Thursday, April 16, 2026

If this is NOT done ...



Not to beat a dead horse but, when reading yet another gem from Futurism regarding AI and the corporate workforce, one thing seems to always apply. Said corporation does not do due diligence in terms of how to properly integrate AI into business operations as it takes real analysis and an in depth plan on how to do it intelligently. Yours truly did this with clients with some success, before AI, to improve corporate workflows and to help companies do their jobs better and in doing this, I found out this is not a trivial task. The bible used, as reference, is, of course,
The Mythical Man Month, the best book, IMHO, in terms of how to correctly do the job just described in this short blurb. If this is not done, a CF of biblical proportion occurs, ALWAYS.

Time to jump out ...




Fortunately, this is false. The frog jumps out when it's time to leave but for humans
connecting to AI, this logical move might not apply. 

Tarantulas have smarts. :)



Tarantula's are so cool. I've always wanted one but the wife says no way. Females live for as long as 30 years and their bite, as painful as it is, is not lethal. Seems they have smarts and innate spatial sense as well.

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Two takes, both valid :)


Microtonal, hard bop, hard rock, syncopated to the max, loops, drive. Totally alive. They cook.
Add Dada to the mix and you have the whole picture of Angine de Poitrine, the pride of Quebec. :)


Physics, cymatics, musicianship, great video, sophisticated hardware. Totally different from 
Angine de Poitrine but Nigel Stamford's music is just as legit, just as valid :)

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Dorian lives ...



Having one Zuck is bad enough. How about two, an AI twin emulating the ethos of 
Jeremy Bentham's Panopticon in order to surveil employees.




Hate to say it but Zuck's move reminds one of Dorian. Interesting take is it not?

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Game theory 101 ...



Back in 1983, probably the most realistic take on game theory, nerds, computers and nuclear war was,
IMHO, War Games, where tech can go sideways if humans aren't in the loop.

 Now consider AI and the prospect of guys running said tech while having serious morality issues if the Futurism article titled OpenAI Staffers Horrified When Senior Leadership Hatched “Insane” Plan to Pit World Governments Against Each Other has "legs".






And this ...



Every time yours truly listens to this guy, the word cringe comes to mind. Seems I'm not alone.


John Nash would find these musings modestly interesting. 



We have it under control ...



For years, yours truly has waxed "poetic" about autonomous weapons as this tech can and has gone sideways on numerous occasions because the question to ask is, who is the enemy because if the ID or circumstances of a given situation is incorrectly analyzed, bad things happen.




The problem


The "solution"


The dataset


The money








Jack Shanahan, a retired lieutenant general and former director of the Joint Artificial Intelligence Center, said A.I. would put “even more emphasis on moving faster and faster.”
Credit...Artur Widak/Anadolu, via Getty Images


Read the entire NYTimes piece to see why tech, like creativity, has no morality.
Remember, as per quantum mechanics, there is no certitude.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

An IPO looms ...


It's amazing how the press and the lay public go crazy when an AI does an analytic on chaotic code, pointing out inherent security risks and gotchas on the web inadvertently written in as the web was built as an ad hoc experiment that just happened to change the world in ways no one could have comprehended in any way, shape or fashion. That this insane system actually works is most amazing at all so step back and lets think about this while the great unwashed goes nuts as putting an AI to work to see how security can be improved upon is both logical and not as earth shattering as the press makes this out to be in the year of our lord 2026. 







Now think about this. Telling everyone in the world about this issue invites bad guys to go through OpenBSD to see where said vulnerabilities lie as many folks have access to AIs like Chat, Gemini and the aforementioned Anthropic so opening up a can of worms applies, does it not?

It gets better.




Question, What's the best way to gin up interest for an IPO?
Answer, Think Eve and the apple.

As proof ...

What would we see ...


What would we see at the speed of light?

Awesome video showing why Einstein was right awaits viewers watching this wonderful clip from
Open Culture proving, yet again, there are gems in the net if one takes the time to look for them. :)

We all learn in school, or at least from our more rigorous choices of science fiction, that we’ll never be able to travel faster than the speed of light. At first, this may sound disappointing, but upon reflection, 186,000 miles per second is nothing to sneeze at. Questions about how to achieve that speed soon give way to questions about what an attempt to do so would be like, many of them answered by the animated video from ScienceClic above. The first surprise is that moving so fast, in and of itself, would have no negative effect on us. When we travel by bicycle, car, airplane, spacecraft, or what have you, we feel only the acceleration. If that remains at a safe rate, no absolute speed will be a problem, in theory, assuming you can get up to it. Still, it couldn’t hurt to buckle up, not that it would help much in the event of a collision, even with a speck of dust.

Putting that out of our minds by assuming that “our ship is equipped with a force field that repels dangerous objects and allows us to roam freely through space,” we can concentrate on what we’d see through the window.

Buckle up. It's time to go. :)