Book Review
Social Machines
A new book argues that machines work best when they help us
perform, not perform in our stead.
The Design of Future Things by Donald A. Norman. Basic
Books. 2007. 231 pages. $27.50.
“Human
subtlety will never devise an invention more beautiful, simple or direct
than does Nature. In her inventions, nothing is lacking and nothing is
superfluous,” Renaissance painter Leonardo da Vinci once remarked. Former
Apple vice president Donald Norman’s
Design of Future
Things
is very much rooted in this
Leonardesque sentiment. The short, conversational book serves as both a
meditation on the nature of human–machine interaction and a warning:
invention that ignores the human, the artful, and the natural will fail both
conspicuously and disastrously. “We are confronting a new breed of machine
with intelligence and autonomy, machines that can indeed take over for us in
many situations,” Norman writes. “In many cases, they will make our lives
more effective, more fun, and safer. In others, however, they will frustrate
us, get in our way, and even increase danger. For the first time, we have
machines that are attempting to interact with us socially.”
We
spend ever more time conversing with machinery. In the obvious sense, this
means more interfacing (the technologist’s preferred term) with a wider
variety of devices: selecting from an assortment of rinse cycles on our
washer; setting lighting systems, motion detectors, and security devices as
we leave the house; starting up the car; programming the MP3 player, GPS
computer, and even the cruise control before actually hitting the gas.
As our
interfacing opportunities increase, so does the potential for human–object
miscommunication.
Machines may work like clockwork, but they handle surprises like robots—
which is to say, poorly. We rely on them when we shouldn’t and find
ourselves (ironically) lost after following the directions of a computer
that can neither see nor drive, mopping up after a stubborn washer that
refuses to stop when we open the lid midcycle, apologizing to the police on
our doorstep for our well-intentioned but overly vigilant security systems.
What’s
missing from the human– machine relationship, says Norman, is a sense of
respectful partnership. His book is full of examples of what a better
tête-à-tête might look like. A Microsoft Cambridge “smart” home actually
seeks to make its
occupants smarter,
allowing family members to leave messages on digital surfaces viewable
anywhere throughout—or outside—the house. It’s a vision of home as digital
administrative assistant rather than as butler. A Georgia Tech smart home
can watch you cook and—if you have to break away to answer the phone—remind
you where you left off. Bad memory? The house also monitors your
prescriptions and can let your family do the same. After all, who knows you
best?
“Both
groups of researchers could have tried to make the devices intelligent,”
Norman points out. “Instead, both groups devised systems t h a t would f it
smoothly into people’s life styles. Both systems rely upon powerful,
advanced technology, but the guiding philosophy for each group is
augmentation, not automation.”
Automobiles are another example of machines that could become less automatic
and more “social.” Radio frequency identification and similar technologies
already allow cars to communicate with tollbooths, so why not with other
cars? It will be a long time before such car-to-car collaboration eliminates
the need for traffic lights and speed limits. In the meantime, cars that
could better negotiate their position, speed, and distance with one another
would most certainly prevent wrecks.
What’s
most important, says Norman, is that the inventors of the future transcend
the binary distinction between the practice of art and the science of
engineering and move toward a comprehensive “science of design.” The notion
harkens back to sixteenth-century Florence, a time and place where broad
knowledge and boundless curiosity were considered as valuable as narrow
expertise or a declared major. If a more generalist approach yields objects
that better reflect the coherence of nature— rather than the whim of
marketers—then the objects of tomorrow will be unquestionably smarter.
❑
About the Reviewer
Patrick Tucker is the senior
editor of THE FUTURIST and director of communications for the World Future
Society. E‑mail ptucker@wfs.org .
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