"When the people are being beaten with a stick, they are not much happier if it is called 'the People's Stick'"

  • I had a great day to day – just lazing around the house, doing the usual chores, put the wheelie bins out for pick up on Wednesday and enjoyed a vegetarian Mexican chilli with some buttered toast. The weather was looking good tonight so I decided that if I am going to get back into the routine of going for a walk each day then this would be the time to do it. The walk was 11km and I cam back feeling really good but my legs were a little sore but not as bad as I would have expected having not done any exercise for almost 2-3 weeks. After I cooled down I jumped into the shower and relaxed as I took some mental notes such as changing my alarm to 9:30am so then I can get back into the routine of walking each day. I’ve decided what I’ll do is go for an 11km walk each day and even on wet days I’l still get up at 9:30am so then I keep in that routine – I find that if you break a routine it is difficult to get back into one vs just keeping the same routine every day so then your body gets used to it.

    uBlock Origin Lite 2026.713.1408 has been released – the update has now been made available on MIcrosoft Edge store and Apple store but it is waiting for approval for the Chrome store. I’m looking forward to the release of Chrome 152 and the inclusion of ‘IndexedDB: SQLite backend’ which should improve the speed and reliability of web app that use it such as Gmail and other Google apps. Apple has released the public beta of version 27 of their platforms but I’m going to hold out until the official release which will probably be around the end of September or early October but keeping in mind that it depends on how well macOS 27 progresses (iOS 27 is on a tighter schedule because it has to be finalised and ready for the launch of the next iPhone and if there is an Apple TV 4K refresh and HomePod then it’ll also mean those platforms will have to be ready.

    Daily writing prompt
    What’s a piece of technology you’re convinced will exist in 20 years?

    This isn’t a wild prediction but I think we’ll see better and cheaper batteries which will allow cars with ranges of over 1000km, trucks with a range equal to that, a more extensive use of batteries when it comes to the train network which will avoid the need for costly electrification projects and we’ll see more renewables with a lot more battery capacity which will avoid the need for peaker plants completely.

    The other piece of technology would be the rise in generation 4 nuclear reactors. Fusion energy is still a long way away given the challenges that it faces. I believe that generation 4 nuclear reactors will start to be phased in as the need to address climate change will overcome any sort of lingering anti-nuclear remnants in society once people realise that generation 4 nuclear reactors are poles apart from previous generations.

    Fediverse reactions
  • I had a good sleep in today and when I woke up I found the weather was once again pretty foul weather with it being grey and overcast. I checked my Ikea order out of curiosity and it appears that I had screwed up my order but thankfully I was able to get get the incorrect stuff cancelled and that is on the way and I’ve placed a new order with the correct selection. Truth be known, if I ended up getting it then the worse case scenario is tha tI would have donated my old stuff, ordered the correct stuff I wanted and the world would have moved on without too much drama.

    uBlock Origin Lite 2026.711.25 is now available in the Chrome extensions store and I got it quickly installed. There has been an improvement in terms of popup blocking however it hasn’t been an exhaustive testing but so far I haven’t noticed any regressions. I sometimes wonder with how neglected extension support on Safari is that maybe Apple should just throw in the towel and embrace Chrome to avoid lagging behind not just web standards but also extension support.

    I guess this is one of the reasons why when I go to Australia in November that I may end up looking at getting an Pixel 11 XL Pro and a Google Watch – preferably from JB Hi-Fi so then I can still get warranty support when I come back to New Zealand. One thing to keep in mind, by the time I go over there I’ll get to see how version 27 of Apple’s platforms turn out and what a refreshed HomePod and Apple TV 4K also turn out like. It is rather unfortunately that the iCloud Business requires you to be an offically a registered business rather than just a matter of setting up an account like you can with Google Workspace.

    I’m gradually working through the last two episodes of season 2 and I’m looking forward to the next episode of Silo being made available. There are a few other shows such as Foundation, The Last of Us, Severance, Paradise and a few others that will be making a return although it is kind of sad that there have been some that won’t make a return – Beacon 23, Constellation along with Colony. The last one, Colony, being exceptionally annoying because just at the last season we (the audience) were just starting to find out what the larger ‘grand plan’ the aliens had for humanity.

  • Woke up this morning and had my usual breakfast – almost finished my second container of yoghurt but now that I know what a good combination of the chia seed pudding with the yoghurt is for breakfast. I did order some groceries online tonight because I really wanted a roast lamb dinner with roast vegetables but I hadn’t organised myself on my day off at the beginning of the week when I was doing my shopping. Tomorrow I’ll head down to the supermarket during the day and buy some extra yoghurt plus a few other bits and pieces that I forgot about ordering which should mean I am all good for the week.

    My original post on BlueSky regarding ‘financial innovation’ came as a result of watching the following video:

    I’m always reminded of when I see something needlessly more complicated than what required to get the job done that more often than not it points to something dodgy that is going on. There was a recent property developer had their business collapse in New Zealand where the owners owned multiple businesses and money being shuffled between these different business entities. For me. when I see something like that it looks to me as something that is very messy, very untidy and it tells me just from that alone that something not quite kosher is taking place. A person running honest business doesn’t need to set up multiple registered businesses – the corporate structure would simple and straightforward, accountability for who owns what, who is responsible for what would be transparent and wouldn’t require an army of lawyers and accounts to untangle the mess when it all goes belly up.

    This where I come to the whole AI bubble which has all the tell tale signs of something not quite kosher with businesses once again creating holding companies, moving money between entities, recording revenue from those transfers when in reality it is little more than circle financing. This whole situation reminds me of the Three Stooges comedy routine of circulating the same note to each other. When all this goes to hell in a handbasket we’ll have another enquiry into the mess, none of the people involved will be held accountable (see the global financial crisis as an example of no one being held accountable) the the usual suspects in politics and the media will claim that ‘no one could have seen this coming’ even though there were many people who were sounding the alarm but were being ignored.

    I’m a great believer in the KISS principle, Keep It Simple Stupid, don’t make things more complex than they need to be. Whenever I see something that is needlessly more complex then it tells me one of two things – those involved have more money than what they know what to do with so they create an over engineered solution. The other explanation is that they’re making it overly complex as a form of obfuscation in an attempt to hide the fact that what they’re doing isn’t above board but they want to hide it under a layer of jargon and complexity so most people give up and not ask questions.

    Daily writing prompt
    Are you a lifelong learner?

    As someone who is interested in understanding how the world works I am always keen to acquire more knowledge across many different disciplines because there isn’t one discipline that explains it all. When I look at the world from a materialist perspective I am asking myself how material reality shapes one’s world view – that includes one’s class, culture, economic circumstances, whether one is raised in a monoculture or community with many cultures that are integrated together rather than being siloed off from each other etc.

    As frustrating as things can get I always keep reminding myself that people don’t just act in random ways, that there is a material explanation for why people behave in a certain way. The benefit of spending time, across multiple disciplines, is being able to understand how people tick which alleviates some of the frustration when understand why a person behaves in seemingly irrational ways. The other benefit is that immunises oneself from the sort of conspiracy theories and scapegoating that politicians and influencers love to use as a distraction from the fact that they don’t have any real answers to the problems the voters are facing in their lives.

    Fediverse reactions
  • I woke up this morning, still a bit overcast and cold outside but I started the day with chia seed pudding (chia seeds soaked in ‘Up and Go’ protein shake) and 190g of high protein yoghurt on top. I’ve been having that consistently for almost a month and the great thing is with it is the combination of high fibre and protein keeps me full until my next main meal. For dinner I had the vegetarian bolognese with the konjac noodles – the noodles were easy to cook because it just involves boiling some water, soaking the noodles in there for a minute, drain the water off using a colander and the put the vegetarian bolognese mixture on top. Is it as good as the ‘real thing’ when it comes to real pasta? eh, it’s ok and it is easy to put together when working from home since I only have 30 minutes for dinner.

    Just a follow up to my recent post regarding Graham Platner – the one thing I didn’t touch on was pointing out the fact that it is important to differentiate between critics who are acting in bad faith vs critics who are acting in good faith and can see something that maybe in your blind spot. Were there some people attacking Gahama Platner early on in his campaign not because of genuine concern but because they disagree with the progressive platform but argued in bad faith? I’m sure some were but it is also important to note that there were critics of Graham Platner early on who agreed with a lot of what was said but they had concerns about whether he was the right person to champion those policies and concerns regard the seriousness of the accusations that also came out.

    The problem is that far too many on the left conflated those critics acting in bad faith to those acting in good faith by attacking anyone who was critical of Graham Platner by assuming that every criticism is coming from a position of bad faith. I’m on the other side of the world so I really don’t have any skin in the game nor do I have any influence but having watched it from afar I was hoping that when there were the primaries for the Maine senate seat that cooler heads would prevail, that those who made the biggest lead tend not to hold onto that lead once more candidates enter the race.

    When information starting come out regarding Graham Platner’s past, the tattoo, the 5 tours overseas then followed serious accusations coming out I couldn’t help but get the feeling that there was a whole lot of stuff being held back in an attempt to control the narrative. As the old saying goes, where there is smoke there is fire and I couldn’t help but get feeling deep in my gut that something wasn’t quite adding up – something wasn’t exactly quite kosher about the explanations given.

    I ran for parliament around 20 years ago and when I ran the party conducted a background check – what I had posted on social media, blog posts, YouTube videos I had uploaded etc. Even for a small party they had to do their due diligence because the last you want is a candidate who is running but has a whole heap of baggage which results in the leader of the party having to front up to the media for everything a candidate has said and done instead of talking about policy.

    We also need to stop treating grown adults as if they’re children, that they lack agency and responsibility for the choices they make in their life. We need to stop excusing grown men for their behaviour by brushing it off as ‘youthful indiscretions’ – more specifically cis heterosexual white men. That ‘benefit of the doubt’ is never extended to men from minority groups – that benefit of the doubt seems to be available for only one group. The infantilising men also does a great disservice to men because it also lowers the bar and men overall get the impression that doing the bare minimum is acceptable and anything more than the bare minimum apparently warrants a reward of some sort.

  • Got up this morning and it was chilly outside but I had my heater going the whole night which made getting out of bed not so bad. It looks like for the next couple of days that it should be fairly fine although it’ll be a bit chilly with the temperature getting down to 1°C so I’ll be staying at home. Next week I’m hoping that my Ikea order will be sent and will arrive so then I can change my duvet and duvet cover where on my own bed I’ll have a king sized duvet on my queen size bed and the queen sized duvet cover will go on the king sized single in the spare room that I’m using as my office.

    I’ve been following the early access builds over on Ubiquiti – UniFi Network Application 10.5.61 has been released however there have been plenty of people reporting issues but keep in mind it could be due to UniFi Network Application 10.5.61 or it could be due to the underlying UniFi OS that may have a bug that needs fixing but I guess we’ll need to wait and see what happens. There is the UniFi OS 5.1.21 however it is still in early access and has been so for a couple of weeks so it may not even appear as they move onto the next release in the 5.1.x series or may even hold off for the 5.2.x series.

    I think that things are going to start to get a bit rocky now that the conflicted between Israel/United States has flared up, ships aren’t able to navigate, insurance companies not willing to insure boats in such a dangerous area of the world and also keeping in mind that the price of oil has stablised because of the draw down of strategic reserves but eventually they will run dry. The New Zealand government has help fund extra storage capacity for diesel reserves however the one thing to keep in mind is that the extra capacity does come with a price tag it costing $1.2 million per month – that cost has to be recouped either it being passed along to consumers via higher prices or the government subsidising the additional cost but either way that cost has to be covered by someone.

    It is also interesting to see that as the electioneering continues on that National are how scaling back some of their ‘Roads of National Significance (RoNS)’ or as what I like to call them – ‘the party who claims that they’re good at business demonstrate they have no idea about business’. The reason why I say that is because the roads are of such poor value for money it would be the equivilent of placing a $100 bet, bringing in your ticket then next day and being told you won your bet and get paid out $70 – less than the amount you spent on the bet.

    What amazes me is the fact that we had a report made by, if I remember correctly it was the infrastructure commission, that stated the focus for future spending needed to be making the existing infrastructure work better (60% of funding) and the remaining amount spent on new infrastructure. A good example of making infrastructure work better was the installation of rail tracks from Trentham through to the Upper Hutt station (it was only single track) which would then enable more frequent train services. That is a good example how you take the existing infrastructure we have and then making it work better.

    Daily writing prompt
    What’s one habit that has improved your life the most?

    The best habit I’ve picked up is the habit of making small changes one at a time rather than trying to make a whole heap of changes all at once. The benefit of making those incremental changes is that it allows you to focus all your energy on getting that change embedded in your life so that it becomes muscle memory rather than trying to do a whole lot of changes at once then finding that you cannot keep all the plates spinning at once. As a result of this gradual approach I am finding that my life is a lot better organised because now I have a routine where I just do things without having to consciously think about doing whatever needs to be done.

    Fediverse reactions
  • It has been a cold and chilly day today. I’ve left my heater on all day and although it’ll probably push my power bill north of $200 I would sooner spend the extra money to keep myself warm rather than trying to ‘tough it out’ and end up getting sick. Had a good breakfast in the morning although for dinner I had some tacos with plenty of vegetables which went well. As I’ve noted on previous blog posts my focus is upping the amount of fibre that I’m having and at the moment it is above 36g of fibre which is about the amount a person my age should be eating. I’m finding that with the eating of fibre that I don’t get the sugar spikes meaning that when I have a meal that I don’t have an energy crash nor do I end up feeling hungry a couple of hours after having a meal.

    I finally got around to installing Chrome on Wednesday and then when I checked for updates on Thursday I found that Google had pushed out another update – from version from the initial version of 150.0.7871.101 to 150.0.7871.115 and there were plenty of security bugs that were fixed in the release (link). One thing I did notice is that the ‘writing prompts’ are now working properly in WordPress where as from the main page when you click on ‘post answer’ a new page would open up but the writing prompt wouldn’t appear. The issue regarding uploading a photo is still occuring – I’m unsure whether that is because I’m selecting the photo via open window and selecting photos rather than copying the photo from the Photos app to the desktop then uploading from the desktop to WordPress.

    When it comes to uBlock Origin Lite – yes, it works a whole lot smoother on Chrome than it does on Safari but I guess when macOS 27 I’ll get to see if there are improvements but I’m not holding out much hope because extension support appears to be a very, very, very low priority when it comes to what the Safari developers are focusing on. The problem comes back to the fact that the Declarative Net Request (DNR) has been implemented on top of the native content blocking API that comes part of macOS rather than it being implemented natively. The net result of it not being implemented natively are two fold, the first being that the filters need to be converted from the Declarative Net Request format to the native content blocking format (unfortunately there is no way to know when the filters have been converted after installing an extension – you just have to leave it alone for 5 minutes then hope that it is completed)

    Oh, and I’ve finally taken a photo of my lounge room with the tree in the corner:

    It adds a bit of colour to the room and the corner is no longer looking empty. I bought it online from KMart and got it delivered – it is around 180cm high which is slightly shorter than I am. I’m at the point now where it feels really nice and cosy during winter, being able to cuddle up in the couch, watching movies or television shows on the big screen, the heater in the hall way keeping the house warm.

    I am still looking at some rugs for my bedroom, spare room/office and the hall way but I’m in no great hurry to get it but it would be nice to add some colour given the grey carpet I have (the carpet is perfectly find and hard wearing but some colour would lift the vibe of the place).

    Daily writing prompt
    What’s a book you think deserves a sequel?

    Two books I’d love to see not only a sequel but also a prequel would be 1984 and A Brave New World. When it comes to A Brave New World I would like to know what lead up to the system being created and how a society transitions from one that is highly controlled where people were divorced from their emotions to one where all where all those emotions come flooding back and how one would handle that without having never been given the tools to understand them. When it comes to 1984 the prequel would probably more important than the sequel in terms of how the system came into being although a sequel would be nice assuming there is some sort scenario where the system is reformed or collapses. I’ve kind of wondered whether 1984 could be a television series in much the same way that 12 Monkeys was turned into television series which allowed the exploration of the themes raised in the movie.

    Fediverse reactions
  • Today was a windy and wet day however it appears that things are going to get better on Friday which will hopefully translate to the weekend drying up. Today I worked from home and it was rather uneventful although two system issues caused a higher volume of calls than expected but that being said at least it wasn’t on a day where we’re traditionally more busy. In Australia the telecommunication giant Telstra had a nationwide outage which caused chaos which reminds me of the nationwide outage in New Zealand that occurred on the One NZ network (Spark had their own nationwide outage back in the days of XT Network when they moved from CDMA to 3G UTMS). When this sort of thing happens it makes me wonder whether there should be some sort of fall back mechanism where the other mobile phone carriers pick up load just in case people need to make an emergency or urgent phone call etc.

    Over the last day or two there has been fall out from more revelations coming out regarding Graham Platner. For me when I saw the primary taken place I stood back and waited to see what else came out and I couldn’t help but get the feeling that something was being held back, that not every revelation had ben made public. I generally want to believe in the idea of giving someone a second chance, that there is redemption in this life time, I’ve even rallied against cancel culture on my blog because I believe people have the capacity to deconstruct their past beliefs and reform themselves. With all that being said, rehabilitation doesn’t occur over night and the fact that these issues didn’t come up during a background check for opposition research makes me wonder whether it was a situation of not wanting to find something because what he was saying blinded them from doing some serious digging into the guys past.

    Oh, and as for the Republicans, there was Kevin McCarthy on Fox News who claimed that the Republicans when they found out there was a bad candidate they didn’t vote for him. Really? because how do you explain Donald Trump? Roy Moore? Dr Oz? Herschel Walker? Michelle Bachmann? Marjorie Taylor Greene? Lauren Boebert? Matt Gaetz? Rick Santorum? Christine O’Donnell? do I need to go further? it is amazing how the average Republican voter appears to have no long term memory because Republicans just spout provable lies and there is no political consequences. It’s almost as if Republican voters just live in the moment and what happened 5 minutes ago let alone an hour ago or a year ago didn’t happen because it isn’t even remembered. It’s like watching 1984 where the past is rewritten to justify the present when the phrase “We have always been at war with Eastasia” was uttered. The average Republican has somehow perfected the art of double think – being able to hold two contrary ideas in their head at the same time and consider it perfectly normal.

  • Woke up today around 10am and I had some breakfast but I decided to make it a little more interesting by having chia pudding but rather than eating it out of the jar I decanted the contents from the jar into a bowel and then put some black Doris plums on top (minus the stone). The combination of that along with the vanilla Up and Go, chia seeds and the psyllium husk added some much needed flavour after having pretty bland breakfasts for the last couple of weeks.

    I caught the bus so I could have dinner at mum’s place – meat loaf, whole potatoes with sour cream and sweet chilli, broccoli and cauliflower with cheese sauce then for desert some ice cream. I was also able to pick up some home made musli bars which were quite tasty although I asked that next time mum made them to maybe add some craisins which would add an interesting sweet but tart flavour to it. The musli bar reminds me of the Cookie Time Bumper Bars – quite a hearty snack with plenty of fibre.

    After dinner mum dropped me off home but on the way I picked up some groceries – I picked up some yoghurt for breakfast along with some chocolate Up and Go. I also finally got my act together to buy bigger glass containers because the current ones are around 300ml where as the new one is around 450ml which makes it a lot easier to meal prep because I can give it a good shake, stir it thoroughly to remove an clumps of chia seeds or psyllium husk that may form as the chia seeds or psyllium husk are absorbing the water in the Up and Go.

    Daily writing prompt
    What villain actually had a good point?

    I’m sure it isn’t going to be a popular opinion but I would say that the villain from the movie ‘A Few Good Men’, Colonel Nathan R. Jessup, and the famous “you can’t handle the truth” speech he gave in the court scene. What the main protagonist pointed out was the hypocrisy of the those running the proverbial sausage factory but not wanting to know how the sausage gets made. The professional managerial class, politicians and those in positions of power are happy to bask in the glory of success but the moment that it is known how that success was achieved then they suddenly become very high and mighty, giving bloviating speeches about the importance of the very things they were happy to ignore as so long as the masses didn’t know how the results were achieved.

    Unfortunately there is a habit that for many in power they like to keep their distance so it always gives them plausible deniability when things go pear shaped, to be able to claim that they were left in the dark or if they had an inkling but to never actually ask the necessary questions. The reason why many don’t ask questions because asking questions would then expose themselves to trickier questions regarding why underlings made the decisions they did and what sort of culture exists within the organisation along with who is responsible for the culture – the culture being very much a product of those at the top. As the old saying goes, “The fish rots from the head down”, it is ultimately the leadership who create and nurture a culture within an organisation – if you punish people who do things by the book but take longer but reward those who take short cuts and break the rules then get the results you want then it shouldn’t be surprising that there is now an incentive structure in place.

    We’re already seeing that in New Zealand when it comes to the Ministry of Social Development where employee performance is going to be evaluated based on whether they can hit the numbers set down by the government (link). What is the National led government doing in response to the revelation reported by Radio New Zealand? well, there appears to be a ‘Yes Minister’ video for everything these days – or as my old man used to say about how Yes Minister isn’t too far from reality:

    The government of the day are trying to distance themselves from the objectives they’ve set down and the methods that are being employed to achieve those end goals. Like the Yes Minister video the government of the day are trying to make out as if methods of achieving goals have nothing to do with them while ignoring that the policies that they’re laying down lead to such operational policies being drawn up and implemented by the ministry itself. It is truly amazing how no very few seem to have learnt from the work that Sue Bradford over 20 years ago did while in parliament where she worked on undoing the damage of prior government policies. The policies of prior governments where by Work and Income New Zealand (the precursor to the Ministry of Social Development) would withhold information from those seeking help so then they could hit their KPIs for the year for example, not voluntarily telling clients the benefits they were entitled to. Sue Bradford worked tirelessly to ensure that when clients were dealing with Work and Income New Zealand that there was full disclosure regarding all the assistance that they could apply for rather than the onus falling on the client to do the research regarding what they may or may not be entitled to.

    Fediverse reactions
  • Today was a pretty rainy day and I checked to see the news regarding whether the rest of the country had experienced something similar. Unfortunately down south there has been some pretty major floods but thank goodness the local and central government were able to mobilise resources to help those who were affected. In the northern hemisphere there are heat waves and wild fires, in the southern hemisphere we’ve got El Niño making the weather go crazy. It looks like it’ll be horribly nasty weather until Friday although given how unpredictable the weather is I guess it’ll be a situation of having to play it by ear.

    It is interesting to see the number of centre left and left wing Americans getting excited for the mid terms but I can’t help but get the feeling that there is an echo chamber online. As much as I’d love to believe that things are crashing and burning for the MAGA faithful and then for those MAGA faithful to have a road to Damascus moment, I am reminded that so often that their entire identity is linked to a party and/or an individual rather than an ideology. When you have a large number of Americans whose politics are based on vibes rather than a robust understanding of the issues and the policies being promoted to fix those issues, I wouldn’t hold out on a mass rush towards Democrats. Assuming that they do make the move to vote for Democrats then I’m pretty confident they’ll switch back to the Republican Party the moment the next charlatan comes along promising to feed into their inclination of blaming minorities for the problems in their life rather than the very people they keep voting for.

    In terms of software update, uBlock Origin Lite 2026.705.2152 has been released and it has appeared in the Edge extension store however it hasn’t appeared in the Chrome or Apple Store. I’ve been following the release of Chrome 150 however I liked to check out the Chrome Platform Status page (link) to see what is being implemented. Apple has released Safari Technology Preview 247 recently and on the Web Platform Test it has been bumped from 85.9% to 87%.

  • Oh the hysteria from the usual suspects in politics and the media – the never ending avalanche of hyperventilation about how there is a race for AI between the United States and how the United States cannot afford to ‘fall behind China’ because of…well, visions of what they believing AI is capable doing and by AI we’re actually talking about LLMs. Behind all this nonsense I think it is important to understand the difference between China and the United States – the United States is trying to make a business off providing AI where as the Chinese want to integrate AI into their business to make their products better.

    On one side you have people convinced that if they throw enough money at a problem then they can corner the market and ‘name their price’ – remember Sam Altman talking about AI being like a utility? yeah, that is what I think they’re hoping to be – OpenAI and Anthropic provide the foundation models then charge businesses who will then build products on top of those models. Part of that cornering of the market involves both throwing huge amounts of money at a problem in the belief that they’ll have an unsurmountable lead and the other part is the hysteria about safety, the need for regulation, claims that the next model is ‘super dangerous’ etc. (I’ve compared the nonsense to a chicken wing restaurant boasting about how they have the hottest wings in town along with the theatrics of going as so far as getting customers to sign a legal waver because their wings are so hot and dangerous).

    The second part isn’t just about pumping up excitement and drumming the investment community, most of who are as thick as two short planks (even that is an insult to planks because at least you can turn planks of wood into something useful), but the other part is about creating an environment where politicians are compelled to keep out of the United States the free and open source models that are getting closer and closer to the capabilities of the proprietary models made by OpenAI and Anthropic. The best description of such behaviour would be a non-tariff barrier – creating hurdles so that for most businesses they throw in the towel and not bother entering the United States market and instead focus their energy somewhere else.

    Getting back to the the difference, the comparison I made in the first paragraph only really applies to OpenAI and Anthropic because if you look at the big players – Google, Microsoft and Apple, the value isn’t in the AI but how the AI integrates into their products. The value of Gemini is how it integrates into the Google Workspace, with Microsoft they’re working on their own in house models (Microsoft have five of them) then there is Apple that worked in collaboration with Google (model distillation) to improve their own models. I assume that as Google’s models keep moving forward that Apple will keep doing model distillation on the newer models then deploys those models when they push out updates for their platform every 2-3 months.

    I think with he recent information we’ve had leaked about OpenAI’s alleged financials along with rumours of Meta pulling back on capex spending along with leasing capacity of the unused capacity to the market (the comparison I made on BlueSky is comparing the move to that of a fast food store using up the 5″ burger patties for 4″ burgers rather than cooking more 4″ burger patties – it is better to do that than lose a whole lot more money by having to throw out 5″ burger patties) and at least get some money back from their unwise investment.

    Long term think there will be a correction, the AI companies will scale back, no more subscriptions in favour of pay as you go API access along with ending the free consumer version of their services as investors start demanding they make themselves profitable. It’ll be interesting to see if, once they remove subscriptions and free consumer access, whether there is a viable business model and if there is a viable business model I have a strong inkling that the business isn’t going to be worth $1 trillion let along half of that amount. Keeping in mind that essentially what these AI companies are offering are development tools with an AI service slapped onto the side of it – not particularly all that exciting in the grand scheme of things.

    Regarding the AI washing, we’ve already seen some businesses come out and admit that their layoffs had nothing to do with AI and everything to do with the fact that hey had been over hiring for over a decade simply to keep talent away from competitors but now shareholders are demanding a better return on their investment. Maybe we’ll finally see more businesses be honest instead of hiding behind AI. when thy restructure because it is one thing to be laid off from your job but it is another thing to have your employer lie to your face about the reasons behind the decision.