Joe Kahn, the new director of “The New York Times,” the paper’s biggest digital expert, advises editors not to get too involved in Twitter or social networks, as they don’t reflect the real world. “We want journalists to pursue their journalistic mission outside of networks.”
5 years ago, the previous director, Dean Baquet, asked the public to be very mindful of seeing it, and asked the editors to only comment on Twitter so that they would not be seen as neutral. Another example of how innovation discoveries take us away from a point where we came back.
Robotics is working with electronic meat and human skin to improve our future experience with robots. Searching for the robot in human form, the android, raises a suspicion: when distrust shifts towards robots and humans rely more on relationships with the same rather than similar humans, who can guarantee that humans will not replace most of these robots with human tactility? ?
All these doubts come to my mind after the physical store of Amazon, a large online store, opened in Los Angeles. Growing up saying that the physical store for display and sale, mannequins, shelves, donkeys, testers, and tactile and visual contact with merchandise is a thing of the past, the warehouse has opened a physical store that one of its employees calls “the future”. The result is not the same as the physical stores before the electronic store, this Amazon in Los Angeles is very robotic and algorithmic but has a lot of hiding scenes so that the number of people behind it to deliver the goods, to pick them up, is invisible. Electronics that will put an end to the physical The concept of the store has passed from antithesis to synthesis, like the skin required for robots to touch people, and a fact that cannot be explained by just looking at social networks.The future is reached by drawing circles.