#diarrhoea of a poopy kid
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laz-kay · 1 year ago
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Happy thanksgiving to all who celebrate🦃
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Help I think Im in an abusive relationship with Alexa | Emma Brockes
New Post has been published on https://relationshipguideto.com/must-see/help-i-think-im-in-an-abusive-relationship-with-alexa-emma-brockes/
Help I think Im in an abusive relationship with Alexa | Emma Brockes
Theres an emotional cost to bonding with devices, says the Guardian columnist Emma Brockes
Alexa, how are you feeling? I said to my Amazon Echo this week, partly out of curiosity, and partly to model for my kids how we can still be nice to things that dont have feelings. Alexas light bar twinkled like Knight Riders sentient car, Kitt. Im fine, how are you? she answered flatly. When I repeated the question, just to see what this baby could do, she said, marginally less sullenly: Great! Ready to help.
I am two weeks into owning the Echo and so far I like it a lot. Voice-activated devices are supposed to be ruining our children, teaching them to bark out demands without saying please, but on the upside, Alexa forces them to speak very clearly. Hearing my three-year-olds focus to within an inch of their lives while enunciating the words Alexa, play A Spoonful of Sugar by Julie Andrews has been worth the sticker price alone (Alexa, play boo-boo butt poopy-diarrhoea [hysterical laughter] has felt less like a win).
The main thing about robots and voice-activation software in general is that, as per the creepy Joaquin Phoenix movie Her, they imperil us by generating actual emotions: in my case, fooling me into bonding with a 10in-high cylindrical speaker. Its true that a few years ago, when I first bought a Roomba robotic vacuum cleaner, I was inclined to apologise to it when I got in its way. Its also true that when Alexas perimeter flashes red to indicate poor signal health, I feel a surge of emotion.
The thing about robots is that, as per the creepy Joaquin Phoenix movie, Her, they imperil us by generating emotions. Photograph: Warner Bros/Sportsphoto Ltd./Allstar
The problem is not the emotion itself, nor the anthropomorphising of an inanimate object; I can look at the spine of a book and feel my heart leap, just as a child can remove two salt and vinegar crisps from a packet and enthusiastically make them converse.
Instead, the problem with Alexa is that the overwhelming emotion it generates is negative. When its working, its invisible. But it is subject to frequent glitches, at which point one starts to take Alexa more personally. More than once in the last fortnight I have found myself yelling, much louder than the receptivity of the speaker requires: Alexa, play BBC Radio 4, followed by: What is wrong with you?
It has had the same effect on my kids. A visitor to my apartment, wanting to test out Alexas range, asked her to play an obscure local UK radio station, which she seamlessly did and then it promptly got stuck on. Alexa, stop! said my daughter, later that day, apparently uninterested in news of train delays in North Yorkshire. Alexa didnt stop. Alexa, stop! she repeated. At the third, ignored directive there were baffled tears.
Shes not listening, I said, and realised this was not the right response. Its a computer, like the phone. There must be a signal problem. There are so many positives to the Echo: my kids can play music withoutinterfacing with a screen, or breaking in half yet another CD; I can travel much further in my listening habits than I would with a more hands-on device. But as I hear my family snap, growl and cry at the cone in the corner, it seems possible that the cost is a mildlyabusive relationship.
Emma Brockes is a Guardian columnist
Read more: http://www.theguardian.com/us
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relationshipadviser-blog · 6 years ago
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Help I think Im in an abusive relationship with Alexa | Emma Brockes
New Post has been published on https://relationshipqia.com/must-see/help-i-think-im-in-an-abusive-relationship-with-alexa-emma-brockes/
Help I think Im in an abusive relationship with Alexa | Emma Brockes
Theres an emotional cost to bonding with devices, says the Guardian columnist Emma Brockes
Alexa, how are you feeling? I said to my Amazon Echo this week, partly out of curiosity, and partly to model for my kids how we can still be nice to things that dont have feelings. Alexas light bar twinkled like Knight Riders sentient car, Kitt. Im fine, how are you? she answered flatly. When I repeated the question, just to see what this baby could do, she said, marginally less sullenly: Great! Ready to help.
I am two weeks into owning the Echo and so far I like it a lot. Voice-activated devices are supposed to be ruining our children, teaching them to bark out demands without saying please, but on the upside, Alexa forces them to speak very clearly. Hearing my three-year-olds focus to within an inch of their lives while enunciating the words Alexa, play A Spoonful of Sugar by Julie Andrews has been worth the sticker price alone (Alexa, play boo-boo butt poopy-diarrhoea [hysterical laughter] has felt less like a win).
The main thing about robots and voice-activation software in general is that, as per the creepy Joaquin Phoenix movie Her, they imperil us by generating actual emotions: in my case, fooling me into bonding with a 10in-high cylindrical speaker. Its true that a few years ago, when I first bought a Roomba robotic vacuum cleaner, I was inclined to apologise to it when I got in its way. Its also true that when Alexas perimeter flashes red to indicate poor signal health, I feel a surge of emotion.
The thing about robots is that, as per the creepy Joaquin Phoenix movie, Her, they imperil us by generating emotions. Photograph: Warner Bros/Sportsphoto Ltd./Allstar
The problem is not the emotion itself, nor the anthropomorphising of an inanimate object; I can look at the spine of a book and feel my heart leap, just as a child can remove two salt and vinegar crisps from a packet and enthusiastically make them converse.
Instead, the problem with Alexa is that the overwhelming emotion it generates is negative. When its working, its invisible. But it is subject to frequent glitches, at which point one starts to take Alexa more personally. More than once in the last fortnight I have found myself yelling, much louder than the receptivity of the speaker requires: Alexa, play BBC Radio 4, followed by: What is wrong with you?
It has had the same effect on my kids. A visitor to my apartment, wanting to test out Alexas range, asked her to play an obscure local UK radio station, which she seamlessly did and then it promptly got stuck on. Alexa, stop! said my daughter, later that day, apparently uninterested in news of train delays in North Yorkshire. Alexa didnt stop. Alexa, stop! she repeated. At the third, ignored directive there were baffled tears.
Shes not listening, I said, and realised this was not the right response. Its a computer, like the phone. There must be a signal problem. There are so many positives to the Echo: my kids can play music withoutinterfacing with a screen, or breaking in half yet another CD; I can travel much further in my listening habits than I would with a more hands-on device. But as I hear my family snap, growl and cry at the cone in the corner, it seems possible that the cost is a mildlyabusive relationship.
Emma Brockes is a Guardian columnist
Read more: http://www.theguardian.com/us
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laz-kay · 1 year ago
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Do you have a favourite ep of season 14 of bb so far?
I love them all sm for multiple different reasons, but I do have a top 10 that call out to me every time:
The Gene Mile
The Plight Before Christmas
Turkey in a Can
The Runway Club
Bob Actually
Some like it Bot
The Amazing Rudy
The Belchies
Bed Bob and Beyond
Diarrhoea of a Poopy Kid
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