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“Why are people with Internet fridges always running out of milk and eggs — who are these obsessive custard-eaters? Why don’t people with internet fridges run out of bacon?
Designers of internet fridges might think everything perishable in the kitchen belongs in the fridge. But there are a great many things that simply don’t belong there. Not to mention all the things that you could buy at a supermarket that aren’t for the kitchen at all. Toothpaste? Shampoo?
Designers of internet fridges might think everything comes in a barcoded or RFID’d package that can be programatically tracked. However, many products don’t come in packages, and even packaged products sometimes don’t include individual barcodes or RFID tags.
Designers of internet fridges probably don’t go grocery shopping (or haven’t paid attention to people getting ready to go grocery shopping). Preparing a shopping list isn’t only about noting what’s gone but what will be gone, given future use, before the next shopping trip. That is, it requires understanding patterns of previous consumption and anticipating future use of ingredients and products.
To construct an internet fridge, first reconstruct the reality of domestic life.”
” Designers of internet fridges don’t have a lot of imagination (as described in this post. Why do I blog this? because I always take the smart fridge as an example of a recurring failure of technology, a bad representation of people’s habits, context and way of living.
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