The Atlantic

Why Nothing Works Anymore

Technology has its own purposes.
Source: A Matter Of How You See It Photography by Kala / Getty

“No… it’s a magic potty,” my daughter used to lament, age 3 or so, before refusing to use a public restroom stall with an automatic-flush toilet. As a small person, she was accustomed to the infrared sensor detecting erratic motion at the top of her head and violently flushing beneath her. Better, in her mind, just to delay relief than to subject herself to the magic potty’s dark dealings.

It’s hardly just a problem for small people. What adult hasn’t suffered the pneumatic public toilet’s whirlwind underneath them? Or again when attempting to exit the stall? So many ordinary objects and experiences have become technologized—made dependent on computers, sensors, and other apparatuses meant to improve them—that they have also ceased to work in their usual manner. It’s common to think of such defects as matters of bad design. That’s true, in part. But technology is also more precarious than it once was. Unstable, and unpredictable. At least from the perspective of human users. From the vantage point of technology, if it can be said

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Atlantic

The Atlantic32 min read
Are Young Men Really Becoming More Sexist?
Subscribe here: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube | Overcast | Pocket Casts It’s conventional wisdom that young people will be more progressive than their forebears. But although young people can often be counted upon to be more comfortable with ris
The Atlantic6 min read
How to Not Fight With Your Family About Politics
My family includes a farmer and a fiber artist in rural Kentucky, who rarely miss a Sunday service at their local Baptist church; a retired Jewish banker on the Upper West Side of Manhattan; a theater director in Florida; a contractor in Louisville;
The Atlantic2 min read
The Strange Challenge of Small Talk
This is an edition of The Wonder Reader, a newsletter in which our editors recommend a set of stories to spark your curiosity and fill you with delight. Sign up here to get it every Saturday morning. Small talk, in my experience, is one of those life

Related Books & Audiobooks