Computer Chronicles - CES 1997

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Computer Chronicles - CES 1997
I attended an LDS Institute class at UVU āSupporting those seeking to faithfully navigate LGBTQ+ experiences in the churchā. This marvelous class is held on church property and is for college credit the same way other Institute classes are. I estimated between 60-80 LDS LGBT students and allies in attendance. I didnāt see any class pride flags or pins on display. They werenāt needed. It was enough to be with people who love each other and accept each othersā sincere desire to follow Jesus, regardless of circumstances. Our lesson recalled the words of the Savior to the Nephites: āWhat manner of men ought ye to be? Verily I say unto you, even as I amā. A central question of the lesson was āHow do we become more like our Savior?ā Our teacher was an upbeat sister in a bright pink blazer whose love for her students is full and overflowing.
She challenged us to become more like the Savior by picking a Christ-like attribute and working to make it part of our character. Even if we just picked one, our efforts would make us a better person. One student noted that while it might take 10,000 hours to master something, it takes far less time to learn to do a thing well. At the start of the lesson, the class came up with numerous characteristics and attributes of the Savior, including:
Mercy, Faith, Patience, Forgiveness, Passion, Knowledge, Generosity, Kindness, Understanding, Long-suffering, Equitable, Obedience, Humility, Diligence, Empathy, Hope, Service, Considerate, Supportive, Inclusive, Confident, Forgiving, Loyalty, Mediator, Creative, Perseverance, Healer, Joy!, Charity, Hope, Just, Integrity, Service, Meek, Virtue, Love, Courage, Compassionate, Self-love
A bit later, the teacher directed us to Moroni 10:32 which says āYea, come unto Christ, and be perfected in him, and deny yourselves of all ungodlinessā¦ā and asked us how we could go about denying ourselves of all ungodliness. As several students offered their responses, something occurred to me.
When I was young, if someone had asked me about my ungodliness, I would have immediately turned to all the things about me that are LGBTQ. As I held that thought in my mind, the attributes and characteristics of godliness we had just written on the board seemed to reach out to me with particular force. I raised my hand.
āTo me, denying myself of all ungodliness means giving up the opposite of everything on the board. And I want every bit of that - for myself and everyone else!ā
I want to be someone who is Kind, Merciful, Joyful, Empathetic, Faithful. I want to be a Healer. I want to be full of Charity. I want to be Compassionate. I donāt want to be Unkind, Unmerciful, Miserable, Uncaring or Inconstant or Hurtful. I want Love, not Hate, in this world. If I can be all those good things, and give up all those bad things, I will be more like my Savior. Working toward that end for myself and those around me is a good lifeās legacy.
And nothing on the board was about being LGBTQ.
The Brave LittleĀ Toaster
Picks and Shovels is a new, standalone technothriller starring Marty Hench, my two-fisted, hard-fighting, tech-scam-busting forensic accountant. You can pre-order it on my latest Kickstarter, which features a brilliant audiobook read by Wil Wheaton.
The AI bubble is the new crypto bubble: you can tell because the same people are behind it, and they're doing the same thing with AI as they did with crypto ā trying desperately to find a use case to cram it into, despite the yawning indifference and outright hostility of the users:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/03/09/autocomplete-worshippers/#the-real-ai-was-the-corporations-that-we-fought-along-the-way
This week on the excellent Trashfuture podcast, the regulars ā joined by 404 Media's Jason Koebler ā have a hilarious ā as in, I was wheezing with laughter! ā riff on this year's CES, where companies are demoing home appliances with LLMs built in:
https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-hgi6c-179b908
Why would you need a chatbot in your dishwasher? As it turns out, there's a credulous, Poe's-law-grade Forbes article that lays out the (incredibly stupid) case for this (incredibly stupid) idea:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/bernardmarr/2024/03/29/generative-ai-is-coming-to-your-home-appliances/
As the Trashfuturians mapped out this new apex of the AI hype cycle, I found myself thinking of a short story I wrote 15 years ago, satirizing the "Internet of Things" hype we were mired in. It's called "The Brave Little Toaster", and it was published in MIT Tech Review's TRSF anthology in 2011:
http://bestsf.net/trsf-the-best-new-science-fiction-technology-review-2011/
The story was meant to poke fun at the preposterous IoT hype of the day, and I recall thinking that creating a world of talking appliance was the height of Philip K Dickist absurdism. Little did I dream that a decade and a half later, the story would be even more relevant, thanks to AI pump-and-dumpers who sweatily jammed chatbots into kitchen appliances.
So I figured I'd republish The Brave Little Toaster; it's been reprinted here and there since (there's a high school English textbook that included it, along with a bunch of pretty fun exercises for students), and I podcasted it back in the day:
https://ia803103.us.archive.org/35/items/Cory_Doctorow_Podcast_212/Cory_Doctorow_Podcast_212_Brave_Little_Toaster.mp3
A word about the title of this story. It should sound familiar ā I nicked it from a brilliant story by Tom Disch that was made into a very weird cartoon:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I8C_JaT8Lvg
My story is one of several I wrote by stealing the titles of other stories and riffing on them; they were very successful, winning several awards, getting widely translated and reprinted, and so on:
https://locusmag.com/2012/05/cory-doctorow-a-prose-by-any-other-name/
All right, on to the story!
it's been a long week so i get to go home and be gay about my oc
(he/him)
Concept logos for The Elder Scrolls: Daggerfall
These specific logos were created in preparation for the 1994(5?) Consumer Electronics Show
Art by David Lee Anderson