24 May 2026

WiFi signals can identify you with near-perfect accuracy. I posted something about this before. You’re basically walking around in a radar field, and sensors can detect the pattern from the way things bounce off you. If you're really that nervous you could get EMF blocking clothing from Faraday Clothing.

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WSJ has an article on hiking leg enhancers that let you e-hike, as they call it. Still has kinks to work out, but it may come in handy some day. And when the price comes down.

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The Replacements: How US Helps Foreign Workers Take American Jobs. Yeah, college kids have a bigger threat than AI. Unlike AI, foreign workers are not force-multipliers.

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Looks like a LOT of people fled Democrat states last year. Yup. As Democrats tried to reinforce their anti-Trump governments, people voted with their feet.
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Wearing EEG electrodes can be a problem due to hair. But a new thermoreversible biogel may help.

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Psilocybin cuts nerve pain for weeks and boosts gabapentin efficacy in mice. Neuropathic pain is one of the toughest pain types to alleviate. Medicines that lessen its severity often make you sleepy. It really would be nice to have something that really works. Besides suzetrigine.

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This is a great take on what Late Night shows have become over the years. Peter Girnus posts have been showing up a lot lately as more people discover his unique style.

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Nearly every other password can be cracked in under a minute, and three out of five take less than an hour. Computing power has increased so much recently. For financial stuff, you absolutely really need 2-factor authentication.

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Did amphetamines help Erdős? I'm sure they did. Look at his productivity boost right after 1970 when he first started taking them. Then you can see where he began to experience tachyphylaxis. Happens all the time.

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Micropublishing is a place to publish biology research findings that are too small for a regular paper. But you want to get your findings out there. And it's indexed by PubMed, which is nice.

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Stanfards must be getting bad in academia. Who is a professor and who is a hobo?  These days, they're letting a lot of poseurs be college professors so I'm not surprised. And these are all men. There's some women professors who have been mistaken as homeless, too. 

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Sometimes you want a spreadsheet to do some quick forecasting, but you don't want to open Excel for it. QuickSheet is a mini light-weight spreadsheet tries to do that. From the comments, it's got kinks to work out. I've been using TableEdit but this app was created for older macOS versions, and I get a warning that future versions of macOS won't support it. There's no upgrade, however. The app is free so you get what you pay for, I guess.

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Doctors, This Is Why Our Patients Are Using ChatGPT. This article is written by an ED physician. For now, ChatGPT can sound like it's offering sound medical advice, but this may change in the future, as the advice gets outdated, as it is as good as its training cutoff date, which is a year or so ago. But as doctors become in shorter supply, people will turn to Dr. Chat for medical advice. AI isn't helping the medical profession the way it was envisioned. For doctors, it does their charting for them, although in a way that may not help them remember what exactly happened during that visit. When you don't write your own notes, something definitely is lost.

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For folks that can't exercise, whole body vibration can help decrease sarcopenia. I'll bet it feels good, too.

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If you iPhone is stolen, expect to get really nasty calls from phone thieves who want your password so they can unlock the phone, erase it, and sell it on the black market. Here's what Apple recommends:
the company advises owners to put it into Lost Mode; remotely erase the device; and keep the device on the “Find My” list to prevent it from being set up for a new user.
The time to prepare is NOW, before you lose your phone. Make sure you can see your iPhone in Find My on your computer.

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23 May 2026

Polish Nobel literature laureate Tokarczuk sparks controversy after admitting using AI. Nothing wrong with that, from my standpoint. AI can be a force multiplier, and give you ideas, as well as cleaning up clumsy text. Carry on, Olga.

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Data centers could actually be good for your hometown. It really depends on the type of data center that gets built and the deal you negotiate. Sure it can bring in new jobs and stimulate the local economy, but not all types of data centers will do that. Places like Oregon need the brains part of tech, not the factory drudge parts. That's why Washington and California are wealthy, because they have all the higher-level engineers, while Oregon has mostly the engineers that oversee manufacturing and data center operations. We're not seeing wealthy towns like Kirkland, Issahquah, Woodinville or Redmond.

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'The vibes are young male vibes': Why prediction markets attract a certain type. The kinda guys that like to gamble. That trade in crypto and the latest hustles.

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Hijacking Large Audio-Language Models via Context-Agnostic and Imperceptible Auditory Prompt Injection. If you interact with your LLM agent through an audio or voice interface, you have something else to worry about – inaudible signals. 

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I let an AI agent loose on my network — it owned my supply chain in 12 minutes. I don't why people post these. It's almost like "I let a raging Hereford bull loose in my house – it tore everything up in 12 minutes."

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A favorite VPN used by European and Russian hackers is taken down. About time. But they'll move on.

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Another guy loses his primary care physician. He wants a post-primary healthcare. It sad that many people view primary care as just check-up and triage engines. Primary care is a specialty in itself, and is probably inadequately compensated. There are so clinical updates to be aware of. Blood pressure and cholesterol recommendations change every few years. Same with optimal weight goals. Vitamin D levels. PSA monitoring. etc, etc. This blogger just want to be able to check his labs frequently and use AI to interpret them himself. But AI isn't going to remind him to get his recommended colonoscopy sooner because colon cancer statistics have changed. Bottom line: we still need good primary care physicians, and they shouldn't be treated like low on the totem pole professionals. But the practice should adapt to the world of wearables and technology. Not necessarily by resorting to telemedicine, but by creating more enhanced physicians that meet the needs of people. It's getting harder to find doctors like this.

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Here's a mini-review of Sci-Bot, the latest from Aleksandra Elbakyan. I stopped using Sci-Hub when it stopped indexing modern articles. I didn't use Sci-Net because I couldn't contribute, and it required sign-in. Sci-Bot suffers from lack of content. Great idea, but not quite as useful as it should be.

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The Making of Indian Statistics. I'm linking this webpage because it has a very unique webpage design, and I don't get impressed by very much these days. Kudos to the webpage designer.

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Deschutes County Commission Goes Democrat For the First Time In Three Decades. The influx of Californians into Bend has finally impacted the local politics. Shame.
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22 May 2026

GLP-1s Linked to Lower Risk of Cancer Spread in Four Tumor Types: colorectal, liver, breast, and lung cancers. These cancer types rely on high glucose and inflammatory environments. We're finding so many benefits from these drugs besides weight loss and glucose control. Maybe we should start putting GLP-1 agonists in the water supply!

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When a beam of light passes through a cloud of atoms, photons (particles of light) sometimes appear to spend a negative amount of time there, with light seeming to exit the cloud before it even enters.
Whuut? Why isn't this report not getting more attention?

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Perplexity used to be really useful. But over time, as they added things to compel you to subscribe and upgrade to the Pro plan, the free plan stopped working. I'm always hesitant to sign up for an account, where my searches can be linked to me personally. So I was happy to see that there is an open-source version, called Perplexica. And the source code behind it is available in case you wanted to roll your own.

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Your brain changes during meditation begin within minutes and peak around the 7-minute mark. This is great, and perhaps it's not necessary to meditate for an hour each time.

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Will string of science scandals ruin century-old journal Nature’s reputation in China? Even Chinese scientists are disgusted with the fraudulent research published in the journal Nature. Ironic, since Chinese paper mills are the source of so much research fraud.

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Mental disorders have nearly doubled since 1990, now affecting 1.2 billion people worldwide. I've noticed this. So many mentally ill people in the news. Especially in politics. What's going on? Paper here.
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3D-printed speaker cover can focus audio into a private 'sound spot'. This is cool. Kind of like a parabolic microphone, but instead of the listener having the device, the speaker has the device.

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Imagine identity verification just by putting earphones on. A novel earphone design with heartbeat sensors can verify users just from their heartbeats. Awesome, but a little scary, too. If you can identify someone just from their heartbeat, it could enable a new kind of surveillance. I'm skeptical it will be that precise, however, since there are so many variables that factor into a heartbeat. I think this is just proof of concept. But man, aren't neural nets awesome?

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I'm Tired of Listening to Nerds and Dweebs. Don't we all share this guy's frustrations? Everyone wants to be an expert, and on social media, no one knows you're a dog.

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AI is killing the cheap smartphone. Because RAM is so expensive now. I don't think that this is necessarily a bad thing. Like I don't think the demise of Spirit Airlines and super cheap airfare was entirely a bad thing either. If you know what I mean.

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A Hacker Group Is Poisoning Open Source Code at an Unprecedented Scale. Open source software, like American democracy (or republicanism to be accurate) is only as good as people who act with propriety. Too bad, open source. Fun while it lasted, I guess.

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Well, well. You might have thought that by using the Signal app's disappearing messages feature, that your deleted messages could not be recovered. Nope, it may still be recoverable, through Apple's Time Machine backup systems. Deleted, but not forgotten. 

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All right, Robert X. Cringely is blogging again! Let's see if he still has the inside connections.

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Solid state batteries are showing promise. Let's get them into production, folks. We got datacenters to power.

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And now Dark Horse Comics is closing. Now where will the nerdboys go? What a shame.

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This is where they come from. All those crazy progressive socialist women politicians didn't appear out of nowhere. Here is their incubator! It's called Emerge Oregon. Holy crap!!! Burn it with fire!

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21 May 2026

Don't want to grow old? How a cup of coffee and fruit could be the answer you're looking for. Coffee and "dark fruit". Berries. They'll protect your telomeres. Well, I'm not so sure it's this easy to stop aging, but I love coffee and berries of different sorts. There certainly are people who seem to age much more slowly, so I suppose a reduction in the aging process is possible.

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Brains, brains! There's a startup, Bexorg, that is using living brains, harvested after death and kept alive, to study various treatments for neurodegenerative diseases, testing for efficacy, etc. Here's a YT video of their facility. The brain is such a high-energy demand organ that it's amazing that they can keep it alive. I suppose that it's possible to keep most of the cells alive for study, which may be enough to achieve their goals. Still, one wonders if there is any consciousness or thought process that lingers. What goes on in those "dead" brains?

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"Fasting, when done safely, is an effective weight loss intervention. Popular diets that incorporate fasting, such as intermittent fasting, claim to have health benefits beyond weight loss. Our results provide evidence for the health benefits of fasting beyond weight loss, but these were only visible after three days of total caloric restriction -- later than we previously thought."
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Eating ice cream or cheese can really cause nightmares. Especially cheddar cheese, which is the cheese used in Welsh rarebit, a potent inducer of nightmares.

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Hard lesson to learn. A guy came up with an idea to make foods last longer by coating it with a special wax. He called his company Apeel. But then social media spread the word that it was somehow linked to a floor cleaner chemical. Also there was a link to Bill Gates and the two Facebook posts ended up killing the product. The article attaches the blame to "MAHA influencers" but does not name names. Why implicate MAHA in this? Sounds biased to me. 

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Hong Wang may be the youngest female winner of the Fields Medal for solving the 3D Kakeya Conjecture. I can't even grok the 2D version of the conjecture. Seems impossible but it's true.

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Phosphene is a video wallpaper engine for macOS Tahoe. Let's you create stuff like Aerial. I might play around with this someday.

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How you probably will find Satoshi Nakamoto. If you are looking for him, that is.

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If you're a calculator nerd, this site if for you.

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I can't believe Trump was going to sign an order that might treat AI models like how the FDA treats drugs. Thank goodness he listened to saner minds. That would have been a disaster for AI in the United States. This is like CRISPR technology. At first, there wasn't going to be experiments on humans, but China started doing it, so U.S. scientists started doing it, too. As with many things in life, our actions are driven by the actions of the worst players in the game. You may want to exercise restraint and caution, but when everyone else is raging ahead, you will lose.

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Vega: Zero-knowledge proofs for digital identity in the age of AI . Yes! Someone at Microsoft must have read my blog. Or at least read the post I read. There is a way to achieve age-verification without banning VPNs, for goodness sakes.

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Never satisfied. It's that time of the year again. Portland Public Schools teachers to vote on proposed cost-of-living pay raise.

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It happened again. Labor-backed candidates in 2 ultra-close Washington County races for Legislature have claimed lead, new results show. Aren't we sick of this already? On election night, the non-radical candidate wins. But a couple days later, "new results" come in, showing that the progressive radicals won after all. This is precisely why we need to get rid of mail-in ballots. You never see the radical left candidate win on election night, only to lose later. It's always in one direction.

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And Providence Health Plans is shutting down. The Medicare Advantage plans are still being shopped around, but everything else will end. Nobody wanted to buy that asset from Providence. Wow, how the once-mighty have fallen.

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20 May 2026

Removing excess glutamate accumulation after spinal cord injury can mitigate neurological injury and "restores up to 80% movement in animal models". Can it be as simple as that?

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They don't want us to have "unconscious bias" but then they do this
According to the DOJ, black and Hispanic applicants admitted to Yale had substantially lower median MCAT scores and GPAs than white and Asian applicants across multiple admissions cycles, with the department concluding that equally qualified black applicants had dramatically higher odds of receiving interview invitations than comparable Asian applicants.
and
If the goal is a medical profession both excellent and broadly representative, then the solution cannot consist merely of manipulating admissions outcomes. The work must begin where the disparities first emerge—not where they become politically embarrassing.
Agree 100%. 💯

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Apple M3 MacStudio Ultra with 512 GB of RAM and 80 core GPU is on sale at Amazonfor $17,000! Man, it was only around $8000 when I bought it last year. 

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Man, what a depressing read. What You Will Lose When You Retire. It's what you make of it. If you choose to let it be boring, it will be boring. If you choose to enjoy it, it can be a great experience.

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AI video editing. I have no need for this at the moment but it could come in handy, if it's really that easy to use. Looks powerful.

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Google has decided to be an AI-driven search service. They've given up their core business of being a search engine, and now want to serve AI-driven search results. Because that's what people are going at OpenAI and Claude. They're not visiting Google's search page, where companies fight for eyeball-driven ad traffic. And people are manipulating AI search to have them generate factoids of their own design. And sites like Pokemon Central no longer come up on Google searches. Enshittification again.

But Google launched Gemini Omni, an multimodal AI model that can handle anything. Kinda like Grok.

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Soon, doctors will find that patients are recording their visits to send to their AI chatbot at home. These things aren't HIPAA entities and are under no obligation to keep your data private. Who knows who these developers are? Why trust them? If I were a doctor, I would forbid this.

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Nightmare come true. Russian soldiers are being targeted by Ukranian slaughterbot drones. Remember this video? It's happening now in Russia.

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Recycling is a sham. Beyond Plastics Tracked Starbucks’ ‘Widely Recyclable’ Plastic Cups. None Ended Up at a Recycling Facility. I spoke with someone who worked in waste management, who confirmed that a lot of the time, recycling waste and regular trash ends up in the same place.

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Pizza Hut tries to incorporate an AI-drive delivery system – it fails miserably. Gotta watch out with those "AI consultants". They can give ya lousy advice. 😉

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19 May 2026

The Efficiency Moat: Why China Is Beating the U.S. on AI… And Everything Else. It can be painful to compare China and the U.S. in terms of construction. On the one hand, you have California and Hawaii which take forever to build high speed rail. Then you see what China can do. I know it's is an AI video, but I bet it's not too far from the truth.

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How to estimate the hypotenuse of a right triangle without having to use square roots. Doesn't work as well when a = b.

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Handwriting but not typewriting leads to widespread brain connectivity: a high-density EEG study with implications for the classroom. I write far less than I used to. With AI, people will even type less than they used to.

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RSS may make a comeback because of agents. Whatever the reason, it's good that RSS is making a return. Although I've moved beyond RSS, since its rules are too strict. Sometimes they stumble on simple ampersands, sometimes not. And all that messy CDATA crap.

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Why Star Wars went so wrong. No, it's not that it felt like homework. It's because it went woke. Nobody wanted the Star Wars universe to feel like a New England liberal arts college faculty lounge. America's Other Pandemic is still smoldering, but at least it's not blazing like it was a few years ago.

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There's still a lot of fakery in AI. Filipino virtual assistants are behind LinkedIn’s “thought leadership” content mill. Good ol' third-world labor. What would we do without them?

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Even their soldiers? Gen Z soldiers' plastic surgeries strain Korea's military readiness. What a strange society.

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Someone applied the Drake equations to show why it's highly improbable that he'll get a girlfriend. Rationally, this would apply to the vast majority of people. Yet here we are. (Although fertility is indeed declining.)

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No more Hawaii trips for Home Forward. "This is the role of a public official and not a corporate executive”.
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Seatte's building more of that tiny-home goodness. And here's what living next to one of these is like.  Toilet odor! Chlorine gas! Gas masks! Irreversible knee damage!  And yet, "Trudy Benjamin said she doesn’t have any problem with tiny homes."
Well, well, well. Looks like we got ourselves a real liberal, here, eh?
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Defund the police, they said. Because too many minorities are getting arrested, they said. And no one had the guts to oppose this.

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'We're facing layoffs': Portland homeless services at risk under budget plan. Is the Homeless Industrial Complex imploding? Looks like the non-profit scam is finally coming to and end.

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18 May 2026

Japan team has 1st successful engine test for Mach 5 aircraft, eyeing 2-hr trips to US. This would be great. So maybe 1 hour trips to Hawaii? I would love it.

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Several years ago, there were reports that ARB drug like losartan might increase the efficacy of chemotherapy against pancreatic cancer. Even improve survival. I thought it was one of those one-off research findings that wouldn't reproduce and would get forgotten. But ARB drugs can potentiate the effects of olaparib, a PARP inhibitor, which is used in cancers of the pancreas, prostate and ovary.

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The proportion of men who attend college has really dropped off in recent years. And if you are a woman who doesn't attend college, your likelihood of getting married is about 50-50. Times have changed.
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University of Arizona students boo Eric Schmidt’s AI cheerleading during commencement. He's accused of not reading the room. But other college commencement speakers have been booed, too, while discussing AI. When I was a college student, I knew I didn't know everything, and when the university invited a speaker, it was assumed that some successful person was going to share words of wisdom. Not these kids. Good look on the job hunting.

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Scientists “bottle the sun” with a liquid battery that stores solar energy. The solar industry desperately needs an efficient way to store energy, not just feed it back into the grid. Maybe this will be a start.

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AI Rings on Fingers Can Interpret Sign Language. The signer would have to wear 7 rings, but the concept is nice.

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Chat on the major frontier platforms is not private. I know that, but others may not.
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The title is misleading – scientists are making some progress in identifying which neurons encode certain memories, but there's no device yet that allows one to erase memories. But here's something interesting:
Meanwhile, Holmes has come up with a brand-new approach to try to erase ‘flashbacks’, the intrusive snapshots of memories that pop into our heads without warning.

“We put people in a brain scanner and what we found is that your brain lights up when you play the computer game Tetris in a similar place as when people have flashbacks,” she says.

She has since developed a surprisingly simple technique to reduce flashbacks by essentially hijacking that visual part of the brain.

After you recall the memory of the flashback, you play Tetris for 20 minutes, but do so by carefully focusing on integrating the different shapes together, rather than simply letting them stack up.
Keep a portable game player with you at all times.

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KatanaPDF. Free PDF Editor. Runs in your Browser. This actually works. I tried to send the developer some money but after clicking Pay, the spinner just spins and spins. Get that fixed!

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People are working on devices that will prevent you from being recorded in public. It's becoming commonplace, and a nuisance as well as a privacy invasion. I can understand when law enforcement needs it, but not pranksters, "influencers" or just nosy nerds.

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Multnomah Village rally opposes plan to shift Safe Rest Village to recovery-only model. Portlanders are upset when these shelters are made to actually help people that need it, transforming from 'being just a low-barrier shelter where people can “come as they are,” into a recovery-only model that would likely add strict eligibility requirements'. Isn't that what taxpayer money is paying for? Recovery, not just a place to come and crash whenever, on the taxpayer dime.

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Oregon law can prevent mergers and acquisitions that degrade healthcare in the state. However it hasn't exercised this ability, and mergers and acquisitions have negatively impacted healthcare, especially in rural areas. Doctors are pawns in a game of mega-corporations now. It's not as rewarding to be a physician anymore, and one doesn't want to practice in an environment where one is close to burnout.

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What problems do Portlanders think are most important? So many things to be depressed about.

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Who’s moving to WA, and who’s leaving? There's some White flight. Mostly younger folk. The middle-aged and older folk are leaving. Native Washingtonians are leaving, being replaced by foreign immigrants. They say it's the tech industry. If so, why the White flight? I don't like it.

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17 May 2026

The 48-Hour Cancer Binder. This post is both a fascinating inside look at how to use ML tools to design targeted drugs – a must read for anyone looking into pursuing this field. But it's also a great insight into organizing a hackathon team, divvying up tasks based on domain expertise, and working together to achieve the design goal.  A major part of success is being able to present your idea effectively, creating a great pitch. Apparently, not doing so is why these guys didn't win. 
BTW, there already is a drug that targets the FGFR receptor, erdafitinib, used for urothelial cancer, and I suspect it was designed in a similar way.

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Apparently working for Meta is a horror-show. I remember when working there was prestigious. Now, it's a nightmare.

Speaking of fear and horror, I just read about this condition (Urbach-Wiethe syndrome) where your amygdala gets inactivated by progressive calcification. You live without fear. Much of meditation and stress reduction techniques is training to learn to control signals from the amygdala. We need to have a little bit of fear, but in some cases, it can get in the way.

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This makes no sense. India Missed Out on AI and Now Its Run as Market Darling May Be Over. It seems like 80% of the AI articles, podcasts and YT videos are by Indians. Many workers in tech are Indians. How could they miss out on AI? They practically developed AI! Did all the graduates of IIT leave the country? How did their business leaders let this happen? 

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It's true. Google Maps no longer shows the destruction that happened after the massive Pacific Palisades fire. Check it out. It's like it never happened. Lahaina, on the other hand, shows the aftermath. Why did Google choose to revert back? Very strange.

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Here's a fascinating look at how the New Testament changed as it was copied over and over throughout the centuries. Imagine being tasked to copy that book by hand.

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But the data shows that across broader society, the number of people finding partners and having children is declining despite intentions. This is notably pronounced among the least well off, and accompanies mounting loneliness and dating frustrations.

And even when couples can afford to move into their own place, they are increasingly likely to separate. In several countries, people who move in together are now more likely to split up than to have a child, a sharp reversal of the historical norm. 

Dissatisfied with purely economic explanations, researchers are beginning to point the finger at a new culprit — the digital devices and platforms that play an outsized role in young people’s lives across the world.

The number of births fell first and fastest in the areas that received high-speed mobile connectivity earliest. The authors argue that smartphones have transformed how young people spend time with one another, sharply reducing in-person socialising and leading to the collapse in their fertility.

In country after country the birth rate plunged after the introduction of smartphones, no matter what the previous trend was. The younger the age group, the more pronounced the downturn — a mirror image of smartphone usage patterns.

“If you spend lots of time socialising with your peers in the real world, your standards [for a potential partner] are anchored in the real world. If you spend your time on Instagram, your standards are anchored to an artificial sense of what is normal.”
So when you see what the ideal man or woman is on the Internet, the real life person standing in front of you just doesn't pass muster. You want the unattainable. Anything less just doesn't cut it anymore.

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A lot of people, it seems, are finding that they have high unauthorized Google API expenses. Even after you set spending caps. Sometimes you find that Google automatically upgraded your tier. How did this come about? Hacking? It's not clear, and Google is trying to sort it out. But it kinda sucks some of the fun out of AI coding, doesn't it?

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The search for the next James Bond actor has begun. Not crazy about the candidates listed, but oh well. It should be this AI-generated character.
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Is downtown Portland on the verge of a comeback? Here’s what locals think. One guy sees the homeless and his "heart breaks for them". He thinks that the reason for the slow decline of the city since 2020 is insufficient housing, and that adding more will drive people to live in the city. Well, Portland’s Housing Authority Sits On 955 Empty ApartmentsThe number of vacant affordable housing units in Portland reaches 10-year high. The vacancy rate in downtown and SW Portland has increased 28% YoY. There are enough homes – no one wants to move in!! 
Sometimes I think that there wouldn't be any progressives if people were just better informed.

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SeaPort airlines offers TSA-free service to Portland, Seattle, Spokane from Redmond. It's like NetJets. Too bad it's located in Redmond, Oregon.

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Seattle considers state of emergency due to all of the 2SLGBTQIA+ refugees from Texas . I thought this was funny. No panic when illegal aliens and foreign TPS holders invade the Pacific NW. But when it comes to LGBTQ, it's suddenly an emergency. "And Texas is happy to have that crowd gone." I'll bet.

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How many government employees does it take to move three homeless people? Kevin Dahlgren exposes the Homeless Industrial Complex. Of course it takes a lot of people. Who will just kick them out and let them relocate somewhere nearby. But hey, the City did something, right? Rinse repeat. This is the HIC. The problem is now so big that it requires organized response, which means more money and people who have jobs to do. Which must be funded by taxpayers. And government grants.

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Sound Transit has a $35 billion funding gap. Dems everywhere love mass transit. They love to build it. Expand it. Even when it doesn't pencil out.

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16 May 2026

AI research papers are getting better, and it’s a big problem for scientists. Fakery has to be dealt with firmly. Or else the whole industry of science publishing will need to be changed radically. Science is not well-served by AI slop.

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New credit card readers on Seattle transit charging untapped cards. It seems that the credit card readers are way too sensitive, no? People can get RFID-blocking wallets for their credit cards. They even make RFID-blocking cards themselves, which are about the same size as credit cards. They generated blocking signals when they detect the radio frequency that these readers send out.

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This guy started to get bizarre emails with strange subject lines. It turns out that they're generated by email agents from others. I don't get them probably because I haven't been targeted by these script kiddies. But this portends what we can expect when more of these idiots sent their agents out into the wild, scraping data and using it to target people with their stupid emails.

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Just what society needed: 3-D animated ads on trucks. Nice distractions. I'm sure there won't be any accidents happening because of the distraction.

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The Fix for Homelessness? Get Rid of All the Big Money to 'Fix' Homelessness. More people are realizing that NGOs don't want homelessness to go away, or else they won't have a business. NGOs are what progressives form to stay employed. They get grants, pay themselves a salary, and do absolutely nothing. Meanwhile the homeless are nurtured and their lifestyle cultivated. I recall when the homeless started out in cardboard boxes. Now they have the latest tents from REI. Where they can continue to use drugs, with paraphernalia provided by the city in the name of "harm reduction". They should not be given camping equipment and gear. They should be taken off the streets and plugged into social services and rehab under involuntary commitment. But no one has the guts to enact this in the major Northwest cities.

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Hawaii skirts the Citizens United v FEC Supreme Court ruling by passing their own local law that forbids corporate spending on election. Now, only the labor unions can spend money to influence the elections. Sounds fair.

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Oregon SoS says state is ‘going to defend’ mail-in voting as Election Day approaches. Back in 2010, Chris Dudley won on election night, but the winner wasn't declared until the next day, after more ballots were counted and then Kitzhaber miraculously won. They said it was because ballots counted in the major Blue cities took longer to count. Uh huh. Then there is the situation of early ballot submissions. Preliminary results from these ballots aren't announced to the public, but the ballots are opened and processed by election officials. We've seen how crooked some election officials can be in other Democrat states. How secure are they in Oregon? After seeing what happened in Michigan, Pennsylvania, Arizona and Georgia, I am not confident that mail-in ballots are safe and secure. Then there is the documented practice of utilizing the situation of the homeless population to target ballots. Shelters can receive them for the homeless and supposedly the homeless person has to sign the outside of the envelope. But that's not a very difficult obstacle to surmount is it? And we know that some ineligible voters got ballots they shouldn't have. And Tom Fitton's Judicial Watch sued to get Oregon to clear their voter rolls of 800,000 inactive voters (roughly a quarter). They say that these people didn't get ballots, but who really knows? Why did they stall on this? So much of the vote-by-mail system relies on the integrity of the postal system, the chain of custody and signature verification. Knowing that a ballot came from a certain zip code might influence an election official. Ballot curing could be asymmetric, i.e. only Democrat ballots get cured promptly before the deadline. Drop boxes from certain zip codes might get treated differently from those in the big cities. Oregon law allows ballot harvesting, too, and this can be used by corrupt harvesters, who might "forget" to turn in a ballot or discard it if it's for the wrong candidate. 
We just need to get back to voting the old-fashioned way. It might not be as convenient, but it's a lot more honest. 

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15 May 2026

Ugh. This is how misinformation starts. Science Alert (which should have researched this better before publication) has this article titled: A Common Vitamin Has a Complicated Link to Cancer. At first I thought it was going to be about niacin, a vitamin which has some link to carcinogenesis. But no, it's about an old observation regarding vitamin B12 levels. This is an issue that comes up repeatedly, because when someone who has cancer has a vitamin B12 level checked, it can be very high, which has led to suspicion that high vitamin B12 levels cause cancer. The explanation is that vitamin B12 is bound not only by transcobalamin, but also by haptocorrin, and it is the latter that is elevated with cancer and other conditions. When we measure vitamin B12 levels, we are measuring the vitamin bound to holotranscobalamin (which is biologically active) and the vitamin bound to haptocorrin (which is biologically inactive). Elevations of haptocorrin caused by cancer and certain liver diseases makes the vitamin B12 level increase, but that is only an epiphenomenon. There is no available assay for holotranscobalamin in the U.S. – only in the U.K. and it's not approved for use here. That would clear up this whole mess.

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There's an undergound market of thieves dedicated to unbricking stolen iPhones. They don't have a secret backdoor. It's all done by phishing and social hacking.

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How Fear Becomes Policy. The Stranger is aghast at so much surveillance everywhere. But in a society where we have so many thieves, arsonists, thugs, and other general a$$holes, there is no choice but to have surveillance so that we have some chance of catching them and applying some justice.  You don't want surveillance? Then advocate the reduction of a$$holes in your society. 

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Who owns your VPN? 62 VPNs run by just 10 companies. This information is really important when evaluating VPNs. The companies that own multiple VPNs seem to me like they have other priorities than assuring your privacy.

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Earth is flying through ancient supernova debris. This may explain the increase in meteor and bolide sightings recently.

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Your Brain Can Learn Things When You’re Unconscious. Not only learn things but also solve problems. I've had many experiences where I've solved a vexing problem by thinking about it overnight, waking up with the answer.

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The pattern continues. Some Portland institution hires someone with the DEI creds, and before long they prove unsuited for the job and get fired or resign, then walk away with a generous severance pay. It just happened again with PCC. People ask why their contracts allow them to be richly rewarded as they depart. Perhaps this is because without such clauses, no one would take the jobs. From the comments:
Bennings obtained her Piled Higher and Deeper in Higher Education Administration from Texas Tech in 2015. Since then she has held numerous jobs, none last much over 3 years. Texas Tech 3-years, Clovis Community College 1-year, Kellogg Community College 2-years 7 months and PCC for 3 years, 10 months. In the hiring world we call that a troubling pattern. Who is doing the backgrounds and reference checking for these hires?

At her previous position as president of Kellogg Community College, she fired the DEI officer and gave the position to herself. She knows how to work the system.
And why is she getting the $25k retention bonus?Isn't that money that's paid to keep someone from leaving? It's not meant to be part of a severance package.

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The proposed layoffs accompany a host of other measures that Cudd says the university is using to bridge the deficit. These include savings from vacancies and retirements (estimated at roughly 48 employees and $7.2 million in savings) and eliminating cost-of-living increases for unclassified unrepresented staff and university administrators. Notably, the university is also raising tuition—Cudd said the university’s board had approved a roughly 5% increase at its last meeting. 
Pay more, get less. Sad.