The majority of the bathrooms at my university have automatic devices (toilets, sinks, and dispensers for the soap and paper towels) that sense motion to be activated. Well I always thought that this is really a bad idea and I was damn right.
This morning I kept waving my hand in the first sink and neither the water or soap came out, so I used the one to the right. Then after that I did the same thing for the paper towel dispenser and it didn't work! I had to get toilet paper to dry my hands.
This is quite annoying because it really doesn't take much effort to manually rinse our hands, dispense soap and pull a lever to dispense paper towels, yet it feels like so many places want to seem modern and make everything automatic and only function that way.
And this is obviously not just limited to bathrooms. What if one day the automatic doors at your local grocery store don't open? How can anyone enter? How can anyone inside get out? There might me emergency doors but you can't fall back on those to let customers enter the store.
If you ask me, I think that institutions should just stick to manual devices, and if they really want to use automatic devices that badly, they should install some that allow you to use both methods (manual and automatic) to use that device.
Also if anyone wants to provide another example of failed technology feel free to.
This morning I kept waving my hand in the first sink and neither the water or soap came out, so I used the one to the right. Then after that I did the same thing for the paper towel dispenser and it didn't work! I had to get toilet paper to dry my hands.
This is quite annoying because it really doesn't take much effort to manually rinse our hands, dispense soap and pull a lever to dispense paper towels, yet it feels like so many places want to seem modern and make everything automatic and only function that way.
And this is obviously not just limited to bathrooms. What if one day the automatic doors at your local grocery store don't open? How can anyone enter? How can anyone inside get out? There might me emergency doors but you can't fall back on those to let customers enter the store.
If you ask me, I think that institutions should just stick to manual devices, and if they really want to use automatic devices that badly, they should install some that allow you to use both methods (manual and automatic) to use that device.
Also if anyone wants to provide another example of failed technology feel free to.