
Of course the same people are obsessed with their "smart" phones. I wonder if we're raising a generation with a world of knowledge at their fingertips 24/7, and yet too constantly distracted to remember it after?
A friend just bought a new Subaru... Yeah, no keys these days, pushbutton start based on proximity to the key-fob remote. I asked "what happens when the car battery dies one cold winter morning - how do you get in the car? And if you can't get in the car, how do you pop the hood release to jump start it or replace the battery?" Nobody seems to have a good answer to that for me, despite me asking 20 different people that, including the dealer reps when I drove him to pick it up.
Yup... so 4 months old, for some reason the battery somehow drained and he couldn't get into his car one morning - he had to call the dealer so they could send someone out to get into his own car. He even had jumper cables, but if you can't get into the car...
Tell me how that's better than an old fashioned key lock?
We're obsessed with technology "improving things", and I agree in many ways it has... but I see a lot of things that just make me question the wisdom of some of the ways we're cramming it in places where, IMHO, the "improvement" seems questionable, if not negative.
My 2¢ rant.
(And can anyone here answer my car question?)