This post is likely to start a flame war, but my intent is to solicit opinions.
Hmm. In the old days, this was known as a troll alert.
knowone:
The apprenticeship of angst.
mpetryk:
Yep, that's how a troll would respond to an imagined slight. OP made a concise (and, I believe, essentially accurate) statement, if slightly intemperate. Your reply was less helpful and more inflammatory.
Why do some scuba divers hate some scuba innovations that can give rise to a higher degree of safety?
Your basic premise is mistaken. It's not hating devices that increase safety, it's about hating devices that falsely promise increased safety - especially when those devices decrease utilization of critical skills/knowledge/techniques.
Example: the air-integrated computer with audible warning when you pass your user-determined "reserve gas" pressure.
Many SB members feel that a good 'ol brass 'n glass SPG is all you need. Fine. A few have made jokes about the cacophonous symphony that accompanies a class of new divers completing their OW certs when their computers warn them about various issues. Point taken.
Of course you should manage your gas. Of course your buddy should be near at hand. Of course you should learn to use your computer. Of course you should learn to dive without a computer. But why do some hate computers, or at least a perceived over-reliance on them in this case?
You've essentially answered your own question. Is the "over-reliance" "perceived" or actual? If the use an air-integrated computer teaches complacency instead of self-reliance, if it's more prone to failure than the device it replaces, if it costs ten times as much as the device it replaces, if users don't learn how to operate them, would you support their use?
For example, a pilot should know to watch the altitude gauge. Also, pilots of aircraft with retractable landing gear should know to extend said landing gear prior to landing. I am not a pilot, but I am sure that warning systems exist in aircraft to alert pilots to low altitude and retracted landing gear, irrespective of how good the pilot is.
Best if you don't use an example that you (admittedly) know little about. There are lots of planes out there that don't have computers telling the pilot if he is below his planned altitude or only is running low on fuel. Those pilots learn to monitor their gauges themselves, a system that has proven itself both effective and reliable.
What makes scuba different?
It isn't. Though sometimes the number of folks with less than 100 dives and more than 1000 posts sometimes make it seem like Bedlam around here.
Despite their many shortcomings, I think most new divers should be using computers - air-integrated or otherwise. They have their hands full learning buoyancy and finning and navigation and keeping their hands off stuff and buddy skills and, well, they have their hands full. A computer can be a back-up while they work on learning to monitor their gas pressure, acting as an electronic nanny while they master a bunch of complex and life-critical skills. Quite frankly, the computers fail less often than new divers do and that makes them worth considering. On the other hand, developing a dependency on that little beep to tell you you're doing something wrong is dangerously foolhardy. Crutches can help you walk but eventually they just get in the way.