Her' Got Us Thinking. Can You Love -- Like, Really Love -- Your Technology?Joaquin Phoenix stars in a movie about a man who falls in love with an operating system that has an oh-so-tantalizing voice.

ByCatherine Clifford

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

What ifSirinot only told you where the nearest Starbucks is located but also responded to your innermost feelings? And what if you started to like, or even love, this upgraded, more sophisticated version of Siri?

And what if that "what if" is not much of a "what if"?

Joaquin Phoenix's newest movie,Her, which opened in a handful of select theaters this week and will open more broadly in theaters across the country on Jan. 10., is about a man's love affair with his operating system -- an operating system that talks to him in a unbelievably seductive and soothing female voice. She jokes with him, she comforts him, she talks to him.

Wait?She? Maybeitis the proper pronoun here?

The idea at once seems far-off and other-worldly -- the purview ofrobotson Mars - and yet all too close at the same time.

Related:10 Trends for 2014: We Seek Imperfect, Human Moments. With Our Smartphones at the Ready.

Do you sleep with your智能手机? Do you long to get back to your computer at the end of a long day? How much of a leap is it to fall in love with a piece of technology?

The idea may make you uncomfortable. (I know it makes me crinkle up my nose and hunch up my shoulders and give my iPhone a sidelong glance.) But I think part of why the idea is so troubling is because it's not really that impossible.

你上次是什么时候从你的smar抬头tphone and found everyone looking down at their own? We take these smartphones -- these mini computers -- everywhere. And, if we aren't looking down at our mobile device, then perhaps we arewearing it.

Related:Get Ready: Wearable Tech Is About to Explode

Heris not the first time that a director has played with the idea of human beings becoming infatuated with computers. In 2002, Al Pacino starred inSimone, a movie about a film producer who creates a robotic woman to be his lead actress and fools her adoring fans into believing she's real. In the 1999, Robin Williams movieBicentennial Man, a robot named Andrew begins to have his own feelings and emotions.

Ten years ago, though, those movies felt completely science fiction. The reasonHerlooks so compelling is because now, I can't really be sure that it is.

Related:Intel's Futurist: We'll Soon Be Living In Computers

What do you think? Is it possible to fall in love with something that has no human heart? Leave a comment in the section below.

Wavy Line
Catherine Clifford

Senior Entrepreneurship Writer at CNBC

Catherine Clifford is senior entrepreneurship writer at CNBC. She was formerly a senior writer at Entrepreneur.com, the small business reporter at CNNMoney and an assistant in the New York bureau for CNN. Clifford attended Columbia University where she earned a bachelor's degree. She lives in Brooklyn, N.Y. You can follow her on Twitter at @CatClifford.

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