Friday, June 26, 2015

THE PERIPATETIC PHILOSOPHER on:

California Dreaming
Part Two
Ubiquitous “Siri”

James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
June 26, 2015



“SIRI” as GOD IN THE MACHINE



Siri is a part of Apple Inc.'s iOS which works as an intelligent personal assistant and knowledge navigator.

The feature uses a natural language user interface to answer questions, make recommendations, and perform actions by delegating requests to a set of Web services such as Wolfram|Alpha.

The software, both in its original version and as an iOS feature, adapts to the user's individual language usage and individual searches (preferences) with continuing use, and returns results that are individualized.

The name Siri is Scandinavian, a short form of the Norse name Sigrid meaning "beauty" and "victory", and comes from the intended name for the original developer's first child.

Siri was originally introduced as an iOS application available in the App Store by Siri, Inc., which was acquired by Apple on April 28, 2010. Siri, Inc. had announced that their software would be available for BlackBerry and for phones running Android, but all development efforts for non-Apple platforms were cancelled after the acquisition by Apple.

Siri has been an integral part of iOS since iOS 5 and was introduced as a feature of the iPhone 4S on October 14, 2011. 

Dictation powered by Siri was added to the third generation iPad with the release of iOS 5.1.1 in May 2012; full Siri support was added with iOS 6. The 5th generation iPod touch, released in October 2012, also gained Siri support.

Siri is also integrated into Apple Watch's watchOS, and can be activated by holding down the Digital Crown or by saying "Hey, Siri".



THE MAKING OF A BELIEVER


My wife, Betty, had never been to Los Angeles, and I hadn’t been back there in more than thirty years.  So, we were traveling blind were it not for the accompaniment of “Siri.” 

Readers of my works know I am not an electronic nerd, but I must say I am frighteningly impressed with “Siri.” 

It seemed as if “God” were looking down on us, guiding our every remote move, changing directions, stopping at the appropriate stop light, making the correct turns, getting on the appropriate Interstate ramps at a multiplex of interleafing cloverleaf junctions, and then traveling through a labyrinth of streets to our destination.

In this case, it was a lovely tiled roof corner house in a poster board home out of a House and Garden magazine.  It was Hemet, California in the desert, and the residence of my sister, Janice, and her husband, David Ewing.

Given this excellent guidance system, it would be of little avail were Beautiful Betty not such an excellent driver.  I don't drive much anymore except to the library, the gas station, the supermarket and the barber shop.  


CALIFORNIA DREAMING

California has a population the equivalent of Norway, Sweden, Finland and Denmark combined, and a population of motor vehicles that must approach nearly one to every member of that society.

Californians have no choice but to drive to everywhere they go.  

Perhaps this explains why they are the best drivers I have ever laid eyes on, as well as the most courteous encountered in the United States.  

Living in Europe, I thought no drivers could top European drivers in courtesy and competency, but I believe California drivers do. 

Since the automobile is so critical to the lifestyle, we did not encounter a single accident and only two occasions where the driver was obviously having vehicle trouble and we drove hundreds of miles and blended into traffic of thousands of cars.  

Moreover, and this was something of a shock to us, Californians obey the speed limits of the highways. 


WORK AND LIFE IN THE AGE OF “SIRI”

Clearly, Mapquest, Triple A, and other roadway guidance systems are anachronistic.  

This is 2015 and no doubt “Siri” will be replaced by something electronically even more sophisticated.  It is inevitable.

Man’s genius in on display and we are increasingly moving into the “Age of Automation” as well as the “Age of Information.” 

This is not new as these prototypes have been in the works for more than half a century.  

They are now however becoming common to us all, even to those of us who have little clue as to the technology behind the magic. 

We are well into “the Second Machine Age” with relentless technological breakthroughs certain to transform everyday life for us all.  

The question that has to be asked, when it comes to work, the workplace and the worker, subjects dear to my heart and the genre that I have dedicated much of my energy, will humans go the way of the horses?

The dystopian novels of George Orwell’s “Nineteen Eighty-Four” (1949) and Yevgeny Zamyatin’s “We” (1921) predicted mindless totalitarianism and the impact it would have on 20th century life.  

We have no equivalent forewarning novels that have captured our imagination as did these works in the current robotic generated dystopian age.  

As a consequence, we go blindly into the future as advanced economics become increasingly automated and digitized, and machines continue to replace the blessed and challenging occupations of mankind. 

What will he be?  What will he do?   

Mark my words as problematic as the future appears to be there will be a religious renaissance that will rival that of 2,000 years ago.  We don't need a messiah.  We need a pragmatist that will help us answer these proffered questions. 


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