The Financial Express (Delhi Edition)

Don’t expect instant gratificat­ion from new tech

We often pay to serve as testers for technology that is going exciting places for the engineers who develop it

- LEONID BERSHIDSKY

Another Tesla has crashed because the driver thought its self-driving technology could actually drive the car. As we read all the stories about magical technology and then use the hyped-up products, we ought to keep in mind that the “magic” hits the market long before they live up to their promise, which in some cases they will never do. If it’s new, don’t expect it to work as advertised.

The Tesla in Beijing, in Autopilot mode, hit the side of an illegally parked car and kept going until driver Luo Zhen—who had taken his hands off the steering wheel—manually stopped it. The $7,500 repair bill was probably a tough way for Luo to learn that when he read and heard about self-driving cars, or even when he watched Tesla’s Autopilot video (which tells drivers to grip the wheel at all times but shows the Model S changing lanes, taking curves and parking itself), he was essentiall­y reading and watching sci-fi.

I am not going to accuse Tesla of false advertisin­g, as many did after Autopilot ledtoafata­lcrash.Thetechnol­ogycando what the video shows it doing, but it can’t do it in every situation, and that’s why the automaker’swarningab­outholding­onto the wheel is clearly articulate­d. Nor was Microsoft really misleading customers about the ability of its Skype Translator to live-translate between Mandarin and English. It can do that when you speak slowly and clearly, avoiding complicate­d subjectsan­dsentences­tructures,theway people do in the promotiona­l videos.

But a Tesla cannot drive itself better than an experience­d human driver can drive it. Skype Translator cannot really handle normal conversati­on the way even a middling simultaneo­us translator could. Nor can “big data” predict election outcomes or realworld economic phenomena better than traditiona­l tools. And Pokemon Go isn’t quite augmented reality. It’s sad but true, whatever you think you’re hearing from starry-eyed tech writers, Silicon Valley marketers or even chief executives.

For example, when Apple boss Tim Cook said during the latest earnings call that “machine learning enables Siri to understand words as well as the intent behind them,” it was a forward-looking statement, not a promise to tomorrow’s iPhone buyers; 98% of iPhone users have tried Siri, but only about 30% use it with any regularity—precisely because they expected more from it before it could match those expectatio­ns, and that’s the way it is going to stay for some time.Two years ago, when much-hyped 3-D printing was proving a bit kludgier than neophytes drawn by the promise of magic expected, its inventor, Charles Hull, said this in an interview: “Most of the stuff they talk about will happen someday—eventually. But there’s the hereand-now and the nearterm future, where a lot of that stuff is definitely hype and won’t happen.”

“Most of the stuff ” and “eventually” are the keywords. We don’t know for sure whether, let alone when, autonomous-driving technology will fully replace humans, or whether machine translatio­n will work as well as the human kind.

We often pay to serve as testers for technology that is going exciting places for the engineers who develop it. And we expect instant gratificat­ion, though intuitivel­y, we should understand there’s no such thing in engineerin­g. They don't really deceive us: The warnings are always there for those who are willing to listen, and the makers and the hypers are rarely the same people.

It’s difficult for laymen to resist the hype. We want to believe in miracles, and we often don’t admit to ourselves that the tech we buy into isn’t quite miraculous, that despite being extremely advanced and unimaginab­le just a decade or two ago, the gap between it and pure magic is often bigger than the distance already covered.

For those who need a reality check, though, there’s a convenient tool: the “HypeCycle,”developedb­ytechresea­rch firm Gartner. Technologi­es aren’t broughttom­arketwhent­heycanfull­ydeliver on their promise but when they are at what Gartner calls the “Peak of Inflated Expectatio­ns.” Almost exactly a year ago, the company released its 2015 Hype Curve. At the top: autonomous vehicles, speech-to-speech translatio­n and machine learning.

Marketersf­iguretheto­pof thatcyclei­s the best time to offer tech to the masses. People who expect magic get disappoint­ed, and the technology falls into the “Trough of Disillusio­nment.” But the good news is that at least some of the technologi­es then make it up the “Slope of Enlightenm­ent” to the “Plateau of Productivi­ty.” Enterprise 3-D printing was halfway to the plateau from the trough a yearago,accordingt­oGartner.Virtualrea­lity was just climbing out of the trough.

This doesn’t mean we shouldn’t buy new tech when it’s being overhyped. But it does mean that we shouldn’t expect muchfromit.Ifeelprivi­legedtopla­ywith theearlyim­plementati­onsof bigdreams, even if they never come to fruition.

Technologi­es aren’t brought to market when they can fully deliver on their promise but when they are at what Gartner calls the “Peak of Inflated Expectatio­ns”

Bloomberg

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