Monday, December 16, 2019

I studied buttons for 7 years and learned these 5 lessons

I studied buttons for 7 years and learned these 5 lessonsI studied buttons for 7 years and learned these 5 lessonsAll day every day, throughout the United States, people push buttons on coffee makers, TV remote controls and even social media posts they like. For more than seven years, Ive been trying to understand why, looking into where buttons came from, why people love them and why people loathe them.As I researched my recent book, Power Button A History of Pleasure, Panic, and the Politics of Pushing, about the origins of American push-button society, five main themes stood out, influencing how I understand buttons and button-pushing culture.1. Buttons arent actually easy to useJust give it a try.George Eastman Museum/Wikimedia CommonsIn the late 19th century, the Eastman Kodak Company began selling button-pushing as a way to make taking photographs easy. The companys slogan, You press the button, we do the rest, suggested it wouldnt be hard to use newfangled technological devi ces. This advertising campaign paved the way for the public to engage in amateur photography a hobby best known today for selfies.Yet in many contexts, both past and present, buttons are anything but easy. Have you ever stood in an elevator pushing the close-door button over and over, hoping and wondering if the door will ever shut? The same quandary presents itself at every crosswalk button. Programming a so-called universal remote is often an exercise in extreme frustration. Now think about the intensely complex dashboards used by pilots or DJs.For more than a century, people have been complaining that buttons arent easy Like any technology, most buttons require training to understand how and when to use them.Pilots need a lot of training and practice to know what to do with all those buttons.U.S. Air Force/Kelly White2. Buttons encourage consumerismThe earliest push buttons appeared on vending machines, as light switches and as bells for wealthy homeowners to summon servants.At the turn of the 20th century, manufacturers and distributors of push-button products often tried to convince customers that their every whim and desire could be gratified at a push without any of the mess, injury or effort of previous technologies like pulls, cranks or levers. As a form of consumption, button pushing remains pervasive People push for candy bars and tap for streaming movies or Uber rides.Just press here and get more detergent.Alexander Klink/Wikimedia Commons, CC BYAmazons Dash button takes push-button pleasure to the extreme. Its tempting to think about affixing single-purpose buttons around your house, ready to instantly reorder toilet paper or laundry detergent. But this convenience comes at a price Germany recently outlawed Dash buttons, because they dont let customers know how much theyll pay when they place an order.3. Button-pushers are often seen as abusiveThroughout my research, I discovered that people worry that buttons will fall into the wrong hands or b e used in socially undesirable ways. My children will push just about any button within their reach and sometimes those not within reach, too. The children of the late 19th and early 20th centuries were the same. People often complained about children honking automobile horns, ringing doorbells and otherwise taking advantage of buttons that looked fun to press.Adults, too, often received criticism for how they pushed. In the past, managers triggered ire for using push-button bells to keeping their employees at their beck and call, like servants. More recently there are stories in the nachrichtensendung about disgraced figures like Matt Lauer using buttons to control the comings and goings of his staff, taking advantage of a powerful position.4. Some of the most-feared buttons arent realBeginning in the late 1800s, one of the most common fears registered about buttons involved warfare and advanced weapons Perhaps one push of a button could blow up the world.Fortunately, starting a n uclear war is a bit harder than this.rogistok/Shutterstock.comThis anxiety has persisted from the Cold War to the present, playing prominently in movies like Dr. Strangelove and in news headlines. Although no such magic button exists, its a potent icon for how society often thinks about push-button effects as swift and irrevocable. This concept is also useful in geopolitics. As recently as 2018, President Donald Trump bragged to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un over Twitter that I too have a Nuclear Button, but it is a much bigger more powerful one than his, and my Button works5. Not a lot has changed in more than a centuryAs I completed my book, I welches struck by how much voices of the past echoed those of the present when discussing buttons. Since the 1880s, American society has deliberated about whether button pushing is a desirable or dangerous form of interaction with the world.Persistent concerns remain about whether buttons make life too easy, pleasurable or rote. Or, on th e flip side, observers worry that buttons increase complexity, forcing users to fiddle unnecessary with unnatural interfaces.Not so fast, Staples.StaplesYet as much as people have complained about buttons over the years, they remain stubbornly present an entrenched part of the design and interactivity of smartphones, computers, garage door openers, car dashboards and videogame controllers.As I suggest in Power Button, one way to remedy this endless discussion about whether buttons are good or bad is to instead begin paying attention to power dynamics and the ethics of push buttons in everyday life. If people begin to examine who gets to push the button, and who doesnt, in what contexts, under which conditions, and to whose benefit, they might begin to understand buttons complexity and importance.Power Button A History of Pleasure, Panic and the Politics of PushingMIT Press provides funding as a member of The Conversation US.Rachel Plotnick, Assistant Professor of Cinema and Media Studies, Indiana UniversityThis article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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