Useless machine
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A useless machine or useless box is a device which has a function but its direct purpose is deliberately unknown. The best-known useless machines are those inspired by Marvin Minsky's design, in which the device's sole function is to switch itself off by operating its own "off" switch. Such machines were popularised commercially in the 1960s, sold as an amusing engineering hack (term), hack, or as a joke. More elaborate devices and some novelty toy, novelty toys, which have a more obvious function or entertainment value, have been based on these simple useless machines.


History

The Italian artist Bruno Munari began building "useless machines" (''macchine inutili'') in the 1930s. He was a "third generation" Futurist and did not share the first generation's boundless enthusiasm for technology, but sought to counter the threats of a world under machine rule by building machines that were artistic and unproductive. The version of the useless machine that became famous in information theory (basically a box with a simple switch which, when turned "on", causes a hand or lever to appear from inside the box that switches the machine "off" before disappearing inside the box again) appears to have been invented by MIT professor and artificial intelligence pioneer Marvin Minsky, while he was a graduate student at Bell Labs in 1952. Minsky dubbed his invention the "ultimate machine", but that sense of the term did not catch on. The device has also been called the "Leave Me Alone Box". Minsky's mentor at Bell Labs, information theory pioneer Claude Shannon (who later also became an MIT professor), made his own versions of the machine. He kept one on his desk, where science fiction author Arthur C. Clarke saw it. Clarke later wrote, "There is something unspeakably sinister about a machine that does nothing—absolutely nothing—except switch itself off", and he was fascinated by the concept. Minsky also invented a "gravity machine" that would ring a bell if the gravitational constant were to change, a theoretical possibility that is not expected to occur in the foreseeable future.


Commercial products

In the 1960s, a novelty toy maker called "Captain Co." sold a "Monster Inside the Black Box", featuring a mechanical hand that emerged from a featureless plastic black box and flipped a toggle switch, turning itself off. This version may have been inspired in part by "Thing (The Addams Family), Thing", the disembodied hand featured in the television sitcom ''The Addams Family (1964 TV series), The Addams Family''. Other versions have been produced. In their conceptually purest form, these machines do nothing except switch themselves off. It is claimed that Don Poynter, who graduated from the University of Cincinnati in 1949 and founded Poynter Products, Inc., first produced and sold the "Little Black Box", which simply switched itself off. He then added the coin snatching feature, dubbed his invention "The Thing", arranged licensing with the producers of the television show, ''The Addams Family'', and later sold "Uncle Fester's Mystery Light Bulb" as another show Spin-off product, spinoff product. Robert J. Whiteman, owner and president of Liberty Library Corporation, also claims credit for developing "The Thing". (Both companies were later to be co-defendants in Landmark case, landmark litigation initiated by Dr. Seuss, Theodor Geisel ("Dr. Seuss") over copyright issues related to Figurine, figurines.) Both the plain black box and the bank version were widely sold by Spencer Gifts, and appeared in its mail-order catalogs through the 1960s and early 1970s. , a version of the coin snatching black box is being sold as the "Black Box Money Trap Bank" or "Black Box Bank". Do-it-yourself versions of the useless machine (often modernized with microprocessor controls) have been featured in a number of web videos and inspired more complex machines that are able to move or which use more than one switch. , there are several completed or kit form devices being offered for sale.


Cultural references

In 2009, the artist David Moises exhibited his reconstruction of ''The Ultimate Machine aka Shannon's Hand'', and explained the interactions of Claude Shannon, Marvin Minsky, and Arthur C. Clarke regarding the device. Episode 3 of the Fargo (season 3), third season of the FX (TV channel), FX show ''Fargo (TV series), Fargo'', "The Law of Non-Contradiction", features a useless machine (and, in a Story within a story, story within the story, an android named MNSKY after Marvin Minsky).


See also

* Arthur Ganson * Discard Protocol * Jean Tinguely * Overengineering * Rube Goldberg machine * Theo Jansen * Trammel of Archimedes


References

{{Machines Executive toys Machines Novelty items Mechanical toys Products introduced in the 1950s