I woke up this morning and spent my day just relaxing around the home watching some YouTube videos on the television and then I decided to head down the road to do some grocery shopping. While I was down there I needed to pick up some ointment because I have dry cracking heels (I’ve applied it to them and I think that as long as I keep applying to them then they’ll eventually heal). While I was also down there I bought some dinner (lamb rumps and some Japanese coleslaw for dinner) along with some fresh fruit and vegetables – something I’m aiming to each more of along with avoiding bread because in a lot of cases it is empty calories that leave me feeling hungry within an hour of eating it. The coleslaw is always nice – the great thing with the Japanese coleslaw (I’m unsure how Japanese it actually is) is how the dressing isn’t overpowering and there isn’t a huge amount of dressing to the point that the whole coleslaw is drenched in it.
uBlock Origin Lite 2026.503.1521 has been released (link) – it is currently available on the Microsoft Edge and Apple stores but not available on the Chrome store as it is waiting approval. More improvements are on their way and I’ve tested it out on Safari with plenty of success. I was having a look online at the availability of Apple TV 4K given that there are rumours of there being a refresh being launched soon. All the major retailers in New Zealand either have run out or have very limited stock which indicates to me that maybe the inability for them to get more supplies into New Zealand is an indication that Apple wish to flush out their stock before any sort of upgrades are announced as to avoid having to give the older version steep discounts. One of the big rumours with the next Apple TV is the SoC upgrade to A17 Pro which will mean AV1 hardware accelerated support out of the box. There are no announcements but apparently it is waiting for an improved Siri and Gemini integration to be made available so that the experience for end users can be a lot better.
I’ve been watching more videos on YouTube regarding how the economics of AI simply don’t make sense and it is always interesting to hear the same refrain from supporters about expotential growth. There is a problem making such a claim, these AI companies are burning huge amounts of money and on every subscription tier they’re losing money. When you’re not charging the actual cost of delivering your service then it shouldn’t be surprising that there is a huge amount of demand but the big question is what happens when you start charging the actual cost of delivering the service, when that service isn’t getting a massage subsidy, is that demand going to be sustained or will those customers reevaluate whether paying for your service makes sense. I say that because there was a company recently who reported that they had gone through their year’s token budget within a space of 3 months. When you’re paying for tokens used rather than a flat rate then every time you get an answer back that is entirely useless and you have to do the operation again then that is more tokens burned and more money spent – at some point companies are now admitting that AI costs more than humans (link) but then again anyone who hadn’t been sucked down into the cult of AI could have told you that. That being said, I’m not anti-AI but I think that there has far too much hype and the technology simply isn’t there yet – the error rate is still high, the cost of computation is too high and many businesses are simply unable to use it in a way that is actually producing useful output.
Things are pretty rough out there, the economy is struggling, retailers are barely holding on with many now finding they’re now getting few hours of work each week. There is an election in November and I don’t envy whoever ends up winning the election because there very little in the way that the government can do to meet the immediate challenges being faced. I say that because there are plenty of solutions for the long term such as a national rail strategy of electrifying the whole network and standardising the voltage to 25kV, standardising platform height and signaling system as well as investing into double and triple tracking where extra capacity is required. That doesn’t even touch on the bigger goal which should be to bring logistics companies closer to rail depots so that long distance trucking can be replaced with rail with trucks being used for the final mile delivery. They’re all great ideas but they take years to implement (and should be implemented) but there are also needs that need to be met today but the big question is what the solution is and whether it’ll be enough given the fiscal constraints the government is currently under.
I’ve been watching the following video and although I’d like to be optimistic about the future I am regularly reminded when I hear people talk about how they regret their vote for Donald Trump but when asked “would you vote for Kamala Harris” very few of them said yes with most saying they would either not turn out, leave the selection blank or vote for Donald Trump again with the asinine justification of him being the lesser of two evils.
I think the damage that has been done by the Donald Trump administration give that when you view it within historical context where in the space of 28 years the world had to deal with 8 years of George W Bush, then some of the damage was undone by Barack Obama only for all that work to be undone with the first Donald Trump presidency. Then after Donald Trump had lost in his attempt to go for a second term where Joe Biden won the rest of the world thought it was just a blip on the radar and things would get back to normal only to find that Donald Trump once again tried to go for another term and won. After dealing with both George W Bush and Donald Trump then it shouldn’t be surprised that the rest of the world has had enough.
Governments are currently working with friendly countries such as the recent agreement signed between New Zealand and Singapore regarding energy supplies and food security. I think we’re going to find many more agreements like this being signed and many of them being setup to work around the United States. Mark Carney, the prime minister of Canada, already has a long term plan in terms of how to deal with United States, closer relations with the European Union regarding defense production, intelligence sharing, and supporting Ukraine. When it comes to trade, Canada is in a good position along side Mexico when it comes to the CPTPP and it’ll be interesting to see whether China and Indian end up joining the CPTPP. Slowly the globe is working around the United States then sooner or later the United States will wake up and realise that the world has moved on without them.


