Open any consumer electronics catalog from around the 1980s to the early 2000s and you are overwhelmed by a smörgåsbord of devices, covering any audio-visual and similar entertainment and hobby nee…
Sort of a meandering article that doesn’t have a strong thesis. Posch wants to say that we used to have cool consumer electronics that we owned and now we have subscription services and we own nothing, but it gets distracted by detours into “here’s a history of consumer electronics” and “look at these smartphone features we lost because corporations are greedy”. And like, all of it suggests the thesis, but idk. I don’t disagree that we are in an era of subscription services and surveillance and owning less and less, but everyone knows that so it’s kind of a banal point to make in an article. And the article doesn’t really explore this idea from a new and interesting angle, it’s just recapping everything we already know.
Sort of a meandering article that doesn’t have a strong thesis. Posch wants to say that we used to have cool consumer electronics that we owned and now we have subscription services and we own nothing, but it gets distracted by detours into “here’s a history of consumer electronics” and “look at these smartphone features we lost because corporations are greedy”. And like, all of it suggests the thesis, but idk. I don’t disagree that we are in an era of subscription services and surveillance and owning less and less, but everyone knows that so it’s kind of a banal point to make in an article. And the article doesn’t really explore this idea from a new and interesting angle, it’s just recapping everything we already know.