Sunday, July 12, 2026

The Odyssey ...



Excellent to a fault, The Guardian explores the Odyssey with consummate grace and respect, showing Homer's genius in depicting a story detailing the first modern man dealing with the vagaries of reality at deep level.


This same kind of epic scope lies in Joyce's Ulysses,
especially with Molly Bloom's soliloquy of lust, heartbreak and longing.


Picture of first edition of Joyce's Ulysses. Public Domain.

Everything spins/Rev II



Roy Kerr was right. Black holes spin and now, researchers are proving, yet again, everything spins. :)



Mirror world, kinda :)



If man wants to colonize the solar system, the place to go is Titan. Why? It's atmosphere is 1.5 times denser than earth's, the hydrocarbons are endless in terms of easy access to energy and gravity's 14% of Earth's. Compare this to Mars, virtually no atmosphere, which means radiation from the sun becomes dangerous. The pressure suits must not only protect the explorer from radiation but also must be pressurized, complete with air supply and heat, due to the lack of a viable and safe atmosphere. With Titan, no need to pressurize, just heat and air supply are the requirements. In terms of costs, a no brainer. Self sustaining applies and, you don't have to be underground in order to survive on Titan while on Mars, you do. Downside. It's far away.







Cassini, gone but not forgotten

Saturday, July 11, 2026

Foghorn Leghorn speaks



Ted's truly excellent pose says it all as Foghorn Leghorn  bloviates yet again on yet another
"truly great success" accomplished by our beloved president.


Sargent: So what we now know is that Trump finally delivered his speech after 11 p.m. on July 4, after what The Washington Post called a “chaotic scramble.” This was the result of officials essentially saying this thing should be canceled and then him overruling them. Trump claims 150,000 people were there in the end, while saying that at least twice or three times as many had been there before the evacuation. Alex, you saw the imagery of the empty seats. What’s your take on the claim of 150,000 for the speech?

Shephard: I mean, there have been a lot of ridiculous Trump crowd-size claims, but I think this is one of the more brazen ones. The VIP section of this speech wasn’t even full. It was half full by the middle of the speech. People that love Trump and that need things from Trump weren’t willing to stay the entire time.

The weather was awful, but I think mostly people did not want to sit through what Trump had promised to be a very long speech. It wasn’t actually that long—I think it was like 30, 35 minutes. But it was exactly what you would expect. It was this kind of endless recitation of the familiar grievances, with a few kind of new half-baked insults thrown in.

In closing ...

Think Reflecting Pool, I know I have. 


Going sideways



Going sideways applies when Karp carps about OpenAI and Anthropic and the notion of control
as control over tech as powerful as AI is, becomes a loaded question for the ages.



Hate to say but Karp's correct. 





But it's deeper than that due to the platform on which AI runs, the thermodynamic nightmare of the data center requiring ongoing replacement of every server, in system, every 24-30 months, in order
to keep telling grandma how to make a better apple pie.

This doesn't compute.












Eating the world applies along with the word assume.


Or the end when you think about it, eh?

Thursday, July 09, 2026

Knowing the ground ...



Aside from the fact the AI guy looks exactly like Prince Andrew, the concept of not knowing the ground applies. Excess tokens created are based on noise in the system caused by entities not knowing what they're doing. I saw this countless times as a "wonderful" consultant and it hasn't changed save that the velocity of the noise in question has increased due to the kind of tech being used in 2026. As per The Mythical Man Month,  adding more people to a late project makes it later applies when the time needed  to properly analyze the situation carefully is ignored, thus insuring  the cost of using AI to "solve" the problem at hand turns it into a cash cow burning event for the ages. 


Click on the image to download the PDF if you dare. This was part of a series on helping
clients do what the boffins in this blurb are not doing, Knowing the ground. The Art of War applies. :)

Wednesday, July 08, 2026

ACM ... goes Open Access!!!



ACM does the right thing by going Open Access!!!
It's a 10! It warms the cockles of this old rube's heart. :)

The power of separation :)


Heat heals, heat destroys, controlling it is a bear, until now.
If this tech scales, the implications goes beyond computation. 

In most materials, the way heat is absorbed and the way it is emitted are inseparable. If a surface absorbs heat efficiently from a particular direction or wavelength, it also emits heat the same way. This long established principle, known as reciprocity, has made it difficult for scientists to independently control how thermal energy enters and leaves a material.

If those two processes could be separated, however, engineers could direct heat much more precisely. A material could absorb thermal energy from one direction while releasing it in another, potentially improving thermal management, energy conversion, infrared sensing, and thermal communication technologies.

A Material That Can Control Heat

To overcome this limitation, an international team led by Professor Koichi Okamoto and Dr. Shunsuke Murai of Osaka Metropolitan University's Graduate School of Engineering developed a new type of device using magneto-optical materials. These materials change the way they interact with light when exposed to a magnetic field, making it possible to alter their thermal behavior.

The researchers paired a magneto-optical material with a phase change material known as GST. The resulting device can control the direction in which heat is radiated, switch that behavior on or off, and retain its configuration even after the power has been turned off. In effect, it allows heat to be programmed in a way that resembles how data is stored and controlled inside a computer chip.

Click here for the paper.

Tuesday, July 07, 2026

A non starter ...



A must watch to learn why putting data centers in space is a total non starter. From cooling to power, the notion of Musk bloviating about moving this tech, "up there", in the numbers he is touting, is a wet dream of biblical proportions. In viewing this, Starlink's approach to business is becoming disastrous as well because not only are Musk's satellites blocking man's view of the universe, they also reside in low earth orbit, which means said tech will eventually fall from space, entities one and all, containing rare earths, awesome in terms of compute but toxic to all life on earth. 

Summing it up.

The fools that bought into the SpaceX IPO better have a space suit handy as the long term radioactive activity of that offering is slowly becoming more lethal by the day. 

There's a cost to everything. The Greek Myths tell you why this is so. :)