[conspire] Flashing twelves (was: Twitter successors)
Syeed Ali
syeedali at syeedali.com
Fri Mar 15 04:26:20 PDT 2024
On Wed, 13 Mar 2024 14:12:45 -0700
Rick Moen <rick at linuxmafia.com> wrote:
> Quoting Paul Zander (paulz at ieee.org):
>
> Early on, kitchen appliances tended to have buttons labeled "clock
> set". Not so the typical VCR. And the manual, assuming you could
> find it, was often not well written, at least for English readers.
> The industry has come a long way in making better user interfaces.
I think clocks should be clocks, and not what most people have, which
is:
- a phone
- with smart capability
- with software (app or OS)
- with internet access
- that connects out on the net
- to a server which has internet access
- which has software
- which has hardware
I like when technologies lean into solving problems transparently. I
don't think this has been discussed downthread:
With the example of a device that uses the time, there is a signal
called WWVB [1] transmitted by the National Institute of Standards and
Technology [2] and devices empowered by this listen to the signal and
set themselves.
The obvious parallel is a device which connects to the internet and
a time server, but I disagree with having that sort of tech in my
VCR/etc. for reasons which are likely obvious to everyone here.
A clock was put in VCRs because it was cool, and it's put in microwaves
and ovens because they have concepts of start and stop times. I
don't think these are good reasons to feature the time.
At a previous house, my washing machine had bluetooth and an app. I
don't know why and I never tested it.
I can understand home alarm systems, but I'm still waiting for
technology-empowered smoke detectors.
----
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WWVB
[2] https://www.nist.gov/pml/time-and-frequency-division/time-distribution/radio-station-wwvb
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