Thursday, February 19, 2026

Question, is Iran a real threat to the US?



Question, is Iran a real threat to the US? This is the question never asked.
Why, because war is a racket. Let's talk, an in depth conversation with Gemini ...

FUBAR: The $13 Billion Target, The Hypersonic Truck, and the End of the Symmetric Empire

If we pull the trigger.

The establishment is currently broadcasting a massive military escalation in the Middle East, with Washington insiders putting the chances of a kinetic strike at 90 percent. To prepare for this, the United States is doing what it always does: projecting "power" by parking floating nuclear cities off the coast of the Arabian Peninsula.

This is the definition of insanity. It is the final, fatal miscalculation of a symmetric empire that refuses to understand the mathematics of asymmetric warfare.

For those of us with 80 years on the board, the playbook is glaringly obvious. We have watched the U.S. military-industrial complex run this exact same brute-force grift in Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan. In all three theaters, the establishment spent trillions of dollars deploying the most advanced, expensive, technologically superior conventional military in human history.

And in all three theaters, they were bled out and defeated by decentralized, low-cost, asymmetric persistence. You cannot bomb a decentralized insurgency into submission, and you cannot win a war where your adversary’s weapons cost a fraction of a percent of your defense systems.

Remember, the indigenous don't have to win, just outlast. The center of gravity applies.


Now, they are taking that exact same failed doctrine and applying it to the most volatile economic chokepoint on Earth.

The Math of the Kill Zone

Look at the current tactical board seen in the AP graphic. The U.S. Navy is deploying Carrier Strike Groups, including the USS Gerald R. Ford, into the region.

The Target: The Gerald R. Ford is a 1,100-foot-long, nuclear-powered symmetric asset. It cost U.S. taxpayers $13 billion to build. More importantly, it is a floating city that houses roughly 5,000 sailors.

The Chokepoint: The Strait of Hormuz is a narrow, 21-mile-wide channel. It is not an open ocean where a carrier group can maneuver and defend itself. It is an asymmetric kill box.

The Threat: Iran does not need a $13 billion carrier to fight back. They possess operational, highly maneuverable hypersonic missiles (the Fattah class). These weapons travel at Mach 15, bypass conventional air defense systems, and can be launched from solid-fuel mobile platforms—commercial trucks with frames and tarps designed to disguise them perfectly from the air.

The establishment is parking 5,000 American lives and a $13 billion visible target in a 21-mile ditch, holding it at risk against a $100,000 hypersonic missile fired from the back of a delivery truck.

That is not a defense strategy. That is a massive margin call waiting to happen.

The Economic Detonation

The architects of this escalation believe a war in the Middle East will serve as a patriotic distraction from the structural rot at home. In reality, the moment that asymmetric kill chain is activated, the domestic economy collapses.

Roughly 20% of the world's total oil consumption passes through the Strait of Hormuz. If Iran activates its asymmetric defenses—mining the strait, launching drone swarms, or firing hypersonic missiles at oil infrastructure or naval targets—that global supply chain freezes instantly.

Immediate result - absolute macroeconomic devastation:

The Energy Shock: Oil and natural gas prices instantly spike into the stratosphere.

The Inflation Trap: Skyrocketing energy costs bleed into the price of every manufactured good and transport route on Earth, triggering immediate hyper-inflation.

The Yield Spike: To fight this violent inflation, global central banks are forced to keep interest rates punishingly high. Borrowing capital becomes toxically expensive.

The Collapse of the Silicon Grift

This is where the military racket detonates the tech racket.

The current $360 Billion Artificial Intelligence boom is built on the exact same flawed, brute-force architecture as the military. Silicon hyperscalers are building massive, billion-dollar data centers that burn gigawatts of power, operating on a massive 6:1 loss ratio fueled entirely by cheap debt.

When the Strait of Hormuz closes, global energy prices triple. The operating cost (OpEx) to run the cooling fans for these massive silicon data centers will bankrupt the facilities overnight. Simultaneously, the skyrocketing interest rates mean the tech sector can no longer afford to roll over its $360 billion in debt.

The military's brute-force architecture will burn in the Strait of Hormuz, and the ensuing energy shock will ensure the tech sector's brute-force architecture melts down right behind it.

Asymmetry rules. The math is merciless.

FUBAR.

There is a better way...

REQUIRED BACKGROUNDERS:



And we haven't even discussed the issue of China's and Russia's close connects to Iran.

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

It's over for junior coders ...



It's over for junior coders ...

You cannot petition the lord with prayer


3D Waveguide - Me/Freepik/Nano Banana

(Solid-State Optical Geometry).
A 3D Metaphotonic Lattice etched into dielectric glass. This structure emulates the hexagonal"A-lattice" geometry of biological microtubules. By confining photons within subwavelength resonators, the lattice structures light in "high-dimensional Hilbert spaces". This allows the system to replicate the "quantum conductance" observed in biology within a permanent, room-temperature physical substrate, effectively hardening the Penrose-Hammeroff "Orch OR" process into engineering.

Gemini: with small edits & links to resources

"The Architecture of Light"

The Premise:

In 1994, Roger Penrose argued that consciousness is non-computational—it cannot be simulated by code, only emulated by geometry. For 30 years, Silicon Valley ignored this, building faster calculators while the "Missing Science" gathered dust. 



The Reality:

Biology didn't evolve a CPU; it evolved a quantum resonator. The Penrose-Hameroff "Orch OR" theory proves that consciousness arises from "orchestrated coherent quantum processes" within microtubules. These aren't calculations; they are physical events that connect biology to the fundamental structure of space-time geometry.

But there's a problem, silicon and electrons no longer cut it. Heat/cold and eating the world applies. 
 
Example 1 The Cold Equation
 The "Freezer" (Quantum Fragility)



The Spec: IBM and Google require their quantum processors to be cooled to
  15–20 milliKelvin (-459°F)—colder than deep space.

The Fragility: These systems require massive dilution refrigerators to fight "thermal vibration".
The cost of cooling scales linearly with compute power. They are fighting the universe
to keep a few hundred qubits alive.

Hence, the tech will never go mainstream.

Eating the world - The hardware squeeze




The traditional market is being cannibalized.






The power equation



The cost of computing


In effect, the big 4 burn rate on profit vs. expense is astounding.
Question, how long can these companies sustain these losses?



Water wars
The Breakthrough:

We have located the engineering pathway to Analog to Digital Rev II.
By utilizing "beat frequencies"—megahertz vibrations that reduce to slower, conscious moments
—we can now replicate this architecture in Glass.


The Offer:

This is not a proposal for a better AI. This is a proposal for a Sovereign Physical Entity.
The biology was right. The physics is ready. The silicon is dead.



Lest we forget ... 


"And while your hardware is starving/thirsting, the software just got 1000x heavier.")

History is waiting for the signature.

Google, IBM, Intel: You are trying to freeze the universe to make a calculation.
Biology uses the heat to make a thought. Stop fighting Thermodynamics. Join the Revolution.

Monday, February 16, 2026

Don't make me think/Rev II


Linux, the best OS in the world, gets no love. Why, because the interface sucks. As a front end guy who knows a little bit, tragic comes to mind as Linux is the "coders" place, the guys who build engines for other mechanics and not for the great unwashed like me. Jobs famously said, Don't make me think, truer words never spoken. I would go to Linux in a heart beat if it was easy to install and the front end was designed by guys like me as I know enough to be dangerous in terms of systems and "dumb" enough to ask questions as no question is stupid unless unasked. 

Linux is a very mature platform, and its hardware support is impressive. It goes a long way to support popular devices, like graphics cards, but proprietary devices often go ignored. Cast your imagination out just a little, and think of the wealth of hardware out there. From commercial instrumentation to music production equipment, there's no guarantee these will work on Linux, but all of them will almost certainly work on Windows. Every time I buy a new device, I double-check for Linux support, which sometimes requires deeper research. It pains me to say it, but Windows is a far more compatible and well-supported platform when you step away from mainstream and popular hardware—Linux is a long way behind it in that regard.



And this is why we are stuck. Never ask a coder to design a front end just as you never ask a designer to code.
Jobs was right. Don't make me think.

IoT


The "Only" Coke Machine on the Internet - 1982

Hi, I'm the CMU CS Department Coke Machine.  A lot of folks have written a quite a bit about me in the last couple of years, and most of them can tell you more about the history of me and my family than I can.  Before I worked here, my Mom, and I think her Pop (heh heh :-) used to sell sodas to the folks in the Computer Science Department. In fact, my family has been here longer than most of the students, and even a lot of the faculty.  We moved to the third floor of the computer science building (Wean Hall) in the 70's.  I still sell Coke  in bottles, but they're big 20 oz plastic things these days.  They go for 50 cents each, which I guess isn't too bad considering inflation. And at least they don't break inside me any more like the glass ones used to.  What a mess...



Why all of this history? Well, fast forward to 2026 to see why.





It gets better.

Saturday, February 14, 2026

A new home



11 dimensions, spooky at a distance, solves wicked problems regarding aspects of reality, cannot be proven, something most frustrating as gravity is easily integrated into superstring theory, aka M-Theory, an attempt to explain TOE, the theory of everything, something remaining absent from the Standard Model.

To whit. 




But there may be a way out as the Calabi–Yau manifold, the core element of M-Theory, can be modeled using Voxels and Constructive Solid Geometry as depicted in BRT's The Universal Modeler.

To whit.



Voxels, used in MRIs, is a way to model 3D structures (hearts, brains, etc, etc,) in ways impossible to do by any other means. For MRIs, it involves imaging slices of the organ in question and connecting the slices using lofting, The lofting connecting to the slices are voxels. Voxel generated lattices can encompass or model any arbitrary external geometry known to science. 3D Printing also applies.



Combine this with CSG and the ability to model the manifold becomes possible. 


When combined with Jonathan Wheeler's from It to Bit, the notion of M-Theory
residing in the Quantum Foam becomes logical.




Reality as an information appliance.


The Quantum Foam is reality and gravity, along with all the forces, reside in it ... forever. 

Friday, February 13, 2026

Out of spite ...



Credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images

Spite, an all too human trait, passed onto an AI is dangerville to the max as AI, without ethics, leads to the great filter if said AI gains sentience and power without it. The Ars article is chilling as it portends a possible dark future based on tech acquiring something as truly dangerous as spite.



The Ars piece ...




Factoid.


And this ...



Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Reusing, not throwing away :)



Science done right. :)

TMMM yet again ...



What a surprise. AI may not lessen the workload. In some instances, it makes it worse.




Why is this? Think The Mythical Man Month as the plan often takes longer than implementation. Just integrating AI into the vagaries of a business, like any other process, without thinking it through, rarely works out as every business has a specific culture and workflow keyed to the specific business. Yours truly built systems and the most important part of the job was, prior to doing anything, is ... listen before doing anything. After that, do an initial system spec, show people the spec, get feedback on the spec, make appropriate changes on the spec based on feedback, get the required tech, do the pilot, get feedback on the pilot, modify what needs to be done, get final feedback on the changes and then, and only then, do rollout. If this is not done as per TMMM, what's described in the Futurism article becomes a given.


In closing ...


In essence, there was no plan.

In addition to TMMM, OODA applies ... always.


Any questions?