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10 technologies that deserve to die (Go at it)
MSN/Technology Review ^ | 24 Oct 03 | Bruce Sterling

Posted on 10/24/2003 11:34:45 AM PDT by RussianConservative

A science fiction writer's irreverent take.

1. NUCLEAR WEAPONS

ONE CAN make some sound arguments for nuclear power-medical radioisotopes are quite handy, while far-traveling spacecraft can barely function on anything less-but there is no reason for us to go on pretending that we need to fry entire chunks of continents. Not only are nuclear weapons technically clumsy, but they betray a blatant death wish better suited to al-Qaeda than a civilization.

Nowadays, a well-organized state can deftly obliterate any conceivable target with exquisite GPS accuracy. Conventional "daisy cutters" and cluster bombs can be scaled up to any size or potency that the military might need. This leaves nuclear bombs with only one ideal function: terrorism. They are excellent weapons for nongovernmental predators to deploy against centers of government. They are quite useless for governments to deploy against terrorists. So why are governments still manufacturing these expensive, dangerous, easily stolen objects?

If all nuclear weapons vanished tomorrow, the world's current military situation would not be affected one whit. The U.S.A. would still be military top boss. Yet we'd be much less likely to wake up one morning to find Paris or Washington missing.

2. COAL-BASED POWER

COAL ISN'T so much a "technology" as a whole school of them, all of them bad or worse. Coal was the primeval fuel of the industrial revolution. Coal powered the first steam engines, whose killer app was pumping stagnant water out of coal mines. It powered the railroads, whose killer app was moving coal.

Unfortunately, we've been doing this coal trick for some two hundred years now, and coal is getting uglier by the day. If your accountants rival Enron's, you can claim that coal is a cheap fuel. Add in acid rain, climate damage, and medical costs, and it swiftly becomes dead obvious that coal is a menace. Coal spews more weather- wrecking pollutants into the air per unit of energy than any other fossil fuel. Extracting coal destroys vast tracts of land. Coal mining is one of the world's most dangerous jobs.

If coal vanished tomorrow, we'd miss it: the U.S. would lose a quarter of its energy supplies. But that shortfall, daunting though it is, cannot compare to the ghastly prospect of blackened skies over China and seas rising out of their beds. The sooner we rid ourselves of this destructive addiction, the less we will have to regret.

3. THE INTERNAL-COMBUSTION ENGINE

I HAVE to confess that, as a former denizen of the 20th century, I'll miss the loud, soul-stirring THRAAAAGH of a two-stroke motorcycle. And liter for liter, calorie for calorie, gasoline is truly the queen of liquid fuels. Nevertheless, if you stand inside a closed garage with any internal-combustion engine, it will kill you. That is bad. Even the best such engines emit an eye-watering stink.

Internal-combustion engines are big and clumsy. They are hard to tune, and they waste a lot of effort carrying their own weight. They've got a great incumbent fueling system built into place, but they need to be replaced by hydrogen and fuel cells, technologies that are simpler, safer, and cleaner. If you need really loud, macho engine noises, why not just record them and play them on your car stereo?

4. INCANDESCENT LIGHT BULBS

IN REALITY, these sad devices are "heat bulbs." Supposedly a lighting technology, they produce nine times more raw heat than they do illumination. The light they do give, admittedly, is still prettier than the eerie glow of compact fluorescents and light- emitting diodes. But it's still a far cry from the glories of natural daylight.

Plus there's the cost of light bulbs, their fragility, the replacement overhead, the vast waste of energy, glass, and tungsten, the goofy hassle of running air conditioners to do battle with the blazing heat of all these round little glass stoves...let's face it, these gizmos deserve to vanish.

They will be replaced by a superior technology, something cheap, cool, and precisely engineered, that emits visible wavelengths genuinely suited to a consumer's human eyeball. Our descendants will stare at those vacuum-shrouded wires as if they were whale-oil lanterns.

5. LAND MINES

THE PLANET is already cluttered with well-meaning nongovernmental organizations protesting land mines. Their plaint makes perfect sense when you realize that land mines are ideally suited to blowing up peacemakers once a war is over.

During a war, few soldiers step on land mines, because mines are placed by enemies waiting with rifles. Once the armies demob, though, and armies always do, land mines don't kill combatants anymore. They kill livestock, the brighter and more exploratory kinds of children, and the men and women who wander around after soldiers, attempting to restore the planet to habitability.

There is something to be said for the practice of automating bombs so that people can get killed without any human intervention. After all, there's a long technical trend there, and it strongly favors advanced societies with engineers over those among us who merely pick up hoes and axes in fits of tribal rage. But it's stupid to manufacture and spread lethal devices that don't know when a war is over.

6. MANNED SPACEFLIGHT

ONE HATES to see this dazzling technology go, but when one resolutely sets the romance aside, there's not a lot left. Thanks to decades of biological research, it's now quite clear that flying around the solar system is bad for one's health. Without the healthy stresses of gravity on one's skeleton, human bones decay just as they do during prolonged bed rest while muscles atrophy. Cosmic rays blast through spacecraft walls and human bodies, while solar flares will fry astronauts as diligently as any nuclear bomb. I won't mention the fact that spacecraft are inherently rickety and dangerous, because that's a major part of their attraction.

There is little point in stepping onto the moon, leaving flags and footprints, and then retreating once again. The staggering price of shipping a kilogram into orbit has not come down in decades. In the meantime, unmanned spacecraft grow smaller and more capable every year. Until we bioengineer ourselves to enjoy cosmic rays, or until we've got rockets that can lift a Winnebago made of solid lead, this technology belongs on the museum shelf.

7. PRISONS

IT'S RATHER out of style to suggest that people who transgress might be rehabilitated if treated decently. But even if criminals are to be relentlessly punished, removed from the sight of decent people, and kept in a giant, two-million-person ghetto, there are better, cheaper, and more efficient ways than the ones we have.

Newfangled electronic-parole monitors and ubiquitous computing offer plenty of opportunities. These certainly needn't be seen as sissified kinds of constraints; they could be just as cruel and unusual as anyone might like.

Lose your American internal visa (formerly known as a "driver's license") and you soon find that merchants won't take your credit, that aircraft won't transport you, that for all your sunny smiles and good behavior, you are under heavy constraints. American airports have become incarceration centers in all but name, plus you can get a drink there and listen to Muzak. So why do we go through these same ritual gestures with the iron bars, uniforms, and transport trucks? Technically, it's redundant.

8. COSMETIC IMPLANTS

THERE IS something scarily aberrant about puffing up living human flesh by implanting large amounts of an alien substance. Not that people will sacrifice vanity-of course that is out of the question- but any truly advanced medical technology would simply grow the flesh into the desired shape, using the human metabolism, as opposed to injections of window putty. Silicone's mimicry of flesh-and the same goes for gel, saline, and collagen-is too crude for genuinely cosmetic purposes.

9. LIE DETECTORS

THEY JUST plain don't work. They might have some vague use in increasing the psychological stress of a subject under interrogation, but galvanic skin response and heart rate have little to do with the process of lying. The use of lie detectors is basically a voodoo ritual that allows large institutions to lie to themselves about the trustworthiness of their employees.

Even if lie detectors did work-say, with newfangled nuclear magnetic-resonance brain scans-they would become an Orwellian intrusion. Furthermore, there would likely be a social revolution as major actors in society, from top to bottom, had to admit to fabricating their lives out of spin and wishful thinking. The official public version of our means, motives, and opportunities is severely divorced from the private world of our interior thoughts. If we were forced to confront and reveal our brain functions through technological means, most of us would soon discover that we led half- baked lives of quiet intellectual desperation, in which very little th\ought of any kind ever took place.

10. DVDs

THE DVD was the most eagerly adopted electronic consumer gizmo in history, but I'd feel bad if I failed to complain about the evil of these things. First and worst, DVDs are unbearably frail. Any benefit one gets from "clearer pictures"-on what HDTV superscreen, exactly?-is quickly removed by the catastrophic effects of a single thumbprint or scratch. Plus, just like CDs, DVDs as physical objects will prove to warp and delaminate.

Most loathsome of all is the fiendish spam hard-burned into DVDs, which forces one to suffer through the commercials gratefully evaded by videotape fast-forwards. The Content Scrambling System copy protection scheme doesn't work, and the payoff for pirating DVDs is massive, because unlike tapes, digital data don't degrade with reproduction. So DVDs have the downside of piracy and organized crime, without the upside of free, simple distribution. Someday they will stand starkly revealed for what they really are: collateral damage to consumers in the entertainment industry's miserable, endless war of attrition with digital media.

TECHNOLOGIES DIE rather routinely-seen a Conestoga covered wagon lately?-but it's rare for them to be singled out and righteously put to death. Some technologies, however, are so blatantly obnoxious that the human race would rejoice if they were obliterated. A wise society would honor its young technical innovators for services rendered in annihilating obsolete technologies that are the dangerous hangovers of previous, less advanced generations.

Bruce Sterling is a science fiction author, journalist, and cultural critic based in Austin, Texas. He is the author of "The Hacker Crackdown" and other books, and his articles have appeared in Wired magazine, The New York Times, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction and other publications.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: misc; technology
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To: RussianConservative
Well, cumbi-f'ing-ya...

What a bunch of hooey.

That said, I have eliminated incandescent lights from my home, and I am very pleased with the results. My utilities bill is rock steady at $30 per month.
21 posted on 10/24/2003 11:47:16 AM PDT by ericthecurdog
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To: Sofa King
Actually if this guy would just stop putting his DVD's in the toaster they would be just fine....
22 posted on 10/24/2003 11:47:22 AM PDT by Always Right
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To: ContemptofCourt
In fact, it is rather suprising that we still place so much reliance on such old technology.

The ultimate reliance on old technology is the nuclear power plant. It may seem high tech, but all is does is heat up water to steam and then send the steam to power the generators. So it actually is the oldest form of technology -- the steam engine -- that actually provides us the electricity. The nuclear aspect is just there to heat the water.

23 posted on 10/24/2003 11:48:20 AM PDT by FreedomCalls (It's the "Statue of Liberty," not the "Statue of Security.")
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To: FreedomCalls
Is he wearing a mullet?

A mullet head, LOL

24 posted on 10/24/2003 11:49:01 AM PDT by Always Right
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To: RussianConservative
So this elitist wants everyone else to give up coal power and the internal-combustion engine, but he gets to keep his SUV and his 5000-sq.-ft California home.
25 posted on 10/24/2003 11:51:17 AM PDT by Alouette (Neocon Zionist Media Operative)
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To: RussianConservative
Didn't we go through all this about a monthe ago?
26 posted on 10/24/2003 11:52:14 AM PDT by Publius6961 (40% of Californians are as dumb as a sack of rocks.)
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To: RussianConservative
100% of all critics of land mines do not have there asses on the 38th parallel facing infiltration by lunatic minions of Beloved Leader Jr.

100% of all US critics of Hiroshima were not in uniform in the Pacific in 1945. Nuclear weapons prevented a major third world war in the 20th century by scaring the bejesus out of world leaders. Anyone who thinks Stalin wouldn't have invade Western Europe sometime shortly after 1945, absent nuclear weapons, probably believes Ed Asner when he promises to move to France.
27 posted on 10/24/2003 11:53:11 AM PDT by Lonesome in Massachussets (Uday and Qusay and Idi-ay are ead-day)
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To: AngryJawa
This is SATIRE. Isn't it?
28 posted on 10/24/2003 11:55:18 AM PDT by BenLurkin (Socialism is Slavery)
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To: harpseal
a rouge space object

Would that be like Tammy Faye Baker?

29 posted on 10/24/2003 11:56:13 AM PDT by olorin
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To: ContemptofCourt
Coal can be converted into a gas or synthetic oil, which means we don't have to get those items from insane people wearing tablecloths on their heads!
30 posted on 10/24/2003 11:56:59 AM PDT by kaktuskid
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To: RussianConservative
Prisons are technology?
31 posted on 10/24/2003 11:57:42 AM PDT by Zathras
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To: Lonesome in Massachussets
To pick up your line of reasoning:

100% of all Cosmetic Implant critics have never had their face disfigured in an accident. Nor have they had to live with a total mastectomy.

100% of all Prison critics have never had to live next door to a paroled murderer, rapist, or pedophile.

32 posted on 10/24/2003 11:59:21 AM PDT by AngryJawa ("The bang is great, but the shockwave is where it’s at.")
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To: ContemptofCourt
In fact, it is rather suprising that we still place so much reliance on such old technology.

The technology may have been around awhile, but "old" is subjective.

We've been screwing around with solar, wind, fuel cell, turbine, hydroelectric, and various other forms of electrical power generation, and that nasty coal powerplant still generally gets the job done with less fuss than any "newer" technology. Nuclear power is probably the best real alternative, but we're - unjustifiably - afraid to build them.

As for internal combustion, NOTHING, but NOTHING, has come even close to matching the efficiency, power, reliability and durability of the hydrocarbon IC powerplant - turbine, 2/4 stroke, diesel, whatever - in one form or another, our ability to shape our environment has been expanded by orders of magnitude due to the internal combustion engine.

Oh, and this Sterling guy is an idiot and most likely a hypocrite as well.

33 posted on 10/24/2003 12:00:08 PM PDT by xsrdx (Diligentia, Vis, Celeritas)
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To: BenLurkin
This is SATIRE. Isn't it?

Methinks Mr. Mullet is quite serious.

34 posted on 10/24/2003 12:00:30 PM PDT by AngryJawa ("The bang is great, but the shockwave is where it’s at.")
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To: RussianConservative
I'll miss the loud, soul-stirring THRAAAAGH of a two-stroke motorcycle

And not the the heart-pounding THUMPPPP of a four stroke Harley?

The author and I are not cut from the same cloth.

35 posted on 10/24/2003 12:04:07 PM PDT by CodeJockey (I've got your tag line.)
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To: RussianConservative
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/993684/posts
already posted here... beat you by almost a full month...
36 posted on 10/24/2003 12:06:47 PM PDT by Namyak
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To: RussianConservative
6. MANNED SPACEFLIGHT

This alone makes him an idiot.
37 posted on 10/24/2003 12:09:00 PM PDT by KevinDavis (Let the meek inherit the Earth, the rest of us will explore the stars!)
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To: RussianConservative
Maybe if Mr. Sterling would use the services of a capitalist pig mechanic to give his vehicle a tuneup, the need for which has probably been indicated by an orange dashboard light glowing in Mr. Sterlings face like deer in the headlights, the exhaust fumes wouldn't smell like those from a lawnmower.
38 posted on 10/24/2003 12:09:45 PM PDT by brianl703
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To: RussianConservative
So why do we go through these same ritual gestures with the iron bars, uniforms, and transport trucks?

Mr. Sterling, like most liberals, cannot fathom that some people in this world get up, every day, with nothing on their agenda aside from taking advantage of other people, often violently.

While I'm sure he'd be comfortable living next to a proximity collar equipped homicidal rapist, he knows he'll never have to so why not speculate.

39 posted on 10/24/2003 12:10:44 PM PDT by xsrdx (Diligentia, Vis, Celeritas)
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To: RussianConservative
Well, I'd like to see ovens and stoves gotten rid of and replaced with replicators. I hate to cook!
40 posted on 10/24/2003 12:10:54 PM PDT by luckystarmom
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