Has anyone coined the term “fast tech” yet?

77 points by luu 1 month ago | 44 comments
  • Animats 1 month ago
    That era is mostly over, due to the convergence of everything into smartphones. The 1990s were the peak period for minor electronic junk, powered by round connectors with no standard for voltage, current, polarity, or pin size. The 1990s brought the Furby, Tickle Me Elmo, and a flood of R/C controlled toys.
    • eru 1 month ago
      You can still buy lots of these toys and minor electronic junk. But many of them nowadays at least standardise on USB for power or charging (otherwise, it's mostly AA or AAA batteries).

      Honestly, the 'minor junk' has gotten so much better in quality, too. We got some kiddie light up shoes that we bought more than six months ago, and the LEDs and batteries in there are still going strong. The cheap RC car we got a year ago also still runs on the initial AA batteries.

      • SOLAR_FIELDS 1 month ago
        Rechargeable batteries and ports becoming ubiquitous has been a boon for households. Case in point: we wanted lighting for our stairs like many people do. You can buy, in the single digit dollars, motion sensor lights that are rechargeable and come with magnetic and adhesive to mount the lights in the stairwell. Keep a usb fan out cable cluster nearby and recharging them once a week is a 10 second endeavor to pop the lights off the magnets in the walls and leave them plugged in for an hour. Amazing.

        Such a setup would have been in the hundos of dollars even 25 years ago

        • eru 1 month ago
          I read somewhere that batteries get about 8% better per year. Meaning a doubling in performance about every 9 years.
      • mindslight 1 month ago
        The only dependency of the original Furby was AA batteries. If you find one in a drawer, you can clean out the battery compartment, pop in new cells, and you're probably good to go.

        Meanwhile smartphones have enabled this trend writ large with devices now entirely dependent on surveillance-laden someone-else's-computer-connected throwaway apps that are only meant to work long enough to churn to the next product revision.

        • coolcase 1 month ago
          There is a lot of waste still. Pregnancy tests for example. And even the small array of devices - mouse keyboard phone watch charger headphones - still need to be replaced too often.
        • 1 month ago
        • haxton 1 month ago
          I've been about it as "throwaway software." Why bother searching for someone else's mediocre LLM generated software when I can just as easily (and hopefully as cheaply) generate the same thing, but it just works for me
          • fragmede 1 month ago
            Features. I could whip up a single-purpose image manipulation program to do whatever, but it's just easier to use an existing multi-purpose program with a bunch of features, unless I'm doing batch processing of files, but even then, using imagemagik or writing a gim-paint plugin is likely to be better than rolling my own from scratch.
            • dangus 1 month ago
              I was actually surprised that this post wasn’t going to be about software trends. I think there could be more attention paid to software business concepts that are essentially throw away pump and dump schemes. E.g., all the VSCode forks for AI coding that are already collapsing away/being acquired and enshittified.

              But back to the hardware, the hardware disposability isn’t a new phenomenon but it’s still a big problem and a catchy phrase to help bring more attention to the throw away nature of it would be a good start.

              What really needs to be implemented is some kind of regulation on product features like built-in wear items and irreplaceable batteries, as well as software deprecation.

              There are a number of ways it could be implemented that could effectively discourage these practices, just some possible ideas:

              I think a recycling program similar to many states’ recycling deposits could work really well. Each product gets a recycling serial number, customers return them to a collection center and get paid a certain percentage of the original sale price/MSRP, perhaps that percent would go down the older the item is. The refund is paid for by the original manufacturer.

            • Havoc 1 month ago
              AI models certainly feel like it. Everything is hot for about a week till something shiny shows up
              • eru 1 month ago
                Well, the Linux kernel is also only hot until the next version is released a few weeks later.

                I'm not sure that proves anything one way or another.

                • NoPicklez 1 month ago
                  Yes, but in comparison nobody is talking about the new Linux Kernel, compared to the new AI models & features.
                  • eru 1 month ago
                    Yes, there's just more exciting progress happening in the AI world.

                    But just because they are coming up with new models every week, doesn't mean that producing last week's model was a waste in the same way that replacing a physical product every week would be a waste.

                    This month's Linux kernel version builds on last month's version. Similarly, most of the work that goes into today's LLM is recycled from yesterday's.

              • slt2021 1 month ago
                There is a term "javascript framework"

                https://dayssincelastjavascriptframework.com/

                vibe coding and LLM will only turbocharge this

                • stevage 1 month ago
                  The source code for that website is pretty amusing.
                  • chrismorgan 1 month ago
                    > <meta charSet="utf-8"/>

                    Ah yes, Next.js, still producing stupid bad HTML more than six years after it was reported.

                    So, you pay over 200 kB of JavaScript just for the “in about 12 hours” text to be recomputed once a second. As far as I can see, that’s the only dynamic behaviour.

                    For some reason unclear to me I went ahead and made a more sensible version (with dead code stripped and about two tiny material changes in CSS or text, see if you can spot them), and, minified, it’s under 1350 bytes with everything but the favicon inline. In other words, more than a kilobyte smaller than the original markup, despite embedding the functionality of an extra 213 kB of JavaScript and CSS.

                      <!DOCTYPE html><meta charset=utf-8><meta name=viewport content="width=device-width"><title>Days Since Last JavaScript Framework</title><meta name=description content="Get the always up to date information about how many days have passed since a JavaScript framework has been published"><link rel=icon href=/favicon.png><style>body,html{font-family:sans-serif;margin:0;overflow:hidden}body{background-color:#fff}main{height:100vh;display:flex;justify-content:center}strong{font-size:20em;align-self:center}strong::selection{background:#000;color:#fff}.ribbon{background:#000;right:0;top:0}aside{padding:.2em .5em;color:#fff;position:absolute}.contact{font-size:.75em;background:#898989;bottom:0;left:0}.contact a{color:#00008b}</style><main><strong>0</strong></main><aside class=ribbon><b>updated daily!</b><br>next update in about 2 hours</aside><aside class=contact>if you spot an unlikely mistake on this website, get in touch:<a href=mailto:javascriptisa@veryfast.biz>javascriptisa@veryfast.biz</a></aside><script>function r(){var n=Date.now(),m=Math.round((Date.UTC(n.getUTCFullYear(),n.getUTCMonth(),n.getUTCDate()+1)-n)/60000);document.querySelector(".ribbon").lastChild.value="next update in "+m==0?"less than a minute":m==1?"1 minute":m<45?m+" minutes":m<90?"about 1 hour":"about "+Math.round(m/60)+" hours"}setInterval(r,1000);r()</script>
                    
                    (Completely untested, not even run once.)
                • matznerd 1 month ago
                  What about "fast apps" as in apps you build with AI to quickly fill a niche knowing it won't be a long term viable business, but build to just for that moment?
                  • Zak 1 month ago
                    Related to the comments there, one thing I'm quite sure of is that every battery should be user-replaceable. Most should be field-replaceable and of a standardized type, though I realize the form factors of some devices preclude the latter.
                    • eikenberry 1 month ago
                      Sounds very close to vibe coding.
                      • roughly 1 month ago
                        This kind of thing is possible because we haven’t come around to recognizing the Earth as a finite, closed system. We’re pretty sure all the junk and pollution and carbon and whatnot goes Somewhere Else.
                        • eru 1 month ago
                          The earth is a giant ball of matter.

                          You can reasonably model it as a closed system in terms of matter. But it's very open in terms of energy.

                          There's practically unlimited space in landfills to take up any garbage we can produce. Later, when you need the materials, you can invest energy to mine your landfill.

                          I'm not saying we should do that or that it's a good idea. My point is that 'earth is a closed system in terms of matter' is a much weaker and less profound statement than it sounds like.

                          What is limited is the amount of resources we can cheaply get access to in the short run. Similarly while landfill space is practically unlimited, there's a limit to how much our various ecosystems can take, if we just dump our garbage and emissions into them directly.

                          The latter aspect encompasses eg releasing CO2 into the atmosphere. But also putting plastics in the ocean, where it might do real damage. (As compared to having the plastic sit around in a land fill.)

                          • roughly 1 month ago
                            The earth as a giant ball of matter is an interesting geological phenomenon, but our concern is more the earth as a viable biosphere, which, as you note, is a much more constrained system, and that seems to be the set of constraints we haven’t internalized yet.
                            • eru 1 month ago
                              Yes. It's just that this is very distinct from the physical notion of a 'finite, closed system'.

                              The biosphere isn't closed: it regularly exchanges material with the rest of the giant ball of matter.

                          • coolcase 1 month ago
                            I think we are aware it is a closed system but doing the right thing is not rewarded. (Or wrong thing punished).
                          • tropicalfruit 1 month ago
                            i came up with one recently, "scroll based memory"

                            the way people seem to forget something after they've scrolled past it.

                            • nahhypedit 1 month ago
                              I mean pump n dump is the economy; be a first mover, guess the peak, cash out.

                              Spend tons of money on analytics to predict what to move on and when to cash out.

                              The term hasn’t been coined but the economy it describes is decades old.

                              • hulitu 1 month ago
                                > Has anyone coined the term “fast tech” yet?

                                No, we have enshitification.

                                • aaron695 1 month ago
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                                  • Elaris 1 month ago
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