True - in some places - but is that the fault of "technology" or of those who make it? (people called "humans", I believe)...
Well, no. I'm not laying the blame in any specific direction here -- in fact, I'm not really thinking in terms of blaming anyone or anything at all -- I'm just observing how far we've come, and how negatively it affects us. Of course it's not the technology's fault that depression etc. are sky high (unless AI is much further along than I realised and harbouring malevolent intentions, which is a scary though if ever there was one), and it's not the fault of those who make it, either -- it's the lifestyle it engenders. We're constantly being told to do things faster, work harder, because now we
expect things to be done RIGHT NOW. Isn't there some sort of scientific evidence that people who live in the country whose lives are less dependent on technology are generally happier, less stressed and healthier? I might be wrong there, but I have a vague memory of reading/hearing something alone those lines...
Great for slicing electric bread...
The day electric bread comes onto the market I'm leaving the planet.

Very handy if your driveway is a fairly steep slope and it's icy - at least as long as there's no power cut when you arrive back home...
Well, fair enough, but watching someone try to walk up an icy hill can be vastly entertaining. But I suppose if it keeps the number of garage-door-related deaths down it's all to the good.
19th century Luddite though I may be, I actually only use my mobile phone to make and receive telephone calls; I doubt that I'm entirely alone in this bizarre minority habit...
Not alone, but very likely in a minority. MP3 players and things I can understand, but I'm totally baffled by the calorie counters and perfume-finders.
Now that's not entirely fair; food presented in supermarkets having been mass-produced as inexpensively as possible is inevitably predetermined to "cost" less than that which is created by small-scale producers to far higher standards of agricultural and animal husbandry, so that's nothing new beyond the fact of the sheer prevalence of the former food type these days.
That's true. I'm not saying it's anything new that smaller production lines/small independent businesses are more expensive, I was just referring to the fact that it now costs extra
not to have anything unnatural added to our food. I realise that leaving their produce unsprayed means a bit more work for the people involved in tending to it before it hits the shops, but my point is that these days we have the scientific knowledge to know how bad these chemicals can be for us, and yet we're still doing it the quick and convenient way, all because it's a bit cheaper and quicker. This is what technology is doing -- it's encouraging us to believe that
everything can and, more importantly,
should be done in the quickest and most cost-effective way possible. But in the case of food especially, it only contributes to the depression/obesity/stress that increasing numbers of us are suffering from, and we then rely on technology to deal with
these, too.
OK - I'll largely go along with most of that - but, in so doing, may I ask precisely what technology you propose to call upon in order to accomplish the joy-spreading that you intend?
Yeah, I hadn't really thought that all the way through...

Sorry if I sounded argumentative, that wasn't the intention! I may have gone a bit doomsday-scenario there... Well, it's coming up for 1am so it could have been much worse!
Jas