Comment And counting Bell Labs is questionable (Score 3, Insightful) 260
Bell Labs (cosmic microwave background radiation, among other things) did its best work while it was a state-authorized monopoly.
Bell Labs (cosmic microwave background radiation, among other things) did its best work while it was a state-authorized monopoly.
Good old fashioned AI used to be hands-on - your dissertation code had to at least work for the examples in your thesis, and your code was under development for long enough that it had to survive OS and language updates.
Being wary of code by theoreticians is definitely valid - I believe it was Knuth who said something like "I have only proven this code correct, not tested it".
I first heard this comparison back when IDEs were young (kudos to Larry Masinter, at Xerox PARC at the time).
Amplifiers don't really know or care what they are amplifying.
If you tell them to create good, bad, immoral, or dangerous code, they'll try to comply.
Laws against bad uses of LLMs just make them illegal - they don't make them impossible.
Mediocre programmers with IDE/LLM support will create reams of mediocre code, at best.
I have a paid subscription to the Washington Post (I live in the DC suburbs), so I get their content sans paywall. They let me create a few non-paywall links per month, and I share them when I see something the rest of the net should see without the paywall.
I pay Reddit annually, and I get their content sans ads. Whenever I see Reddit before I log in, I want to go wash my eyes out.
The real problem is I don't want to spend the money for a full subscription to every news source I read occasionally.
If there was a way to pay, say, $10/month to get 30 links from a basket of paywalled news sources, I'd be on it in a heartbeat.
My wife is a sign language interpreter, and does a lot of remote work, especially since covid.
To handle a meeting on Teams, sign language interpreters need to pin two video streams - the current speaker, and the deaf client(s).
It is essentially impossible to do this in Teams - they routinely open up a separate Zoom session for interpretation.
You'd think the inability to do this would be an ADA violation...
The biggest complete failure of a US software project. See here.
1982 - 1994. Twelve years of effort, pure waterfall design/test/implement, everything was believed on schedule until the last minute.
What you really want is a dog-like robot with package grippers on its back, and one arm for doorknobs and elevator buttons - something like a Boston Dynamics bot.
Four legs - stable without balancing, so longer battery life.
Low profile - delivery vans could have more than one, in dog-house slots
Can't be mistaken for a human - give it a few cute dog-like mannerisms
I'm a long time NASA contractor. The vibe I got from my management and agency communications was that we could have at least lived with Isaacman - he at least believed NASA did valuable things, things worth preserving and defending. Maybe that's what got him rejected, ultimately.
Now we're back to the drawing board again.
Any bets that finally dropping into flow state will look like mental stress?
Just what we need - a device to detect maximal productivity and interrupt it.
The problem is, by and large jobs aren't taken - they're given by business owners and their MBA-driven middle managers.
If you're a business owner and you have a task that can be done in two ways:
* Human + AI = more productive human, human level salary
* All AI = OK performance, little or no salary
You're going to choose the second one until it becomes clear that "OK performance" is actively alienating your customers.
I predict many spectacular AI failures while this lesson is learned and relearned.
if you're looking for long-term utility and support. I made that mistake with the iPad - the first iPad lost support quickly compared to iPad 2 and following.
Apple's design and testing people are good, but you don't really know what people really want until you have feedback from several thousand users.
To the people who bought Vision Pro - thanks for your input on Vision Pro 2, which we won't see until Apple can solve the obvious Vision Pro problems of weight, power, and cost.
Apple can by default read the contents of your iPhone backups.
I could see them running the moral equivalent of an anti-virus scan over those backups.
You can encrypt your backups, but then you had better not lose your backup keys or you're REALLY screwed.
vast price disparities ($80 per ton for forest projects versus $1,000 for direct air capture)
Plant fast-growing trees on West Virginia mountains
Harvest them
Bury them in local abandoned coal mines
Repeat every 5-10 years
Jobs to replace lost coal mining jobs.
New uses for old coal mines (well, probably not the mountain top removal mines...).
I'm not sure you could grow and bury two tons of wood for $80, but you could definitely do it for $1000.
All that's needed for this to work is a guaranteed price for real not-faking-it carbon sequestration.
This opinion article (Washington Post, gift link so no paywall) says there's 20-year-old Supreme Court case law that says the Government can't treat people differently under the law just because they don't like some of them.
Those cases were under Roberts, and were unanimous where it counted.
Trump is repeatedly on the record saying he uses US law to go after his enemies. A Supreme Court with any spine at all could use this to shut down the worst of his behaviors.
it's logistics.
Apple probably had this kind of pipeline acceleration in the works ever since the election.
"Be there. Aloha." -- Steve McGarret, _Hawaii Five-Oh_