Terminal Compromise by Winn Schwartau (my reading book .txt) 📖
- Author: Winn Schwartau
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might come out. Only CNN showed up. They sent a junior producer.
So what, everyone has to start somewhere. And this might be his
big break.
“Mr. Chairman, committee members,” his eyes scanned the dais as
he spoke. “Honored guests,” he looked around the hall to insure
as many people present felt as important as possible, “and inter-
ested observers, I thank you for the opportunity to address you
here today.” In seconds he owned the room. Pierre was a capti-
vating orator. “I must plead guilty to the overly kind remarks
by Senator Deere, thank you very much. But, I am not feigning
humility when I must lavish similar praises upon the many dedi-
cated friends at dGraph, whom have made our successes possible.”
Mutual admiration society, thought Scott. What a pile of D.C.
horseshit, but this Pierre was playing the game better than the
congressional denizens. As Pierre spoke, the corners of his
mouth twitched, ever so slightly, but just enough for the observ-
er to note that he took little of these formalities seriously.
The lone TV camera rolled.
“My statement will be brief, Mr. Chairman, and I am sure, that
after it is complete you will have many questions,” Pierre said.
His tone was kind, the words ominous.
“I am not a technical person, instead, I am a dreamer. I leave
the bits and bytes to the wizards who can translate dreams into
a reality. Software designers are the alchemists who can in fact
turn silicon into gold. They skillfully navigate the development
of thoughts from the amorphous to the tangible. Veritable art-
ists, who like the painter, work from tabula rasa, a clean slate,
and have a picture in mind. It is the efforts of tens of thou-
sands of dedicated software pioneers who have pushed the fron-
tiers of technology to such a degree that an entire generation
has grown up in a society where software and digital interaction
are assimilated from birth.
“We have come to think, perhaps incorrectly, in a discreet quan-
tized, digital if you will, framework. To a certain extent we
have lost the ability to make a good guess.” Pierre paused.
“Think about a watch, with a second hand. The analog type. When
asked for the time, a response might be ‘about three-thirty’, or
‘it’s a quarter after ‘, or ‘it’s almost ten.’ We approximate
the time.
“With a digital watch, one’s response will be more accurate;
‘one- twenty-three,” or ‘4 minutes before twelve,’ or ‘it’s nine
thirty-three.’ We don’t have to guess anymore. And that’s a
shame. When we lose the ability to make an educated guess, take
a stab at, shoot from the hip, we cease using a valuable creative
tool. Imagination!
“By depending upon them so completely, we fall hostage to the
machines of our creation; we maintain a constant reliance upon
their accuracy and infallibility. I am aware of the admitted
parallel to many science fiction stories where the scientists’
machines take over the world. Those tales are, thankfully, the
products of vivid imaginations. The technology does not yet
exist to worry about a renegade computer. HAL-9000 series com-
puters are still far in the future. As long as we, as humans,
tell the computer to open the pod bay doors, the pod bay doors
will open.” Pierre elicited a respectful giggle from the stand-
ing room only crowd, many of whom came solely to hear him speak.
Rickfield doodled.
“Yet, there is another viewpoint. It is few people, indeed, who
can honestly claim to doubt the answer displayed on their calcu-
lator. They have been with us for over 20 years and we instinc-
tively trust in their reliability. We assume the computing
machine to be flawless. In many ways, theoretically it is per-
fect. But when man gets involved he fouls it up. Our fingers are
too big for the digital key pad on our wristwatch-calculator-
timer-TV. Since we can’t approximate the answer, we have lost
that skill, we can’t guess, it becomes nearly impossible to know
if we’re getting the right answer.
“We trust our computers. We believe it when our spreadsheet
tells us that we will experience 50% annual growth for five
years. We believe the automatic bank teller that tells us we are
overdrawn. We don’t question it. We trust the computer at the
supermarket. As far as I know, only my mother adds up her gro-
ceries by hand while still at the check-out counter.”
While the image sank in for his audience, Pierre picked up the
glass of ice water in front of him and sipped enough to wet his
whistle. The crowd ate him up. He was weaving a web, drawing a
picture, and only the artist knew what the climax would be.
“Excuse me.” Pierre cleared his throat. “We as a people believe
a computer printout is the closest thing to God on earth. Di-
vinely accurate, piously error-free. Computerized bank state-
ments, credit card reports, phone bills, our life is stored away
in computer memories, and we trust that the information residing
there is accurate. We want, we need to believe, that the ma-
chines that switch the street lights, the ones that run the
elevator, the one that tells us we have to go to traffic court,
we want to believe that they are right.
“Then on yet another hand, we all experience the frustration of
the omnipresent complaint, ‘I’m sorry the computer is down. Can
you call back?’” Again the audience emotionally related to what
Pierre was saying. They nodded at each other and in Pierre’s
direction to indicate concurrence.
“I, as many of us have I am sure, arrived at a hotel, or an
airport, or a car rental agency and been told that we don’t have
a reservation. For me there is an initial embarrassment of
having my hand slapped by the computer terminal via the clerk.
Then, I react strongly. I will raise my voice and say that I
made a reservation, two days ago. I did it myself. Then the
clerk will say something like, ‘It’s not in the computer’. How
do you react to that statement?
“Suddenly your integrity is being questioned by an agglomeration
of wire and silicon. Your veracity comes into immediate doubt.
The clerk might think that you never even made a reservation.
You become a liar because the computer disagrees with you. And
to argue about it is an exercise in futility. The computer
cannot reason. The computer has no ability to make a judgment
about you, or me. It is a case of being totally black or white.
And for the human of the species, that value system is unfathoma-
ble, paradoxical. Nothing is black and white. Yes, the computer
is black and white. Herein again, the mind prefers the analog,
the continuous, rather than the digitally discreet.
“In these cases, the role is reversed, we blame the computer for
making errors. We tend to be verbally graphic in the comments we
make about computers when they don’t appear to work the way we
expect them to. We distrust them.” Pierre gestured with his
arms to emphasize his point. The crescendo had begun.
“The sociological implications are incredible. As a people we
have an inherent distrust of computers; they become an easy
scapegoat for modern irritations. However, the balancing side of
the scale is an implicit trust in their abilities. The inherent
trust we maintain in computers is a deeply emotional one, much as
a helpless infant trusts the warmth of contact with his parents.
Such is the trust that we have in our computers, because, like
the baby, without that trust, we could not survive.”
He let the words sink in. A low rumbling began throughout the
gallery and hall. Pierre couldn’t hear any of the comments, but
he was sure he was starting a stink.
“It is our faith in computers that lets us continue. The reli-
gious parallels are obvious. The evangelical computer is also the
subject of fiction, but trust and faith are inextricably meshed
into flavors and degrees. A brief sampling of common everyday
items and events that are dependent on computers might prove
enlightening.
“Without computers, many of lifes’ simple pleasures and conven-
iences would disappear. Cable television. Movies like Star
Wars. Special effects by computer. Magic Money Cards. Imagine
life without them.” A nervous giggle met Pierre’s social slam.
“Call holding. Remember dial phones? No computers needed.
CD’s? The staple diet of teenage America is the bread and
butter of the music industry. Mail. Let’s not forget the Post
Office and other shippers. Without computers Federal Express
would be no better than the Honest-We’ll-Be-Here-Tomorrow Cargo
Company.”
“Oh, and yes,” Pierre said dramatically. “Let’s get rid of the
microwave ovens, the VCR’s and video cameras. I think I’ve made
my point.”
“I wish you would, Mr. Trew-Blow,” Senator Rickfield caustically
interjected. “What is the point?” Rickfield was
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