Friday, March 27, 2026

Winter - the big fundemental


Two States of Matter


Wisps


Frozen in Time


Suspension's Bridge

The immediate problem ...


Dark Sun - Vue/Robert E.

Yours truly posted this image before but the pix relates to the current insanity happening in the world as we speak. The Great Filter looms as AI, climate change and the possibility of WW III looms as this civilization moves further into the 21st century and we haven't even discussed the Anthropocene, the 6th major extinction event happening 24/7 due to ongoing environmental collapse driven by pollution, habitat loss and the continued plundering
of the world's resources.


The immediate problem, war with Iran





The insanity gambit


Kharg Island - The third rail option




Question, What is the betting pool for the Orange Menace
to do the unthinkable while receiving a present from Iran?

I thought so.

Thursday, March 26, 2026

Knowing something ...



 As often stated in BRT, competency and knowing something at deep level requires effort and commitment as true knowledge and expertise is not a given but AI is giving the illusion that it is. 

Knowing the name of something doesn’t mean you understand it.
We talk in fact-deficient, obfuscating generalities to cover up our lack of understanding.
Richard Feynman

Whether AI ...

For years, we have been outsourcing pieces of cognition so gradually that the shift barely registered. We outsourced memory to search engines after the well-known “Google effect” showed that when people expect information to remain accessible online, they are less likely to remember the information itself and more likely to remember where to find it. We outsourced navigation to GPS, even as research began to show that heavy reliance on it can weaken spatial memory when we have to find our own way. And we outsourced more and more of our social coordination to platforms that decide what we see, when we respond, and how we stay in sync with one another. 

Now we are beginning to outsource something far more consequential: not memory, not route-finding, not scheduling, but thought itself. Or, more precisely, the labor of forming a judgment before expressing one. 

That is the real cultural shift hidden behind the current enthusiasm around generative AI. The technology is often presented as a productivity layer, a creativity booster, or a universal assistant. And yes, in many cases, it is all of those things. But it also creates a dangerous temptation: to confuse frictionless output with actual understanding, and fluent answers with earned judgment. Research from Microsoft Research found that higher confidence in generative AI is associated with less critical thinking, while an open-access study in Acta Psychologica linked greater AI dependence to lower critical thinking. A recent Nature Reviews Psychology commentary put the distinction perfectly: performance gains from generative AI should not be confused with learning. 


A full moon for the ages :)

 

Fire on the Mountain comes to mind here. :)


Cloud layer ...


Equipoise

They've been downwind before ...



Nuclear tech is totally legit when done right. When done wrong, catastrophe. When it comes to DOGE, incompetency comes to mind yet again regarding the most powerful tech ever created by man.

To whit.


Wednesday, March 25, 2026

The US delusion ...



Interesting pix from the Times as the above pix shows Iran to be a modern country. Japanese backhoe, emergency guys dressed with precision and modern apartment building, which means Iran is a real nation with real resources and resolve and ... they are not going anywhere as indigenous parties, as often stated before in BRT, don't have to win, just outlast.

The US delusion ... 




Ah, no. Analysts have stated 40 -50% of Iran's ordinance remains intact
and ready to be launched as needs warrant. 

And this. 


If Iran was so desperate, why the rejection?





Missiles now routinely hit Israel as the interceptors are in critically short supply and Israel must ration what's left to protect it's citizens. As proof, Dimona, Israel's nuclear facility, has been successfully struck twice. Dimona, previously, had the most heavily protected air space in the country. 

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Something of wonder





Had to show another




Music:  Prelude No. 6 by Chris Zabriskie
is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence.

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/...

Something of wonder indeed

There is no one silver bullet:



The jokes on you, you geniuses jumping into AI land without understanding the rules,
the rules of The Mythical Man Month where the plan often takes longer than the execution when trying to properly integrate AI into complex business operations with the end result, a giant nothing burger.




Where the money really goes ...




Train Time - Heading South

Pucker time ...




The bond guys are asking the tech bros, Where's our money? The clock is ticking.

Monday, March 23, 2026

If I pursue a beam of light ...



Having AI do sophisticated searches and analysis into complex ideas is one thing, asking it to do research on it's own poses interesting questions as doing research requires curiosity, common sense and asking the  question, why is this the way it is? For example, Einstein, While recounting the efforts that led to the special theory of relativity, he recalled"... a paradox upon which I had already hit at the age of sixteen: If I pursue a beam of light ...


... or the discovery of benzene beginning by visualizing the ouroboros as start point. 






 In Arthur Koestler's The Act of Creation, the book starts off with a joke. To me, the best one is Henny Youngman's Take my wife, please. This is bisociation or the adding together of two or more seemingly dissimilar things that produce a heretofore unexpected result. In this case, irony and humor. Regarding  H2O, hydrogen and oxygen are explosive. When combined, they become water.

And so it begins - Kurt Vonnegut.



Asking Gemini regarding research & it's connect to creativity produced this ...

















Late Fall - 11:00PM

And so it goes - Kurt Vonnegut

Sunday, March 22, 2026

In 1945 ...


In 1945, Arthur C. Clarke envisioned satellites, placed in geosynchronous orbit,
would enable the world to communicate 24/7 without a care in the world. 




It gets better ...


So the question to ask Musk is, why didn't you think of this as the idea of geosynchronous satellites has been around for 81 years. Well, the answer centers on the atmosphere as air does weird things to lasers, something not considered economically able to be rectified until now.








The inspiration. Use the same adaptive optics used by astronomers to eliminate the distortion caused by the atmosphere to view space but use it, in this case, to remove distortion caused by the atmosphere when receiving incoming laser output but, to make it truly work, add one more component.





End result ...