In
Letter From America (IHT) Richard Bernstein wonders if we're suffering from technological involution or, in other words, being swamped by too much technology, useless widgets and the like.
He's struggling with Windows Vista (apparently a lot of people are) as it has so many more requirements added to it which in turn slows the whole system down. Most people use very few of the many features now added to mobiles.
Bernstein is putting forward the general idea that once a good system is put in place or a useful product is out on the market, on the whole it should be left alone. It's serving its purpose well and doesn't need to be tampered with but, of course we aren't satisfied unless changes are made because this is meant to represent progress.
Bernstein gives many examples of systems so complex they've ended up getting us all in a pickle. Here are a couple;
The court system is so clogged with litigators and their lawyers that it takes years for cases, whether civil or criminal, to get to their conclusions — this despite the indisputable truth to the old saw that justice delayed is justice denied.
The financial crisis brings home the national clutter like almost no other event, except, perhaps, the advent of Windows Vista — that tremendous profusion of unregulated new financial instruments that got us into such an incomprehensible tangle that the very people who created them have to be paid extra to get us out.
Even after all these months of crisis, examination, and analysis, how many people would actually recognize a credit default swap if they saw one?
But hey, it may just be a generational thing.
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