Some random thoughts inspired by this blogpost:

1. I once said, a couple of decades ago, that "the net is about
sociology, not technology" (which got me quoted, among other places,
in _The Cluetrain Manifesto_). Picking up from there, it seems that
today's devices are more about biology and psychology than technology.
2. It seems clear, to me, that what enables "licenses" like this is
today's IP law infrastructure, which is likely to collapse under its
own weight at some point. What then?
3. The flow of data is too one-way. How might one enable sousveilance
in this context?

Thoughts, wise ones?

Udhay


http://kottke.org/16/06/cars-are-getting-weird

Cars are getting weird  TIM CARMODY  ·  JUN 13 2016

Tesla has two cars, the S60 and the S75, that are physically more or
less identical, but one costs $8500 more than the other. The cheaper
car ($66K base price) has a software block on its battery which limits
its range to 208 miles on a full charge. Pay $8500 up front, or $9000
for an over-the-air update later, and you get an extra 40 miles.

Same car, same battery. About 20 percent more efficient, for $9000.
Better software license.

Cars are big computers, and have been for a while, but we're slowly
starting to treat them like it. Different expectations, different
pricing, different ownership structures, different usage; different
everything.

Here's another story on managing expectations for cars, about steering
wheels. Steering wheels have a basic function; they control the car.
But if a car is capable of driving itself, and is also an interface
for a wide range of general computing tools, what does that mean?

Volvo's Concept 26 vehicle, which debuted in November at the Los
Angeles Auto Show, features a retractable steering wheel. Robin Page,
Volvo chief of interior design, says Volvo chose to keep the familiar
shape of the steering wheel.

"We wanted to keep that recognition of a round steering wheel," he
said. "People need to get used to autonomous drive, so being able to
get back to that steering wheel and grab hold of it, that's
comforting. We decided to have it there as a recognizable icon."

The steering wheel becomes a skeuomorph. It becomes a surveillance
device, registering pressure to tell whether you have both hands
firmly on the wheel, or if you've fallen asleep or are in distress. It
becomes an entertainment console. It transforms and retracts into the
dash to signal when you've shifted between user-controlled and
autonomous modes. Its familiar presence soothes you through the
transition. Eventually, you forget it was ever there at all.

-- 

((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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