiring yourself in that tightly?
[+] [-] DividesByZero|13 years ago|reply
That facebook home ad with the distracted employee creeps me out for this exact reason
[+] [-] nisa|13 years ago|reply
Privacy concerns are legitimate. Google Glass may not even be the problem. But the impact of the availability of ever more personal data in the hands of government and corporations for our society needs to be discussed. People have a legitimate right to know about their data trails.
PS: The #next conference "stole" their slogan¹ from the 26C3 Chaos Communication Congress²
1: http://nextberlin.eu/2013/04/behind-the-scenes-at-next13/
2: http://events.ccc.de/congress/2009/
[+] [-] DividesByZero|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] kh_hk|13 years ago|reply
I am not competing with you, and I do not care if I take a late flight, or do not have a reservation to this restaurant because in my mind reality is not goal driven, but path driven.
[+] [-] unknown|13 years ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] protomyth|13 years ago|reply
Getting the answer or the data isn't really the biggest issue. The problem is understanding what that data actually means. I am pretty convinced (given the students I observe), that google helps with data and trivia, but doesn't help with the understanding of what that trivia means. Put another way, you can access data faster than someone without the glasses, but can you turn that data into information?
I am all for the demise of rote learning of names and dates, but I think we need more tools for explaining the how / why and not the what. You can lookup the API calls with the glasses, but not know how to do the design of those API calls.
[+] [-] xfs|13 years ago|reply
It is not really a competition about who lives a better life, or what is the true experience. It is about how general people's life will be changed by the product. Scoble's point is very clear: the product gives users power through technological superiority and let them have a new mean of social display. When everyone starts to get Google Glass, its function no longer matters; it becomes a social device.
[+] [-] DividesByZero|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] gyardley|13 years ago|reply
Even a UI-less, effortless experience transforms the experience. For instance, passively recording what you see through Google Glass will cause you to view the world with a mind towards recording and archiving your experience.
While Scoble believes he is winning a competition, he is simply opting into a different set of experiences - one where he might get access to things like airline tickets or restaurant reservations a little faster than the rest of us, but also one where he's also constantly evaluating how to use the technology he's carrying to interact with the world. Some people will prefer this set of experiences, while others will prefer the originals.
Both types of people should be able to get what they want, but I worry that Google Glass will alter the experiences of everybody, not just its users. We all act and think differently when we're aware we're being recorded - it makes us more self-conscious, putting us in an 'observe ourselves' mindset that competes with the 'observe the world around you' mindset. In a world with a plurality of Google Glass-wearers, we'll have to assume we're constantly being recorded when around other people, and that's not something I particularly care to experience.
[+] [-] icebraining|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] keithpeter|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] cateye|13 years ago|reply
So, it is true, we are in a competition, but not the competition that Scoble is referring to.
The competition is more about open standards, patent laws and the future of freedom.
[+] [-] coldtea|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] icebraining|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] StavrosK|13 years ago|reply
Meanwhile, don't we have more important things to do than listen to someone go "yeah, I can use my apps faster than you"?
[+] [-] jasonlotito|13 years ago|reply
Children dying of hunger in Africa. If you aren't working on that, you are a bad, bad person and should be ashamed.
Everything else is a waste.
[+] [-] ratsbane|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] sebastianconcpt|13 years ago|reply
Scaling anxiety disorders big time.
Here we go...
[+] [-] arbuge|13 years ago|reply
(Except maybe that airline ticket if I don't get one of the remaining two...)
[+] [-] infoman|13 years ago|reply
I was about 1000% more efficient than my coworkers at new things, ways and information because I googled fast and found the information.
[+] [-] devonbarrett|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] pfortuny|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] ef4|13 years ago|reply
A large fraction of people are utterly freaked out by the idea that they'll be obligated to adopt new technology just to keep up.
Better to give many chances for people to discover on their own that they really want to use a new technology for positive reasons, rather than out of fear.
[+] [-] EliRivers|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] coldtea|13 years ago|reply
To keep up with what? That's for b-level players that are caught on the rat-race.
Outside of this, you don't even need a mobile phone...
[+] [-] jeffehobbs|13 years ago|reply