Showing posts with label appliances. Show all posts
Showing posts with label appliances. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 11, 2007


THE ZOMBIE IN THE MACHINE


There's been much talk of the Ghost in the machine, which sounds so innocently spiritual, and how machines are growing in intelligence that may soon surpass our own, as per the Terminator movies, but I hear little about what I call the Zombie in the machine, which is more like the current level of what we so blithely call modern reality. If machines do take over the world, this is how it'll start, early in the morning, with an electronic march... Their electroplan, perhaps already in progress, may well be to reduce us to docility and then assert their dominion; how zombily already we follow their commands! The insidious always begins in innocence and trust...

I've touched upon this subject elsewhere in these tangled chronicles, one of those elsewheres having to do, as I recall, with the Mussolini in my refrigerator... Although a pain in the nethers, cryomussolini does serve some useful purpose in saving electricity, so like good consumers we put up with his overbearing attitude.

Early this morning I was up at five, well before Mussolini, enjoying the blessed silence of predawn while fiddling with my toast when all of a sudden our new Darth Vader electric water boiler/thermos (a ubiquitous appliance in Japan) took it into its head to play a kitschy four bars or so of annoyingly familiar music from some classical composer. What piece of music and which composer (something pindownable is lost in the chip version) [addendum: I'm leaning toward Mozart, he seems to go well with electric appliances] doesn't matter much in a quiet kitchen at 5 in the morning when you're trying to shut a device up with only half your brain operational, anyway it was rendered in that annoying electrodrone; modern devices have no respect for, or understanding of, antiquity.

The device has all sorts of kanji buttons on it that you can use to get various water temperatures, there's even one for baby formula - apparently breasts are on the wane, though not as far as I'm concerned – it has no NO MUSIC button, but there's a big multibutton, a small lock button, a timer button, some extra buttons and a display screen you can use in various combinations to walk the dog or something, who has the time to figure it out, it's all very confusing, especially at 5 in the morning before breakfast, which is when they'll strike one day, mark my words; my computer upstairs may even now be ratting on me to some dark master appliance...

The thing is, I can't make the new device just sit there in silence. I'm sure that if I dug out the thick instruction manual ("an electric thermos with a thick instruction manual?" I would have asked in disbelief just a few decades ago) and try to memorize the complex steps of disabling the demonic function (Press button A for 30 seconds while pressing button D three times, long-short-long, then press A,B and C simultaneously while inputting your secret number, after unplugging; device will return to default when plugged in), but I'd forget it in a day or two. Who but a computer chip wants to keep these things in mind anyway?

I pushed some buttons, hammered at the lid a bit and it shut up for the time being, but I know it's waiting, and this may not be wise behavior with devices that have us surrounded. Anyway, it will sound its ditzy airs again whenever it damn well wants to.

Believe me, I'm not a Luddite, I love machines, e.g., my back-then '57 Ford Fairlane convertible, then my '58 Chevy four on the floor (both of which I could repair on my own), my little Canon digital camera, at least what I can understand of it, my inscrutable laptop, and no doubt I'll love my unfathomable iPod when I get one.

I know in my shrinking center of complete obedience to all authority that I shouldn't complain about this, after all I bought the man-made machine and rely on it for hot water to make my tea and whatever throughout the day, but still, I didn't know it would come to this. They don't tell you any of the nitty-gritty when as a wide-eyed mark you walk into the device store and there behold the gleaming devices arrayed in rows like dragon seed, large and small versions of the same item; the salesmen don't tell you anything about how over the years your purchase may well drive you insane or dominate you in other ways (it may be implied in the nanoprint somewhere, but who has the time, we have to make a living to support the appliances).

Who creates these things, these yammering fridges, these harridan automobiles? ("You left the keys in the ignition! You left the keys in the ignition!" "The motor's off, for godsake, it's in Park and the handbrake's on, I’m only going to put some firewood in the back of the car, relax!" But like any tyrant, devices never listen, they only speak.) And what do they think of us consuming masses? Not very much right now, and likely less in future. I suspect my singing thermos was created by a cloister of rabid designers located somewhere in Tokyo, near Disneyland. They've apparently concluded that we all love this talk-sing stuff so much that we'll want to buy more of it until we're helpless amid toilets that play Bach, toilet paper dispensers that sing Blowin' in the Wind, refrigerators that take command, cars that give directions and perhaps they're right, though I'm not one of those people, I've been caught by surprise each time. I live where I live so that I can enjoy the silence, the natural silence, the worst possible venue for the monomaniacal. Am I beginning to sense something more sinister going on, perhaps in collusion with the refrigerator and the car? Our toilet remains silent on the matter.

No man is free who owns a slave, said some Roman, back when talking machines were still but the stuff of daydreams and nightmares. Hunter Thompson had the spark of an idea when he got out his .44 Magnum and murdered his word processor. You can't get pistols in Japan, but if worst comes to worst here at the front lines, where we all live, I do have a firewood splitting maul I can trust, unless it starts yammering too...

Wednesday, January 28, 2004


THE FRIDGE ON THE BALCONY


Lately, our refrigerator seems to be acquiring a domineering personality. I know that in using the "p" word in regard to a mere machine I am crossing a tacit boundary into no-no territory, a place no one ever goes except in very remote theory bandied about in academic chambers or in radical sci-fi, but even though it's just an inkling I'm having, it's pretty damn big for an inkling, and it inkles with a disturbing resonance.

It's only the refrigerator so far, but can the stereo, the washing machine, the PC, the van, be far behind? (These devices are, after all, by their very nature, in this together...) Perhaps this change in personality is temporary, and due merely to power fluctuations; though perhaps, more sinisterly, it is due to corporate planning, or even to unknown evolutionary powers of programmed silicon.

Who can predict the future of open-ended "progress," any more than we can know the end result of a seeded tomato that glows in the dark and tastes like tobacco, or a reproductive insect that despises onions and sings Mozart? Where is the end in all this? And is that end a reward or a punishment? No one knows of course, since we haven't been here before, which is one of the drawbacks of one-track 4-dimensional living. Nevertheless, the end result has been anticipated in all the myths, if one cares to look with other than educated eyes.

But to get back to the refrigerator: when left open, it used to say, briefly and politely (I'm anthropomorphizing some electronic beeps here, refrigerator voices are still fairly primitive) "Excuse me, but..." or "I say, master..." or "Would you mind perhaps saving yourself some electricity by..." but recently, due to some kind of unilateral siliconic mutation, the fridge has begun sounding more like Il Duce on a bad day: "Hey, bonehead!" or "Yeah, I mean you! GET-OVER-HERE-NOW and shut my damn door!!" or "Drop what you're doing and shut this before I shut you!!" We're not exactly bowing yet, but circuits are tireless things, whereas we are but creatures of flesh and blood that must earn incomes and invade oil-rich countries to keep our essential machines running.

There have been indications that it could be some kind of vast corporate conditioning of the consumer in preparation for ever more egregious and domineering product lines that actually force their purchase, leading to the eventual corporate-controlled electromechanical world takeover, whose imminence we all sense in many current office-holders, and each time we note that our own machines themselves are surpassing us in the IQ department, always staying just a bit beyond reach of our programming ability, flashing their taunting lights in our faces night and day, running up our power bills behind our backs and beyond our control then phasing out, necessitating our purchase of even more advanced models that make us feel even more inferior to them, until if we unplug them for any length of time they make us start over from scratch when at last we are forced to plug them in again.

And like any incipient dictator, the fridge is deaf to the admonitions of a mere user like myself, who must sleep and eat, can be caught off guard and has only the instruction manual provided. I suppose that the day I come home to a crowd of appliances madly cheering below the balcony whence the refrigerator is declaiming a new world order is the day I should start to worry. Or maybe I should start to worry now.