Archive: https://archive.today/1ODbq
From the post:
>A time traveler visiting from an earlier era might reasonably conclude that humanity has entered the age of cyborgs and cybernetics. Pedestrians regularly walk down city streets with tiny computers in their hands and even smaller digital devices shoved in their ear canals. Virtual reality headsets, though still bulky, can transport users into convincingly realistic digital versions of far away museums and long past historical events. And yet, despite all this technology, people today still can’t really feel what it’s like to touch objects in their digital worlds.
Archive: https://archive.today/1ODbq
From the post:
>>A time traveler visiting from an earlier era might reasonably conclude that humanity has entered the age of cyborgs and cybernetics. Pedestrians regularly walk down city streets with tiny computers in their hands and even smaller digital devices shoved in their ear canals. Virtual reality headsets, though still bulky, can transport users into convincingly realistic digital versions of far away museums and long past historical events. And yet, despite all this technology, people today still can’t really feel what it’s like to touch objects in their digital worlds.