MundaneBlog

December 3, 2024

Links you Should Read 2024-12-2

Filed under: AI,Consumerism,Daily Links,Technology — Tags: , — DrMundane @ 12:08 am

Starting with one from Wired this morning.

Sonos appears poised to go down the enshittification rabbit hole, if their fortunes do not turn. A particularly galling quote:

And while the overall speakers per household were actually up to 3.08 from 3.05 last year, with a slowing new user base, how can Sonos continue to make money in what is looking to be a saturated market?

The answer is they can’t! We’ve sold enough fucking smart speakers! Please stop the planet is literally heating up. It’s just emblematic of the omnipresent drive to grow and profit and extract. Even the journalists writing the story take it for granted that this must happen, and will not spend a single line arguing that they actually don’t need to grow year over year. Maybe their business model wasn’t sustainable, and they should learn the hard way why unlimited growth never works. Instead, they will use their new subscription ready app to squeeze the people who have already bought in. They have altered the deal, pray they do not alter it further.

For the next story, Mike Masnick over at Techdirt going over how he actually uses AI. An old post, but it came to my attention again in his newer post.

I must say I am fairly convinced that AI could be useful as a writing assistant. It does make me want to try it. But then again I have enough trouble writing when it only comes down to getting motivation. Adding more steps to my process would undoubtably prevent me from finishing.

I did have an occasion at a dinner party recently to actually talk to someone in education about their usage of AI. I was, at first, taken aback that someone in my real life actually uses AI and they have positive things to say about it. Their argument does mainly revolve around the “time” factor. They are used to having a lot on their plate, and for them AI is useful for creating presentations, simplifying language (write this so a 4th grader can understand), and otherwise helping them create new material quickly.

I mainly listened and questioned on this occasion, and did not get into my more… animated feelings. Still, I actually do hope to get into more discussions on AI in real life, and hopefully I will have the presence of mind to argue my full position convincingly.

That’s it for today, enjoy.

October 25, 2024

Consumerism – Whole Body Deodorant

Filed under: Consumerism — Tags: , — DrMundane @ 8:36 pm

Posting some old thoughts (2024-9-7)

The recent (at least this year per my perception) advertising blitz of these whole body deodorants appears to me as a sign of peak capitalism, or perhaps just a very stark example of the craven nature of sales.

I will start with the natural question: How many places on the human body smell all that much to begin with? Per my recollection, the apocrine sweat glands, in the underarm area and the pubic area. I think perhaps behind the ears and perhaps somewhere else, but they are limited. 

To quote Wikipedia: “In humans, apocrine sweat glands are found only in certain locations of the body: the axillae(armpits), areola and nipples of the breast, ear canaleyelids, wings of the nostrilperineal region, and some parts of the external genitalia.”

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apocrine_sweat_gland accessed 2024-9-7

I can not say I find any areas sans the armpits to have too terrible a smell. Apparently, even in this modern era of an American sensibility that trends towards intense fragrance, such things have not been a problem up until the present. But I am to be led to believe, by the existence of ads letting me know, that one should be concerned with such smells.

I am not convinced.

Now I must, to be fair, admit to enjoying fragrance myself. But the difference must be that I have no feeling of being without if I smell of nothing.

Or perhaps I can not tell anymore. 

Returning to the issue, it is sensible to analogize the current advertising blitz, in online ads and TV commercials, to that which brought us deodorant at all. I think it is well known that such consumer desires and even social expectations were in part if not in whole driven by commercial concerns from the turn of the century on. 

I extend no benefit of the doubt that such commercial concerns are at work presently trying to induce demand. 

I think it is indicative of the constant growth mindset. Having perhaps saturated the current market for deodorant with brands and scents and varieties that provide plenty of ‘individuation’ through consumption. It has reached the conclusion. There is perhaps no more room in that market for growth, only a steady state of consumption. This is apparently not enough for them.

They need a new product. Not a replacement, of course, but a reason to consume more, or add another product.

It is important to discuss such a view or such a possibility so as to hopefully convince others and head these advertisers and companies off in their commercial ambitions.

I think it offends so much since it is once more turning the human body (and some things I happen to appreciate about it, like the real smells) into something homogeneous. 

Inducing shame in someone to sell must be thought of as unacceptable. It should be named as what it is, craven exploitation of human weakness. 

As another aside, I refuse to be homogenized or to be what some would say I ought to be. This offends that sensibility in me. 

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