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1. cridde+(OP)[view] [source] 2025-01-22 11:42:49
My wife and I recently watched the HBO Dune miniseries (it’s great!) and I was thinking how bizarre it would be if people in that universe were spending their days passive scrolling the screen on their pocket computers.

Wall-E depicted a future like that, but I can’t really think of any other books or movies that imagine that kind of future for humanity. Surely this is a phase we are going through, right?

replies(2): >>barrke+h2 >>A4ET8a+H3
2. barrke+h2[view] [source] 2025-01-22 12:00:03
>>cridde+(OP)
Fahrenheit 451 has the wife mindlessly listening to airpods all day, even while having conversations (requiring skill in lipreading to avoid interruption). The airpods are described as Seashells or ear thimbles, small radios with speakers that sit in the ear canal.
replies(1): >>sotix+Dp
3. A4ET8a+H3[view] [source] 2025-01-22 12:12:56
>>cridde+(OP)
"Super Sad True Love Story" has that and some other interesting insights into potential evolution of existing media landscape, where watching full Narnia movie makes you movie buff and reading books makes you an icky old man. Book is fairly sad as the title suggests, but mostly due to world it portrays. Some of the trends were captures pretty well; some likely won't age that well.
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4. sotix+Dp[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-01-22 14:36:20
>>barrke+h2
She also had a screen on every wall to watch content everywhere she looked. Fahrenheit 451 was prescient even if it was reacting to the times.
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