Ask HN: When did we start to assign “smartness” to technology?
Every phone, fridge, TV and car is smart now. When did this trend start and why do the companies that sell these product keep using it? Is it only a marketing strategy or is it something deeper in this "smartness"?
My guess is that technology cannot be smart. People are smart because they do innovative things, dogs are smart when they find things that are well hidden or do tricks, little kids are smart when they discover patterns in movement and speech, but not lifeless technology that is programmed to do a specific task.
It's weird as a human to think that a tool can be as conscious as you because, you know, it's just a tool.
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[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 16.6 ms ] thread"Smartphone" was reportedly first used for the Ericsson R380:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ericsson_R380
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qE8DnLzdcKs
It's all about the same way consumer gadgets have always been marketed: to save the owner time, energy, and money, leaving them with more time for leisure and fun. Or today, leaving them more time to work to afford rent and food along with all the gadgets.
The Portsmouth Block Mills are the first example of integrated mass production using machine tools.[1]