Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

It is a hilarious way of writing but it is quite common to find people who are fearful of new technology. In the 1890s I'm sure that people fearful of motor vehicles would consider it a "pretty poor use of money" to buy a "horseless carriage".


It seems that OP isn't so much fearful of new technology as they are fearful of dying (and killing others).


Sure and people fearful of horseless carriages in the 1890s are rightfully fearful of dying since:

* horseless carriages won't avoid running into things whereas horses can see and instinctively won't run into a wall

* the greater speed of horseless carriages in the 1890s without modern safety infrastructure like signs and traffic lights does greatly increase the risk of injury


True, every bad technology is just ford's car, wright brother's plane, more than 256MB of RAM, and the internet. From blockchain to generative ai to FSD. No don't think about all the other bad technologies that have a similar profile to these and never went anywhere (or worse), only think about the extreme edge cases that don't have a similar profile.


Not sure what the point is here? My point is that OP is not afraid of new tech per-se, but instead doesn't like where it is now and finds it dangerous.

I'm sure in time the technology will evolve and there won't be a new car on the road that wouldn't support FSD - just like it did with "horseless carriages". It will take some more time though and not all companies will be equally advanced. From what I've heard (from other sources too) I wouldn't want to be driven by a Tesla FSD at the moment.

> * horseless carriages won't avoid running into things whereas horses can see and instinctively won't run into a wall

Off topic, but interesting - if you think about it, we actually already had mostly-FSD in the 1890s. It just ate a whole lot of grass.


My point is that OP's post which espouses a common fear, even if it may be justified for some, is not really interesting. I don't want to gatekeep HN, but personally I do not enjoy this type of content.

A secondary implied point is that new technologies which may seem dangerous can still be safe and useful when used properly, such as driving horseless carriages carefully in the 1890s or using FSD (Supervised) with proper supervision as directed.


>> horseless carriages won't avoid running into things whereas horses can see and instinctively won't run into a wall

On the other hand, horseless carriages also don't spook.

I've yet to have my car buck because it didn't like how something looked or sounded.

But maybe FSD will bring back that "fun"!




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: