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Lai Kok Wui
Lai Kok Wui

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Expect Tech to Change, But Not the Way You Think It Will

This is a submission for the Future Writing Challenge: How Technology Is Changing Things.

Imagine you’ve got the coolest toy robot ever 🤖✨. It walks, it talks, maybe it even sings your favorite song 🎵. Awesome, right? But then—oops!—its leg gets stuck, or its battery dies, and you’re stuck waiting for it to work again. That’s what tech is like for me in 2025, even though it’s supposed to be super smart by now. I keep asking the same silly questions: Why can’t I open my car’s charging hatch when the battery’s dead? Why won’t my old printer talk to my computer? 🖨️ Why can’t I log into my Meow Meow account even after fixing my password? And why is my Wi-Fi so slow when I’m the only one using it? It’s like my robot keeps tripping over its own feet, and I’m left scratching my head 🤔.

Back when I was a kid, 15 years ago—I dreamed big about the future 🌌. I thought by 2020 we’d have flying cars zooming around like in cartoons. Nope, didn’t happen. I pictured phones that never needed charging, where I’d never have to plug anything in or fight with wires. I hoped tech would be like a magic friend that just works—no fuss ✨, no muss. But here we are, March 11, 2025, and it’s still not that simple. Take listening to music: my phone doesn’t even have a headphone jack anymore! I’ve got these Bluetooth headphones instead, but when they run out of juice, no music for me. I’m stuck waiting, and that quiet walk home feels boring. That little hiccup doesn’t just bug me—it ripples out 🌊. Maybe I’m grumpy when I get home, and my dog doesn’t get his usual belly rub because I’m too annoyed 🐕.

We’ve got fancy stuff like AI now—think of it as a super brainy robot helper. I’m even chatting 🤖 with one called Deephide to write this... 😳 Sorry, that's beyond my current scope. Let’s talk about something else.

But even with AI, these tiny problems stick around, and new ones pop up like weeds 🌱. Why can’t my Wi-Fi just be fast? Why can’t an AI grow arms and legs, march over, and fix my car’s charger for me? 🚗 (Okay, I’m lazy—I admit it.) When my Wi-Fi lags, I can’t finish my work, and then I’m late to meet my friends. They’re mad, I’m mad, and suddenly one slow internet signal messes up everybody’s day. It’s like dropping a pebble in a pond—the ripples keep spreading.

Have you seen those funny videos where they ask people from different times—like the ‘90s or now—to do stuff? Like, “How do you answer a phone?” 📞 or “How do you roll down a car window?” Back in the day, you’d pick up a clunky handset or crank a handle. Now we tap screens and push buttons. Tech changes how we live so fast, it’s wild! But it also makes us expect everything to be perfect and quick. When it’s not—like when my printer won’t print my homework 📄—it’s a big deal. That one glitch means I’m rushing around, my teacher’s annoyed, and my whole morning’s a mess. See? Ripples again 🌊.

I wish tech was more like a Nokia 3310 that never breaks 📱💪. And I wish we could all stay calm when it does trip up. It’s fun to use gadgets to make life better—like playing games or calling friends—but I don’t want them stopping my day 😌. Maybe we should even learn to fix stuff without always needing phones or computers. What if my car dies and I can’t Google how to fix it? I’d be stuck like a kid with a broken toy, hoping someone else knows what to do. Tech’s little stumbles don’t just bug me—they splash onto everyone around me, like my family, my friends, even my dog. So here’s hoping we figure it out someday—less tripping, more magic!✨

In reality tech will change unexpectedly 🌟.

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