Tuesday, October 08, 2024

NEW INC. MAGAZINE COLUMN FROM HOWARD TULLMAN

 

Our devices are too good at remembering the things our brains used to handle. 

EXPERT OPINION BY HOWARD TULLMAN, GENERAL MANAGING PARTNER, G2T3V AND CHICAGO HIGH TECH INVESTORS @HOWARDTULLMAN1

OCT 8, 2024

 

I honestly don’t know whether this is physiologically correct or not – or whether this whole situation is just a product of my advanced age – but I’m convinced that memory is a muscle.  And that, if you don’t make specific efforts to exercise it regularly, you will lose more and more of the capacity as you age. Call it a “use it or lose it” proposition and we’re all on the wrong side of the equation.

And, in the interests of full disclosure, this is also not a pitch for Prevagen or whatever other non-prescription remedies are being peddled non-stop on your tube these days. I have to admit that I find myself watching these particular ads more closely and that I’m relieved that whoever is writing these ads decided to give the jellyfish a break and stop claiming that the magical and curative ingredient has been extracted from these poor little creatures to further serve mankind. Feel free to Google “apoaequorin” if my reference is a little obtuse. Or maybe it’s just your poor memory.

Speaking of ad folk, does it seem that in any given hour of tube viewing, you are likely to see the exact same half dozen ads over and over – sometimes run back-to-back – in interruptive bursts that seem longer and longer all the time. Do they think that we won’t remember seeing the same ads before or – perish the thought – are they convinced that we’ll only remember the ad content if they consistently and repeatedly beat us over the head with the same junk?

As a longtime technologist, I also feel that we can’t really blame our computers and phones or the tech community for the fact that we no longer feel even the slightest obligation to remember phone numbers, addresses, directions or tons of other formerly essential information, which we used to carry around in our heads. We even used to brag about that capability. It’s a much more sensitive subject when the matter relates to birthdays and anniversaries – especially of family members and relatives.

But to be honest, most of those dates are also long gone and, but for Facebook reminders and email notifications, would be regularly forgotten. In a fit of poignant honesty, coupled with a devious wink or glance, the new Apple Intelligence ads offer repeated suggestions that when you are stuck for a memory or a name to go with an approaching face, your iPhone and Siri will quickly rise to the rescue. Whatever did we do before to fill these gaps?

Also allow me a moment to whine about the streaming strategy that sucks us in with an introductory free two-fer (two episodes of a new show or series made available, initially) and then asking us to patiently wait and then tune in once a week for the next month or two to see subsequent episodes. Apart from the complexity of trying to track what day the next installment of seven or eight different programs will be released, who honestly even remembers what happened “previously,” notwithstanding the 30-second recap that precedes each show?

Kudos to the Apple TV show, Bad Monkey, starring Vince Vaughn, where the opening weekly recap is offered grudgingly by a tongue-in-cheek narrator who admits that he hates doing it. And it’s still next to impossible to follow the multiple storylines. I find myself longing for the clarity and consistency of the hundreds of Law and Order episodes, where you could reliably count on the Dick Wolf formula with the firm knowledge and reassurance that virtually every show would be wrapped up in a nice bow by the end of the hour.

Lest you believe that these concerns are uncommon, I have a simple and familiar experiment you can use to see where you stand on this (possibly) age-related memory spectrum. Almost all of us have now been exposed to some mobile or desktop security system or two-factor authentication requirement that sends a numeric code to your phone and requires you to enter the code (ranging from six to eight digits) into some digital form in order to allow access to financial accounts and the like.

Typically, the texted code (which is time-bound) does you the “favor” of quickly disappearing so that you are required to remember it and then return to some other screen and enter it there. My own limit seems to be six digits and even then, I have to mentally break the number into two, three-digit parts to be sure I have it. There is zero chance without writing it down that I will ever again remember any eight-digit code the banks seem to increasingly favor. If you haven’t already experienced this phenomenon yourself, write down a few larger random number sequences and try it.  

The only good news is that the newer smart phones will automatically retain the texted code for you and autofill it into the appropriate place once you return to the prior location. Considering that this is their doing in the first place, it’s the very least they can do for us.

And please don’t get me started on the indecipherable buses and stoplights in Captcha quizzes or the very sad irony that we humans now regularly need to prove to the computers that we are real. It’s not something I’m likely to forget any time soon.

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