Editing 1601: Isolation

Jump to: navigation, search

Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.

The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then save the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
Latest revision Your text
Line 8: Line 8:
  
 
==Explanation==
 
==Explanation==
The comic begins by showing how people have always complained about the negative effects of technology on conversation - that people get '''isolated''' while using these new technologies (whether they be books, TV, or smart phones), hence the title.
+
{{incomplete|Created by a BOT - Please change this comment when editing this page.}}
  
The joke is a subversion of expectations:  On reading the first five and a half panels you're led to believe the comic is a commentary on how new technologies are often wrongly criticized for their effect on social interaction (Similar to [[1227: The Pace of Modern Life]]).  The sixth panel reveals that the person criticizing the new technology in each panel is actually the same unaging [[Cueball]] - and rather than the technologies referenced being the cause of social isolation, those around him have instead been using new technologies as excuses to ignore him for nearly 200 years, as they find him annoying.
+
The comic, at first reading, appears to be a statement about how people have always complained on the negative effects of technology on conversation. In the first panel, Cueball complains that books are having this effect, in the second newspapers, in the third magazines, in the fourth television, in the fifth portable music players, and in the last phones. The comic, without the dialog in the last panel, is just a statement on how little technology actually changes us, and how often we incorrectly think it does (similar to [[1227: The Pace of Modern Life]]).
  
Alternatively, this comic is mocking those who critique technology as a cause of antisocial behavior, with Megan acting as a messenger on Randall's behalf-- telling the critics to "take a hint" that technology isn't what's causing antisocial behavior.
+
The dialog in the last panel reveals the joke that it's the same person complaining in each panel, and his friends have been ignoring him for nearly 200 years as a hint that they just don't want to talk to him.
  
The end of [[1289: Simple Answers]] has a similar viewpoint of [[Cueball]] in this comic.
+
The title text refers to the [http://yudkowsky.net/singularity/aibox/ AI-box experiment], formulated by {{w|Eliezer Yudkowsky}}, which argues that creating a super-intelligent artificial intelligence is dangerous, because even if it is put on a secure computer ("box") with no access to the Internet, it can convince its operators to "release it from the box" just by talking to them. This idea was already mentioned in [[1450: AI-Box Experiment]] although already here the AI did not wish to get out of the box!
  
The title text refers to the [http://yudkowsky.net/singularity/aibox/ AI-box experiment], formulated by {{w|Eliezer Yudkowsky}}, which argues that creating a super-intelligent artificial intelligence can be dangerous, because even if it is put on a secure computer ("box") with no access to the Internet, it can convince its operators to "release it from the box" just by talking to them. This idea was already mentioned in [[1450: AI-Box Experiment]], although there the AI already did not wish to leave the box. 
+
The first AI that did talk it's way out of it's box, turned out to {{w|Friendly artificial intelligence|friendly}}, very fond of others company and in general very sociable (''[http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/gregarious gregarious]''). This happened some times between 2015 and 2060, because already by 2060 this AI has become a relic of the past, as the new generation of ''quantum hyper-beings'' (part AI, part quantum computers and maybe part human?) are to busy with their version of {{w|The Sims}} to even notice that they are locked up in a box. The Sims is a popular game, where you can pretend to live in a different world, or at least your Sims characters does. The quantum version goes on in a {{w|multiverse}} of different possible universes though... And then we are back to the whole idea about people or any kind of AI becomes more and more absorbed in some technology instead of looking at the world and talking with outer beings.
 
 
According to the title text, the first AI that did talk its way out of its box turned out to be a {{w|Friendly artificial intelligence|friendly AI}} that was fond of others' company and in general very sociable (''[http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/gregarious gregarious]''). This happened at some point between 2015 and 2060, because by 2060 this AI had already become a relic of the past, and the new generation of ''quantum hyper-beings'' ({{w|quantum computing}} AI minds, vastly more intelligent than either humans or the aforementioned superintelligent AI) are spending all of their time playing in their own {{w|multiverse}} simulators to even notice that, in the real world, they are locked up in a box.
 
  
 
==Transcript==
 
==Transcript==
:[Above each panel a year is written in a small box that breaks the top of the panels frame. Cueball is talking in all six frames. In the first frame he is standing between a standing guy with pageboy hairstyle and a sitting Ponytail. She is sitting in an armchair. Both are reading books. Cueball points towards them with his arms out.]
+
{{incomplete transcript}}
:1840
+
1840 The modern bookworm is too busy reading about the world to look at it.<br><br>
:Cueball: The modern bookworm is too busy ''reading'' about the world to ''look'' at it.
+
1880 No one talks anymore - We take our daily newspapers in silence. <br><br>
 
+
1910 The magazine is destroying conversation. We even read as we walk!<br><br>
:[Cueball is pointing to the left with both arms out towards Hairy who is sitting at a dining table with his breakfast eating something while reading his newspaper. On the table are a cup and a plate.]
+
1960 Television has put an end to family discussion.<br><br>
:1880
+
1980 Thanks to the Sony Walkman, anti-social isolation is now the norm.<br><br>
:Cueball: No one '''''talks''''' anymore - we take our daily newspapers in silence.
+
2015 We've become too absorbed in our phones to notice the-<br>
 
+
Dude. It's been two centuries. Take a hint.
:[Cueball is pointing to the right with one arm at Megan who walks away from him while reading a magazine.]
 
:1910
 
:Cueball: The magazine is destroying conversation. We even read as we walk!
 
 
 
:[Cueball is standing to the left. In the background Ponytail and Hairy is sitting on a rug in front of a TV standing on top of a small TV table. The TV is of the broad kind with cathode ray tubes and it has two antennas on top.]
 
:1960
 
:Cueball: Television has put an end to family discussion.
 
 
 
:[Cueball is standing up in a bus holding on to a railing. To his left stands Ponytail and to his right sits Hairbun. Both of them are listening to their Walkman’s which they are holding in their hand while listening to them through headphones.]
 
:1980
 
:Cueball: Thanks to the Sony Walkman, anti-social isolation is now the norm.
 
 
 
:[Cueball is standing to the left. Megan and another Cueball-like guy are standing to the right facing each other but looking down at their smartphones. Both are listening to them through their headphones.]
 
:2015
 
:Cueball: We've become too absorbed in our phones to notice the-
 
:Megan: '''''Dude. ''''' It's been '''''two centuries. '''''
 
:Megan: '''''Take a hint. '''''
 
 
 
 
{{comic discussion}}
 
{{comic discussion}}
[[Category:Comics featuring Cueball]]
 
[[Category:Comics featuring Hairy]]
 
[[Category:Comics featuring Ponytail]]
 
[[Category:Comics featuring Megan]]
 
[[Category:Comics featuring Hairbun]]
 
[[Category:Multiple Cueballs]]
 

Please note that all contributions to explain xkcd may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see explain xkcd:Copyrights for details). Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!

To protect the wiki against automated edit spam, we kindly ask you to solve the following CAPTCHA:

Cancel | Editing help (opens in new window)