Novelty fatigue
JC pontificates about technology
An occasional series.
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Novelty fatigue
/ˈnɒvəlti fəˈtiːg/ ((n.)
After the Shock of the New” comes the fatigue of the new: the tipping with any new technology fashion, fad or bright idea (GPT-3, Lockdown WFH, Crypto, AI art, HDR photography, 3D cinema, Outsourcing, Total Quality Management, Human Resources, when people go, “okay I see what's going on here: this seemed fun but is now kind of tiring and the output is essentially rubbish. Can we all get back to work now?”
Technology goes one of two ways: it either quickly works, solves a perennial problem, is widely adopted, and migrates in the collected mind from “revolutionary weapon” to part of the furniture — here think email smartphone, internet, online shopping — or, it turns out to be a a flash in the pan, as fun as eating toothpaste off a spoon, and is abandoned as rapidly as it was adopted. If you have a 60inch curved 3D TV that you paid five grand for that now takes up an inordinate amount of room in your living room, and can only be viewed from a 15 degree angle, you will know this feeling.