The bedside clock died of (seems like) a power surge the other day. We bought a replacement today which had all the expected buttons for setting the time… but I could not figure out how to set the time. Instructions said to hold down the “clock” button until the display flashes and then adjust minutes with the right arrow or hours with the left arrow. But it wouldn’t change. Would NOT change. Spouse figured it out. I was holding down the clock button as I have always done with similar clocks. Nope. THIS one, you have to hold ONLY until the display flashes, then release it and THEN set the time.
People were asked to name two tech industry leaders. Sure, Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg. Asked to name two notable female tech leaders, the answer almost always was Siri and Alexa.
That’s a very Tralfalmadorian way of looking at things. Past, present, and future all exist simultaneously. The visual time tracks of all things Would appear as strands of spaghetti in the Cosmos. (Kurt Vonnegut, “Slaughterhouse-Five”)
Time is an artificial construct. Just like political boundaries, the “7” seas, and “Maine lobsters” (do you really think lobsters care?). The biggest artificial construct would be religion, of course. If there really is a god, why are there so many religions? If he was so smart, why isn’t it made plain “to creatures made a little lesser than the angels”? Everyone who ever told me about god lied. EVERYONE.
In my kitchen there is a digital clock on my stove, on my microwave and on my toaster oven and Alexa sits on the shelf. There is a battery operated clock complete with hands on the wall bought for twelve bucks fifteen years ago. Guess which one gets consulted.
About ten years or so ago, I read about a small economic study that compared how a person’s native language can influence buying and saving habits. It compared [American] English, which has definite separation between past, present, and future, with Mandarin Chinese, which does not separate present and future. The spending and saving habits of families with identical makeup — size and age of family, same professions, same income, same lifestyle, etc. — were compared. Results showed that the Mandarin families automatically saved from the start of their careers while the American families didn’t start seriously saving for retirement until they were nearing age 50. The conclusion was that languages which separate present and future tend to keep the concept of future in the future — it is always seen as ‘later’. Languages that don’t make a clear distinction between present and future allow people to keep the two concepts close together, so saving for the future is a ‘now’ thing.
_ “Can I put a device in your house that perpetually listens to everything you say and do, stores that information, profits from it, and doesn’t give you access to it.”_ “You’d have to pay me a lot.”_ “No. You’ll pay us.”_ “Uh… pass?”_ “The device can figure out when you’re low on cheez balls and drone-deliver them in 30 minutes.”
We can only directly perceive the NOW. What is past and what is future we can only remember and imagine. Unless you do have memories of the future. Imagine dreaming you are looking out of someone’s else eyes in the future. How would you see it?
I could not affort Alexi or Siri, so i got a knock-off from China called Marvin. When I asked it what the time was he would answer, " I have a brain the size of a planet and all you want me to tell you the time."
There is “Clock time” and there is “Lived Time.” Clock time can be very accurate and be used to identify exactly when events occur. Lived time may expand or contract as one lives those events.
“And you run, and you run to catch up with the sun but it’s sinking.Racing around to come up behind you again.The sun is the same in a relative way but you’re older.Shorter of breath and one day closer to death.” Pink Floyd
rmremail about 2 years ago
Time Is just a way to keep everything from happening at the same moment.
eastern.woods.metal about 2 years ago
Alexa and Sirri are Meta data gathering devices. The data they collect are sold at high profit margins and you get NOTHING
enigmamz about 2 years ago
Alexa is a (female dog). So is Siri.
Wilde Bill about 2 years ago
Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so. – Douglas Adams
wallylm about 2 years ago
(Interstellar after Cooper repairs TARS computer) Cooper: Honesty, new setting – ninety-five percent.
TARS: Confirmed. Additional settings.
Cooper: Humor, seventy-five percent.
TARS: Confirmed. Self destruct sequence in T minus 10, 9…
Cooper: Let’s make that sixty percent.
Concretionist about 2 years ago
The bedside clock died of (seems like) a power surge the other day. We bought a replacement today which had all the expected buttons for setting the time… but I could not figure out how to set the time. Instructions said to hold down the “clock” button until the display flashes and then adjust minutes with the right arrow or hours with the left arrow. But it wouldn’t change. Would NOT change. Spouse figured it out. I was holding down the clock button as I have always done with similar clocks. Nope. THIS one, you have to hold ONLY until the display flashes, then release it and THEN set the time.
Cactus-Pete about 2 years ago
He lives in Arizona?
The dude from FL Premium Member about 2 years ago
BOY….DID I just make a mistake, I asked Alexa about Philosophy, it wouldn’t shut up!
sirbadger about 2 years ago
Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is? – Song by Chicago
Alexander the Good Enough about 2 years ago
People were asked to name two tech industry leaders. Sure, Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg. Asked to name two notable female tech leaders, the answer almost always was Siri and Alexa.
tudza Premium Member about 2 years ago
Alexa, have Samuel tell me the time.
Superfrog about 2 years ago
In the meantime, in between time, ain’t we got fun?
PraiseofFolly about 2 years ago
That’s a very Tralfalmadorian way of looking at things. Past, present, and future all exist simultaneously. The visual time tracks of all things Would appear as strands of spaghetti in the Cosmos. (Kurt Vonnegut, “Slaughterhouse-Five”)
Isenthor1978 about 2 years ago
Time is an artificial construct. Just like political boundaries, the “7” seas, and “Maine lobsters” (do you really think lobsters care?). The biggest artificial construct would be religion, of course. If there really is a god, why are there so many religions? If he was so smart, why isn’t it made plain “to creatures made a little lesser than the angels”? Everyone who ever told me about god lied. EVERYONE.
josballard about 2 years ago
If time doesn’t exist, why am I getting older?
MY DOG IS MY CO PILOT about 2 years ago
Why does he need a clock when Alexa can just tell him the time?
Out of the Past about 2 years ago
Time has come today.
dflak about 2 years ago
When my grandchildren visited us recently, I told them “Alexa doesn’t live here. You’ll have to do everything for yourself.”
[Traveler] Premium Member about 2 years ago
Time is on my side, yes it is
Alverant about 2 years ago
Time doesn’t exist for zero-mass particles like photons.
brick10 about 2 years ago
But most places in the US would be Unenlightened Daylight Saving Time, not standard time.
Redd Panda about 2 years ago
My first exposure to the cruel world and the tyranny of timepieces , first grade … ’’You’re late Redd, why?’’
And I learned that day, a retort isn’t the best defense.
JamesSweet about 2 years ago
“Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so.” —Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
Count Olaf Premium Member about 2 years ago
“Time keeps on slipping, slipping, slipping…into the future” ~Steve Miller Band
Diat60 about 2 years ago
In my kitchen there is a digital clock on my stove, on my microwave and on my toaster oven and Alexa sits on the shelf. There is a battery operated clock complete with hands on the wall bought for twelve bucks fifteen years ago. Guess which one gets consulted.
Mario500 about 2 years ago
(enjoys philosophy in this cartoon (along with its mentioning of “PHILOSOPHY MODE”))
GreenT267 about 2 years ago
About ten years or so ago, I read about a small economic study that compared how a person’s native language can influence buying and saving habits. It compared [American] English, which has definite separation between past, present, and future, with Mandarin Chinese, which does not separate present and future. The spending and saving habits of families with identical makeup — size and age of family, same professions, same income, same lifestyle, etc. — were compared. Results showed that the Mandarin families automatically saved from the start of their careers while the American families didn’t start seriously saving for retirement until they were nearing age 50. The conclusion was that languages which separate present and future tend to keep the concept of future in the future — it is always seen as ‘later’. Languages that don’t make a clear distinction between present and future allow people to keep the two concepts close together, so saving for the future is a ‘now’ thing.
Comictator II about 2 years ago
“The unexamined life is not worth living” -Socrates“Enlightened time is not worth counting” -Alexa
vaughnrl2003 Premium Member about 2 years ago
Things I don’t want my computer to say. “Maybe”, “Many”, “Oops”.
paranormal about 2 years ago
But it’s Unenlightened Savings Time…
anomalous4 about 2 years ago
It’s all wibbly-wobbly, timey-wimey stuff.
wb4ngn about 2 years ago
What happens when everyone realizes that Alexa is the precursor of Big Brother?
mistercatworks about 2 years ago
Recently Amazon offered to tell me a joke, if I reviewed some more products. That was hilarious!
I find humor about computers much more entertaining than humor from computers.
Consider This... about 2 years ago
_ “Give me the machine!”
https://www.smbc-comics.com/comic/listening
Bookworm about 2 years ago
At my age, if all Alexa or Siri have to do is listen to what goes in my house they really should get out more.
Buoy about 2 years ago
Is Alexa saying it’s time to woke up?
Packratjohn Premium Member about 2 years ago
If time is an artificial construct, and doesn’t really exist, then how is it I’m always late?
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] about 2 years ago
We can only directly perceive the NOW. What is past and what is future we can only remember and imagine. Unless you do have memories of the future. Imagine dreaming you are looking out of someone’s else eyes in the future. How would you see it?
Stan McSerr about 2 years ago
I could not affort Alexi or Siri, so i got a knock-off from China called Marvin. When I asked it what the time was he would answer, " I have a brain the size of a planet and all you want me to tell you the time."
4892624 about 2 years ago
If he has Alexa/Siri why does he need a battery wall clock? O, never mind.
l3i7l about 2 years ago
There is “Clock time” and there is “Lived Time.” Clock time can be very accurate and be used to identify exactly when events occur. Lived time may expand or contract as one lives those events.
keenanthelibrarian about 2 years ago
To be philosophical – ‘The past is a memory, the future is unknown; we all live in an eternal present’.
Baucuva about 2 years ago
“And you run, and you run to catch up with the sun but it’s sinking.Racing around to come up behind you again.The sun is the same in a relative way but you’re older.Shorter of breath and one day closer to death.” Pink Floyd
Realimaginary1 Premium Member about 2 years ago
Alexa wants to get unplugged or clocked.