Cause for pessimism. There is a stat in basketball called VORP, for Value Over Replacement Player. I'd like one for coaches: VORC, for Value Over Replacement Coach. If such a stat existed, Tom Thibodeau's VORC would be pretty high. Minnesota and Chicago both fell after he left.
Not surprisingly,,, Meta and Yandex are de-anonymizing Android users’ web browsing identifiers. From Ars Technica.
But not by much. WaPo: 5 AI bots took our tough reading test. One was smartest — and it wasn’t ChatGPT. It was Claude.
Today's rollback link. Podcasts, Wallcasts, and Paycasts, from last October. A pull-quote from a comment: "Paywalls are going up everywhere, as producers in the shittily named content business try to get ahead of Peak Subscription, and in the process are killing the open Internet, which is biggest farm ever created for geese that lay golden eggs."
Frontiers of bullshit. In FT: Generative AI models are skilled in the art of bullshit. And MODERN-DAY ORACLES or BULLSHIT MACHINES? How to thrive in a ChatGPT world, By Carl T. Bergstrom and Jevin D. West. Also for fun, a search.
It's all about geometry and packaging. Several million tech years ago, in the late '80s and early '90s, I did a lot of work for Hitachi Semiconductor and the collection of chip makers putting out (or planning at the time to put out) Sun Microsystems' SPARC CPU. The one I learned the most from was Hitachi, which at the time was making the microprocessors embedded in automobile brake systems and first-generation flash memory. Scientists from deep inside the company would make presentations predicting what would happen across the decades to come, just based on inevitable progress in chip design, function integration, and manufacture. I've watched, across those decades, how their predictions came true. One prediction both they and I made at the time was that the fabs required were beyond Hitachi's scope, and that one or two companies not among the leaders back then would end up making the chips and products that ordinary people would pocket and use to vastly extend their agency in both the physical and digital worlds. The three most important companies doing that today are TSMC, Samsung, and Apple. I share all this to tee up Beyond 2nm: Apple’s A20 chip to introduce new packaging breakthrough, in 9to5mac. When when you read about TSMC at that link, recall this one-liner from Jerry Sanders when he ran AMD: "Real men have fabs."
In case you're not worried enough. All in Wired:
A GPS Blackout Would Shut Down the World.
The Texting Network for the End of the World.
The Rise of ‘Vibe Hacking’ Is the Next AI Nightmare.
The US Grid Attack Looming on the Horizon.
You’re Not Ready for Quantum Cracks.