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Computer Chronicles - CES 1997
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Suzuki Applied EV Concept, 2024. An autonomous mobile platform vehicle that can be equipped with an assortment of modular upper bodies for use on logistics sites. The company will display the “safe, simple, self-driving electric trolley the size of a small car” at the CES in January
#Suzuki#Suzuki Applied EV#2024#autonomous#mobile platform#delivery vehicle#electric trolley#self-driving#concept#prototype#EV#electric vehicle#CES
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The Brave Little Toaster

Picks and Shovels is a new, standalone technothriller starring Marty Hench, my two-fisted, hard-fighting, tech-scam-busting forensic accountant. You can pre-order it on my latest Kickstarter, which features a brilliant audiobook read by Wil Wheaton.
The AI bubble is the new crypto bubble: you can tell because the same people are behind it, and they're doing the same thing with AI as they did with crypto – trying desperately to find a use case to cram it into, despite the yawning indifference and outright hostility of the users:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/03/09/autocomplete-worshippers/#the-real-ai-was-the-corporations-that-we-fought-along-the-way
This week on the excellent Trashfuture podcast, the regulars – joined by 404 Media's Jason Koebler – have a hilarious – as in, I was wheezing with laughter! – riff on this year's CES, where companies are demoing home appliances with LLMs built in:
https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-hgi6c-179b908
Why would you need a chatbot in your dishwasher? As it turns out, there's a credulous, Poe's-law-grade Forbes article that lays out the (incredibly stupid) case for this (incredibly stupid) idea:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/bernardmarr/2024/03/29/generative-ai-is-coming-to-your-home-appliances/
As the Trashfuturians mapped out this new apex of the AI hype cycle, I found myself thinking of a short story I wrote 15 years ago, satirizing the "Internet of Things" hype we were mired in. It's called "The Brave Little Toaster", and it was published in MIT Tech Review's TRSF anthology in 2011:
http://bestsf.net/trsf-the-best-new-science-fiction-technology-review-2011/
The story was meant to poke fun at the preposterous IoT hype of the day, and I recall thinking that creating a world of talking appliance was the height of Philip K Dickist absurdism. Little did I dream that a decade and a half later, the story would be even more relevant, thanks to AI pump-and-dumpers who sweatily jammed chatbots into kitchen appliances.
So I figured I'd republish The Brave Little Toaster; it's been reprinted here and there since (there's a high school English textbook that included it, along with a bunch of pretty fun exercises for students), and I podcasted it back in the day:
https://ia803103.us.archive.org/35/items/Cory_Doctorow_Podcast_212/Cory_Doctorow_Podcast_212_Brave_Little_Toaster.mp3
A word about the title of this story. It should sound familiar – I nicked it from a brilliant story by Tom Disch that was made into a very weird cartoon:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I8C_JaT8Lvg
My story is one of several I wrote by stealing the titles of other stories and riffing on them; they were very successful, winning several awards, getting widely translated and reprinted, and so on:
https://locusmag.com/2012/05/cory-doctorow-a-prose-by-any-other-name/
All right, on to the story!
One day, Mister Toussaint came home to find an extra 300 euros' worth of groceries on his doorstep. So he called up Miz Rousseau, the grocer, and said, "Why have you sent me all this food? My fridge is already full of delicious things. I don't need this stuff and besides, I can't pay for it."
But Miz Rousseau told him that he had ordered the food. His refrigerator had sent in the list, and she had the signed order to prove it.
Furious, Mister Toussaint confronted his refrigerator. It was mysteriously empty, even though it had been full that morning. Or rather, it was almost empty: there was a single pouch of energy drink sitting on a shelf in the back. He'd gotten it from an enthusiastically smiling young woman on the metro platform the day before. She'd been giving them to everyone.
"Why did you throw away all my food?" he demanded. The refrigerator hummed smugly at him.
"It was spoiled," it said.
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But the food hadn't been spoiled. Mister Toussaint pored over his refrigerator's diagnostics and logfiles, and soon enough, he had the answer. It was the energy beverage, of course.
"Row, row, row your boat," it sang. "Gently down the stream. Merrily, merrily, merrily, merrily, I'm offgassing ethelyne." Mister Toussaint sniffed the pouch suspiciously.
"No you're not," he said. The label said that the drink was called LOONY GOONY and it promised ONE TRILLION TIMES MORE POWERFUL THAN ESPRESSO!!!!!ONE11! Mister Toussaint began to suspect that the pouch was some kind of stupid Internet of Things prank. He hated those.
He chucked the pouch in the rubbish can and put his new groceries away.
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The next day, Mister Toussaint came home and discovered that the overflowing rubbish was still sitting in its little bag under the sink. The can had not cycled it through the trapdoor to the chute that ran to the big collection-point at ground level, 104 storeys below.
"Why haven't you emptied yourself?" he demanded. The trashcan told him that toxic substances had to be manually sorted. "What toxic substances?"
So he took out everything in the bin, one piece at a time. You've probably guessed what the trouble was.
"Excuse me if I'm chattery, I do not mean to nattery, but I'm a mercury battery!" LOONY GOONY's singing voice really got on Mister Toussaint's nerves.
"No you're not," Mister Toussaint said.
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Mister Toussaint tried the microwave. Even the cleverest squeezy-pouch couldn't survive a good nuking. But the microwave wouldn't switch on. "I'm no drink and I'm no meal," LOONY GOONY sang. "I'm a ferrous lump of steel!"
The dishwasher wouldn't wash it ("I don't mean to annoy or chafe, but I'm simply not dishwasher safe!"). The toilet wouldn't flush it ("I don't belong in the bog, because down there I'm sure to clog!"). The windows wouldn't retract their safety screen to let it drop, but that wasn't much of a surprise.
"I hate you," Mister Toussaint said to LOONY GOONY, and he stuck it in his coat pocket. He'd throw it out in a trash-can on the way to work.
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They arrested Mister Toussaint at the 678th Street station. They were waiting for him on the platform, and they cuffed him just as soon as he stepped off the train. The entire station had been evacuated and the police wore full biohazard containment gear. They'd even shrinkwrapped their machine-guns.
"You'd better wear a breather and you'd better wear a hat, I'm a vial of terrible deadly hazmat," LOONY GOONY sang.
When they released Mister Toussaint the next day, they made him take LOONY GOONY home with him. There were lots more people with LOONY GOONYs to process.
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Mister Toussaint paid the rush-rush fee that the storage depot charged to send over his container. They forklifted it out of the giant warehouse under the desert and zipped it straight to the cargo-bay in Mister Toussaint's building. He put on old, stupid clothes and clipped some lights to his glasses and started sorting.
Most of the things in container were stupid. He'd been throwing away stupid stuff all his life, because the smart stuff was just so much easier. But then his grandpa had died and they'd cleaned out his little room at the pensioner's ward and he'd just shoved it all in the container and sent it out the desert.
From time to time, he'd thought of the eight cubic meters of stupidity he'd inherited and sighed a put-upon sigh. He'd loved Grandpa, but he wished the old man had used some of the ample spare time from the tail end of his life to replace his junk with stuff that could more gracefully reintegrate with the materials stream.
How inconsiderate!
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The house chattered enthusiastically at the toaster when he plugged it in, but the toaster said nothing back. It couldn't. It was stupid. Its bread-slots were crusted over with carbon residue and it dribbled crumbs from the ill-fitting tray beneath it. It had been designed and built by cavemen who hadn't ever considered the advantages of networked environments.
It was stupid, but it was brave. It would do anything Mister Toussaint asked it to do.
"It's getting hot and sticky and I'm not playing any games, you'd better get me out before I burst into flames!" LOONY GOONY sang loudly, but the toaster ignored it.
"I don't mean to endanger your abode, but if you don't let me out, I'm going to explode!" The smart appliances chattered nervously at one another, but the brave little toaster said nothing as Mister Toussaint depressed its lever again.
"You'd better get out and save your ass, before I start leaking poison gas!" LOONY GOONY's voice was panicky. Mister Toussaint smiled and depressed the lever.
Just as he did, he thought to check in with the flat's diagnostics. Just in time, too! Its quorum-sensors were redlining as it listened in on the appliances' consternation. Mister Toussaint unplugged the fridge and the microwave and the dishwasher.
The cooker and trash-can were hard-wired, but they didn't represent a quorum.
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The fire department took away the melted toaster and used their axes to knock huge, vindictive holes in Mister Toussaint's walls. "Just looking for embers," they claimed. But he knew that they were pissed off because there was simply no good excuse for sticking a pouch of independently powered computation and sensors and transmitters into an antique toaster and pushing down the lever until oily, toxic smoke filled the whole 104th floor.
Mister Toussaint's neighbors weren't happy about it either.
But Mister Toussaint didn't mind. It had all been worth it, just to hear LOONY GOONY beg and weep for its life as its edges curled up and blackened.
He argued mightily, but the firefighters refused to let him keep the toaster.
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If you enjoyed that and would like to read more of my fiction, may I suggest that you pre-order my next novel as a print book, ebook or audiobook, via the Kickstarter I launched yesterday?
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/doctorow/picks-and-shovels-marty-hench-at-the-dawn-of-enshittification?ref=created_projects
Check out my Kickstarter to pre-order copies of my next novel, Picks and Shovels!
If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2025/01/08/sirius-cybernetics-corporation/#chatterbox
Image: Cryteria (modified) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:HAL9000.svg
CC BY 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en
#brave little toaster#iot#internet of things#internet of shit#fiction#short fiction#short stories#thomas m disch#science fiction#sf#gen ai#ai#generative ai#llms#chatbots#stochastic parrots#mit tech review#tech review#trashfuture#forbes#ces#torment nexus#pluralistic
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Concept logos for The Elder Scrolls: Daggerfall
These specific logos were created in preparation for the 1994(5?) Consumer Electronics Show
Art by David Lee Anderson
#david lee anderson#the elder scrolls#art#concept art#tes#daggerfall#logo design#logo#CES#consumer electronics show#90s
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Adding another wrinkle to the "on what date did Tron actually take place?" confusion: When Dillinger talks to the MCP at the beginning on the film, there's the following exchange:
MCP: "Hello, Mr. Dillinger. Thanks for coming back early."
Dillinger: "No problem, Master C. If you've seen one consumer electronic show, you've seen them all. What's up?"
The Consumer Electronics Show, or CES for short, has been running annually at different venues since 1967. If we assume that Tron is set in the year 1982, then the CES of that year was held in Chicago on June 3-6 (it was where the Commodore 64 was shown for the first time!). So if it's this particular "consumer electronic show" Dillinger is referring to, presumably the film would take place in early June?
(Of course, it would be easy to simply say that in the movie universe, CES was held at a different date that year.)
(CES 1982 photos by Alan Light)
#Tron#tron 1982#CES#Consumer Electronics Show#computer history#Ed Dillinger#I hope Dillinger got to play the Vectrex before he had to leave early
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WHAT IS LIVING
Today on "Confusingly Obscure References", I give you another Fredrik Knudsen stream fanart to do with the latest Consumers Electronic Show. I choose to believe that the Mochi on the screen is the weird AI rubbish version, and the small one is the real Mochi who gruesomely murdered it, took its place and is now taking a shit in its seat. Also, this was surprisingly good training for colouring in Krita.
#teaowlart#Fredik Knudsen#Mochi#Owl#Owlet#Consumers electronic show#CES#ces 2025#fanart#artists on tumblr#digital art#digital drawing#digital artist#existentialism#philosophy#bird#vtuber#astraline
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CES 2025 had some home hormone test kits that work with just saliva. So far it’s just progesterone but if they expand to E and T like they plan to it would be a huge boon for DIY HRT, and just being ontop of things between appointments.
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This information comes from Robert Evans and Garrison Davis from “It Could Happen Here” a daily news podcast show.
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Juste ces quelques mots pour te dire que je t'aime, que ton rire et tes yeux sont mon plus beau poème, qu'avant de te savoir, je n'étais que silence, toi qui as su donner sens à mon existence…
V. H. SCORP
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A Tiny Tabletop Combination Washer and Dryer
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😜
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Aptera EV, 2025. The latest version of the radical 3-wheel electric car has been presented at the CES. The car's aerodynamics have been refined at Pininfarina's wind tunnel in Turin, Italy. The bodywork features solar panels that can add up to 40 miles (64 km) of driving per day, with the fully charge vehicle able to travel up to 400 miles (644 km). The company claims to have 50,000 pre-orders for the car though no on-sale date has been announced
#Aptera#Aptera EV#2025#3-wheeler#aerodynamic#Pininfarina#CES#CES2025#solar panels#EV#electric car#wind tunnel
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Nintendo Advanced Video System
#Nintendo#AVS#Advanced Video System#1985#catalog#brochure#CES#Las Vegas#scan#Video Game History Foundation#VGHF
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Nintendo Power #51, August 1993 - Wandering around CES.
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This is very interesting
This is cam footage of the 1995 CES show.
It shows off the only(?) known footage of the Daggerfall trailer that was shown at CES '95
AFAIK this trailer has never been uploaded elsewhere so this rough cam footage is the only version of the trailer that still exists publicly. It was recorded by a journalist from the French Gén4 magazine.
Very interesting insight into how Bethesda was trying to hype up their next game less than a year after Arena had been released
youtube
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