Tuesday, October 15, 2024

REAL REALITY, REALLY?

 

Friends of mine, living in Israel, told me their GPS has stopped working.

 

“It keeps insisting we are in Beirut,” they said.

 

They called their phone carrier and also the makers of the app, who gave them the runaround and finally admitted the IDF has been scrambling navigation in order to foil the GPS-guided missiles coming from the northern border.

 

Before they got the real answer, I suggested different possibilities, including an IDF action, as to why their phone set them in a neighborhood in Lebanon’s capital. My last suggestion, tongue in cheek, was inspired. “Perhaps,” I said, “you are in fact in Beirut and you’re the only ones who don’t realize it?”

 

This would make a good novel, I think.

 

This got me thinking about the real-life couple who followed GPS blindly, which led them to fall into a hole in the ground. Another family took Google Maps voice navigation straight into a dead-end desert road.

 

All of these would make good stories and should be developed further into tales of digital worlds replacing our flesh and blood eyes and ears experiences.

 

And speaking of the rare but real flaws of digital navigation, our schools have stopped teaching a new generation how to use printed paper maps. For all the real-time information they lack, they remain an important tool. For that matter, learning to orient with the stars should also be part of basic education. Just sayin’.

 

Because you never know when the next time the digital masters will decide to re-set our reality.

 

Oh, wait. They are doing it in many ways already.


3 comments:

MirkaK said...

Sad that kids in school are not learning penmanship or how to read a map. I love maps and prefer looking at them and figuring out how and where to go, rather than use GPS. I have heard of horror stories from people who used GPS trying to get to my isolated community on the coast. They wound up hours away in the wrong direction. Once, when my husband and I were in Ireland, I reviewed the map and told him which way to go. Instead of listening to me, he followed the navigation device in the car and we went the long/wrong way until we came across a bus driver and asked him how to get out of there. You don't have to guess who was right--the map reader, moi!

Vijaya said...

How unnerving, Mirka. I always keep a Rand-McNally state/world map in my car. My niece, who's a geologist, is one of the few young people who can navigate using a real map. Heck, she makes topo maps!!!

Barbara Etlin said...

Love the cartoon! I've stopped using a cab company's app because it wouldn't believe that I live where I do instead of at one of my neighbours' addresses.