2021年5月24日 星期一

On Tech: When it’s OK to be a guinea pig

Plus, old computer, new life.

When it's OK to be a guinea pig

Asya Demidova

If you bought a book and it came with a bunch of blank pages and no ending, you would be super annoyed, right?

I want to explore when it's fine for tech companies to release half-baked products, like what the company behind the Snapchat app is doing with its Spectacles glasses, and when it might not be, like what Tesla is doing with its Autopilot driver-assistance software that does not safely pilot cars.

What separates worthy real-world laboratory tests from reckless ones is how much risk and cost they ask people to endure. Here's another, relatively overlooked, factor: How well a company sets expectations for what a product can and can't do. Many of us are fine being guinea pigs — as long as we know it.

Snap is an example of both bungling expectations of an imperfect product and then managing them expertly.

When Snap released the first version of its Spectacles in 2016, it was an experimental product that the company led us to take way too seriously. The company went all-out for attention, including with sales stunts that made it tantalizingly hard to buy the $130 sunglasses with built-in video cameras.

It turned out that not many people wanted a pair. So many Spectacles went unsold that the company had to write off a bunch of inventory and unused parts.

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As with the similar Google Glass a few years before that, one of Snap's errors was overhyping Spectacles. Setting off a frenzy was bad for Google, Snap and anyone who bought an intriguing but janky new thing that didn't have a compelling reason to exist. Google Glass has come back, quietly, but I'm not sure it will ever recover from its first overhyped act.

Lesson learned, at least for Snap. The company has continued to release updated versions of Spectacles including the fourth iteration that it announced last week. The new Spectacles allow users to not only record short videos but also add computer-generated images to their surroundings, much like the features in the Snap app. Imagine looking up at the stars and viewing a guided animation of the constellations.

Lots of people and companies are justifiably excited about the potential of this technology called augmented reality. (Snap also is buying the start-up that made the Spectacles display for more than $500 million, The Verge reported.) We'll see if augmented reality becomes as big a deal as its proponents hope. But Snap is smart this time around to make it clear that Spectacles are essentially an unfinished book.

Snap's chief executive says that no one has yet totally figured out augmented reality, and the technology won't become widespread for at least a decade. The lack of hoopla is appropriate and refreshing. This experiment is fine because the company is telling everyone that Spectacles are half-baked.

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And then there's Tesla's experiment. Regulators have repeatedly said that the company is misleading the public about its half-baked Autopilot, a driver-assistance system for tasks like steering and braking on certain roadways. But the name and the ways that Tesla talks about the feature implies that drivers can safely turn their attention away from the road.

Again, part of the problem is that expectations are out of whack with reality. Unrealistic promises about self-driving cars also generated public enthusiasm and investment dollars, but also made slow development of the technology seem like a failure, my colleague Cade Metz wrote in a new article. Of course, a half-baked car on public roads is in a different league from experimental glasses that let you giggle at dancing hot dogs.

As long as the stakes are low, it's neat to see companies tinker out in the open, and learn and improve with people's feedback. The danger is when companies aren't honest with themselves or us about the limits of their products.

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TIP OF THE WEEK

Old computer, new life

You — YES, YOU — can revive that old computer you have shoved in a closet. Here's how Brian X. Chen, the New York Times personal technology columnist, did it, with expert help.

Recently, I took on a personal experiment: I dusted off my 11-year-old iMac, which I had abandoned long ago because it felt too slow, to see if I could put it to use again.

Technicians always suggest to focus on two important parts to improve a computer's speed: storage and memory. Newer solid-state drive storage is superior to traditional spinning hard-disk drives, because it loads applications faster and is more durable. And memory can improve performance when you're juggling multiple apps.

I did a web search on compatible solid-state drives and memory sticks for my iMac. I found a drive at Best Buy for about $70. For the memory, I found a pair of used RAM sticks on eBay for $20.

Then after watching a YouTube video on how to perform iMac surgery, I concluded that this D.I.Y. project would probably be as big a disaster as the recent tile work I did in my bathroom. So I called my favorite tech fixer in my area, Shakeel the iPhone Repair Guy, to ask whether he was up for the job.

He was happy to do it. About a week later, I paid Shakeel $100 and got my iMac back with the new hardware installed. The result? The iMac is even faster than I imagined it would be. It feels snappier than my employer-provided MacBook Air, which was made only two years ago.

The most satisfying thing is that I paid less than $200 to make use of a possession that I always loved — and will continue to enjoy for years to come.

If you're also eager to give your old gadgets a second life, revisit my column from last year on making our tech last longer.

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Before we go …

  • The end of this closely watched court case: Monday is the last day in the trial involving the gaming company Epic and Apple's hold on the iPhone app store. My colleagues explained the judge's questioning of Apple's chief executive over the lack of app store competition and what's at stake in this case.
  • How a local start-up, HugoApp, is beating Uber in El Salvador: The magic formula included connections to influential people and letting people order anything that fits on a motorcycle, Rest of World reported.
  • First Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos bickered over satellites. Now the chief executives of Tesla and Amazon are warring over whose space company should fly astronauts to the moon, according to The Washington Post.

Hugs to this

Cashew, a green-cheeked conure bird, loves to sing and dance along to music videos on his iPad. (You'll want to turn the sound on for this.)

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2021年5月22日 星期六

Does Your Kid Need a Mask on the Playground?

Experts are split.
A roundup of new guidance and stories from NYT Parenting.
Golden Cosmos

Since the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention updated its mask guidelines earlier this month, a lot of parents of children under 12 have been feeling bereft and left out. Unvaccinated kids were not specifically mentioned in this new guidance, and parents wondered: Where's the advice for us, and our kids, who won't be vaccinated until the fall at the earliest?

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Claire Cain Miller, Margot Sanger-Katz and Kevin Quealy asked 828 experts, including epidemiologists and pediatric infectious disease specialists, about what activities unvaccinated children can do, both masked and unmasked. The advice to glean from this piece is instructive, but perhaps not entirely satisfying, because the experts don't uniformly agree.

For example, the reporters asked 105 pediatric infectious disease experts: "Is it necessary for children to wear masks at outdoor playgrounds or while playing outdoor sports now?" While 17 percent said it is necessary, 47 percent said it is necessary only if the kids are not vaccinated, and 36 percent said it's not necessary. (The C.D.C. still recommends all children wear masks during youth sports.)

As with much of the decision-making around Covid, some of these choices will come down to your individual appetite for risk; your family's health overall; the level of local transmission where you live; what is best for your child's mental and physical health; and what the state and local laws indicate. While I would love to be able to report fully definitive recommendations for parents, that's unfortunately not the world we're living in.

Also this week, Tara Parker-Pope and Dani Blum answer common questions about kids and the Covid vaccines. Carrie Goldman has advice about how to find out if your teens are really OK. Jancee Dunn recommends time apart as the greatest gift you can give your spouse or partner. Claire Cain Miller and photographer Bethany Mollenkof have portraits of moms who bore the burden of the child care crisis created by Covid shutdowns. Jenny Marder explains why your kid loves watching videos comparing enormous things like Neptune to tiny things like dust mites.

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And finally, we want to hear from fathers: When do you feel most like a dad? Maybe it's while you're building pillow forts, soothing boo boos, or being the in-house pancake chef. Or perhaps it was the day you cursed under your breath while installing a car seat for the first time. We want to learn about a moment when you realized you've settled into your role as a father and found comfort there. Please email us here with your name, age, location and a sentence or two about reaching peak fatherhood.

Thanks for reading!

— Jessica Grose, columnist, NYT Parenting

THIS WEEK IN NYT PARENTING

Article Image

Amr Alfiky/The New York Times

What Activities Can Unvaccinated Children Do? Advice From 828 Experts.

This phase of the pandemic, when adults can be vaccinated but young children cannot, is confusing for many families.

By Claire Cain Miller, Margot Sanger-Katz and Kevin Quealy

Article Image

Paul Ratje for The New York Times

Ask Well

Answers to Your Questions About Covid Vaccines and Kids

Children 12 to 17 are now eligible to get vaccinated against Covid-19. Here's what we know about giving Covid shots to kids.

By Tara Parker-Pope and Dani Blum

Article Image

Getty Images

How Do I Know if My Teen Is OK?

In the pandemic, many of the traditional measures that indicate a teen is thriving have been rendered irrelevant.

By Carrie Goldman

Article Image

Ciara Quilty-Harper

Why You Should Give Your Partner the Gift of Time Apart

Alone time is a precious commodity for couples and families after more than a year of sheltering in place. Offer it to a loved one, and to yourself.

By Jancee Dunn

Article Image

Bethany Mollenkof for The New York Times

The Pandemic Created a Child-Care Crisis. Mothers Bore the Burden.

In the United States, 1.3 million mothers are out of work because of the pandemic. Their losses are more than economic. Across backgrounds and careers, they describe a loss of identity.

By Claire Cain Miller

Article Image

Nicolas Ortega

Why Your Kid Likes Comparing Neptune to a Dust Mite

Bigger than a planet? Smaller than an atom? Size comparison videos are all the rage and may scratch a very old itch.

By Jenny Marder

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Tiny Victories

Parenting can be a grind. Let's celebrate the tiny victories.

Every Friday includes a stop at the library to collect books on hold or grab some colorful covers from the kid shelves. No one gets to look in the bag until Saturday morning, which means they are excited and eager to read while we get to sleep in a little to start the weekend! — Debbie Tola, Boulder, Colo.

If you want a chance to get your Tiny Victory published, find us on Instagram @NYTparenting and use the hashtag #tinyvictories; email us; or enter your Tiny Victory at the bottom of this page. Include your full name and location. Tiny Victories may be edited for clarity and style. Your name, location and comments may be published, but your contact information will not. By submitting to us, you agree that you have read, understand and accept the Reader Submission Terms in relation to all of the content and other information you send to us.

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