How Apple is changing our outlook on technology
By Elliot Chan, Opinions Editor
The old way of thinking: Nobody owns a computer because nobody needs one. Take a look at the new Apple 1, which came on sale this summer (July 1976). It looks like something a high school student built during the final days before the science fair. That crummy looking machine is worth the equivalent of a monthâs salary for many middle-class people.
Few consumers want computers, and even fewer understand them, but that is not how trends should continue. People are generally content with living day to day within a routine. Technology doesnât abide by those rules. Technology disrupts, but it often takes many years for it to do so. The same way the printing press, the wristwatch, and the steam engine changed the world, I believe that computers can do the same.
Yet when I approach every new technologyâlike the Apple 1âI still say: âNah! I donât need that. Iâm happy with what I have.â Iâm happy writing this article out on a pen and paper, then transcribing it on a word processor, and transferring that to a printing press. Thatâs not a big deal to me.
Steve Jobs, the young and hip founder of Apple, said: âPeople donât know what they want until you show it to them⊠Our task is to read things that are not yet on the page.â Itâs an inspiring quote that perfectly separates innovators from us mere mortals. This quote allows me to be even more optimistic about technology, knowing that in most cases it will win over.
Will there one day be virtual reality, mobile payments, or robot vacuum cleaners available to consumers? Probably. It could happen within the year, or it could take 40 years, but to write off technology is an ignorant reaction to change. We all need to push in the direction of progress. We need to push with Jobs and the Apple 1.
Itâs easy to look to the past and think about how stupid those people were for doing things the âoldâ ways. Yet, what would the future generation say about us? Yes, technology is stealing jobs away from hardworking people, but I donât believe that is a bad thing. I believe that people, like technology, should evolve. We need to start thinking like innovators and less like routine-orientated consumers. We should not just pick a job and stick with it. If you look at it, pretty much every job could be replaced with a robot one day, but I ask you this: how will you work with the technology?
Computers arenât stealing jobs away from people. Computers are changing the way people work. Take this example: bank tellers are losing jobs to automated-teller machines. But then again, what are tellers doing to respond to this? They must innovate. We must see what has yet to be written.