人工智能和遠程控制在電子時代讓我們的家變得更“聰明”:你可以通過控制系統(tǒng)在千里之外調(diào)節(jié)家里的溫度和燈光,甚至你可以在衣柜里裝一個“襯衫大炮”讓干凈的衣服隨叫隨到??墒钱?dāng)每一件小事都有人為你服務(wù),我們的生活就會變味——有些事情親歷親為所帶來的體驗是家庭智能無法比擬的。
測試中可能遇到的詞匯和知識:
gadgetry小配件;小玩意['ɡ?d??tr?]
disembodied空洞的;無實質(zhì)的[,d?s?m'bɑd?d]
gizmo小發(fā)明 ['g?zm??] priggish|adj. 一本正經(jīng)的;自負的['prigi?]
nuisance討厭的人;麻煩事['nju?s(?)ns]
nobler高貴的;華麗的['n?ubl?]
By Jonathan Margolis
Mark Zuckerberg published a video on Facebook a few months ago, showing off the artificially intelligent gadgetry he has installed in his family home in Palo Alto.
The highlight comes when Mr Zuckerberg asks his smart home, whose robot assistant talks to him in the disembodied voice of Morgan Freeman, for a fresh T-shirt. This is duly fired from an air cannon in the wardrobe.
It is tempting to think this may be healthy self-parody. But I have been talking to a VP of Crestron, one of the big names in the growing home automation market, which worked on Mr Zuckerberg's system. It seems it is mostly for real — although he conceded the T-shirt cannon may be a joke.
“Mark was talking with us for more than a year about the installation,” says John Clancy, Crestron's head of residential installations at the company's headquarters in Rockleigh, New Jersey.
“Now he can see which lights are on in the house and to what level, or what the temperature is and adjust each to the level he wants by executing a command using the API [application programming interface].”
Mr Zuckerberg has posted on Facebook extensive notes on his domestic electronics, and invited suggestions for other automated home gizmos he might install. Seventeen-thousand have been posted to date, suggesting that crowdsourcing creative thinking works.
“Home technology” was once the province of extreme gadget lovers, such as Sir Stirling Moss, the British former racing driver, who in the 1960s turned his Mayfair home into a whirring cornucopia of motors, control panels and sensors that would lower his dining table into place while running his bath to the correct depth and temperature.
In the 1990s, stories about Bill Gates's tech-filled home described visitors being tagged so their preferred music and lighting could accompany them everywhere.
But today it is everywhere. According to Cedia, the umbrella organisation for these matters, custom installation — or home integration as this technology is also sometimes known — is a $14bn industry.
Last year I made a video for the FT about a man cave in Manchester with a rotating, spotlit platform for the owner's McLaren sports car.
I love technology, and my home is full of it. But without wanting to seem priggish, I am beginning to find obsessive home automation of the T-shirt cannon/rotating McLaren type yawn-inducing.
It strikes me as a childish misuse of technology — unless, of course, you are disabled, in which case, all power to it.
Home automation is stress-inducing. At almost every installation I look at, there is to be found a frowning male stabbing at an iPad muttering about why the system is not working — and a female partner rolling her eyes.
Switching lights and heating on manually, opening your own curtains and turning on the TV yourself is really very easy and never goes wrong.
And the home automation must-have of your music following you from room to room via hidden ceiling speakers is, for me, simply horrible. Music should be listened to, not used as audible wallpaper.
What is surprising is that Crestron's Mr Clancy agrees with me up to a point.
“I experiment with all this stuff. I had a Nest system in one zone of my home and I wasn't happy with it, until I actually turned off the artificial intelligence aspect of it because it was making changes I didn't want.”
Mr Clancy's system decided he would like the heating to come on every morning in summer, the same as in winter.
“It's important not to let the smart house take over your home and become a nuisance,” he says. I agree. I will keep my home reassuringly stupid, thanks all the same. There are nobler — and more convenient — ways to deploy technology.
1.What was the highlight when Mark Zuckerberg was showing his smart home?
A.He used voice to control the heating temperature
B.He used remote control to adjust the lights
C.He asked his robot assistant to give him a fresh T-shirt
D.He used gestures to control the curtains
答案(1)
2.Who was described to have his guests tagged?
A.Sir Stirling Moss
B.Mark Zuckerberg
C.Bill Gates
D.Warren Buffett
答案(2)
3.How large is the custom installation industry?
A.$10bn
B.$13bn
C.$14bn
D.$15bn
答案(3)
4.What is the attitude of the author for home automation like T-shirt cannon?
A.He thinks it is stress-reducing
B.He thinks it is smart
C.He thinks it is a misuse of technology
D.He thinks it is unpromising
答案(4)
(1)答案:C.He asked his robot assistant to give him a fresh T-shirt
解釋:在扎克伯格的演示中,最為引人注目的是他讓他的機器人管家拿一件干凈的襯衫給他。
(2)答案:C.$14bn
解釋:上個世紀九十年代,據(jù)稱比爾蓋茨給到訪者分類,在智能判斷下在他們來訪過程中將燈光和音樂都調(diào)整成最讓他們感到舒適的狀態(tài)。
(3)答案:C.$14bn
解釋:對于像扎克伯格家里所有的智能控制系統(tǒng),這些科技的市場竟達到了1400萬美元。
(4)答案:C.He thinks it is a misuse of technology
解釋:作者覺得科技的進步的確使我們的生活收益,但是這并不代表著科技要替人類做所有的事情,人類和科技之間應(yīng)當(dāng)找到一個平衡點而非濫用。