I’m an acknowledged lover of most things tech (the geekier,
the better, that’s my motto much of the time), but I can admit to being somewhat
resistant to certain new trends. I’m referring to the increasing amounts of
social media interfacing that’s being packed into the newest cars coming off
the production lines, both stateside and abroad. Excuse me, but personally, I
do NOT want my car telling all of my Facebook friends exactly where on the
Interstate I happen to be at a given point in time, and I most certainly do not
want it telling the local authorities how fast I am driving around the
Charlotte Motor Speedway… uh, I mean I-485. (Some of us here clearly think that
these are one and the same, but I suppose that is irrelevant to this rant.) Nor
do I want my spouse’s Volvo placing itself in a Google+ circle with every other
car in the condo parking lot, or tweeting to strange 18-wheelers that are on
our tail. Call me old-fashioned here, but I will settle for the fact that my
Chevy truck starts every time I turn the key, and does an admirable job in the western
Carolina mountain snow if I happen to be in the area during the winter and kick
the trans into 4WD. I do NOT want it talking to Facebook. EVER. The trend just seems rampant of the kind of
technology that we’ll someday regret. Perhaps it’s due to the flashbacks of the
out-of-control NX-5s chasing Will Smith in the tunnel in the movie, “I, Robot.”
Although I will admit, when I first saw that film, I sooooo wanted the Audi
that Smith was driving. Still do…
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