26 June 2026

SpaceX plans to launch Starlink mobile service in the US. Competition is good.

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China's coal power on the rise again in 2026, reversing first-in-a-decade decline. For all that the Western world is doing to curb CO2 emissions, China is laughing at us. All the sacrifices that people are making. Most importantly, all the taxes that are collected to fund non-profits and NGOs to do...something. All negated by what China does. Why don't Al Gore and John Kerry go to China to protest? Even Greta doesn't care anymore – Palestine is her shtick now.

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Anthropic has hired an economist with . . .  interesting views on human survival. His math is simplistic and slightly off. It's actually 0.99^40 that we'll survive AI in 40 years, not exp(−.01 × 40). Close enough, though. I think it's greater than 99% chance we'll survive AI each year, but it's likely not constant, but increasing over the years, as the technology improves. But we'll also probably run out of HBM and capacitors and not have enough datacenters, so that will change the dynamics.

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This is a good example of software creep. I liked earlier versions of Soulver, the calculator with a unique and intriguing UI. However, over time it has tried to do more and more, and now, it's got all kinds of crap that I will never use, including NLP. There are better tools for those other things. Why can't it just be an easy to use calculator? I love the RLM-15CX and use it so much. Fantastic tool.

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Mullvad founder Daniel Berntsson is behind a huge donation to the populist Örebro Party, which advocates “comprehensive remigration” from Sweden. I like Mullvad even more now. I've read other news reports calling the Örebro Party "extreme far-right" just for advocating common sense policy.

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AI Broke Software's Best Trick. It really is just limited to GenAI. Unlike regular software, where you just package multiple copies of software to sell for a profit, GenAI costs the same amount of money in terms of tokens that someone has to pay for. Training a model is only good for a short period of time, and then you have to train the next improve model. And people expect it all to be free. Or maybe you can get a minority who are willing to pay some money for your AI services, but it's not like selling Windows or Office.

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Delete Doesn't Mean Deleted. Just Ask OpenAI. You gotta be careful what you type into ChatGPT. It's different from what you type into Google search. Chat is more personal and incriminating. And it can be stored for a long time. 
In the copyright case The New York Times brought against OpenAI, Magistrate Judge Ona Wang ordered the company in May 2025 to preserve and segregate chat logs it would otherwise have deleted, even the ones users had asked it to erase, and to keep doing so going forward. Then, in January 2026, District Judge Sidney Stein affirmed a separate order compelling OpenAI to hand over 20 million de-identified conversations, a sample drawn from years of ordinary logs, to the plaintiffs. Two different orders, one quiet lesson: the chats you thought were yours to delete are the company’s to keep, and a court’s to call for.
Is that enough to keep you up at night?

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I read this: M5 Ultra Mac Studio Could Launch in 2026 With Up to 768GB of RAM, which would be great but unlikely, because the world doesn't have enough consumer DRAM. And then this came out: Apple to Skip High-End M6 Mac Chips in Favor of AI-Focused M7 Line. So are they going to debut a M5 machine this year? Or an M6 machine? Or skip that and debut an M7 machine next year? And what good is a faster processor without enough unified memory to play around with?

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As SuperAgers age, they make at least twice as many new neurons as their peers. Dang, I hope I am a superager. It doesn't pay to live long if you're demented or forgetful. The mind is truly precious and it pains me to see so many people abuse their brains so much.

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...one result was very uncomfortable.

    Frequent use of sun or UV protection was associated with increased risk of all four skin cancer types.

They showed that the risk for basal cell carcinoma is 2.4 times higher, 2.3 times higher for cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma, roughly 2 to 3.5 times higher for localized melanoma, and for invasive melanoma, the risk ranged from about 1.4 to nearly 4 times higher! 
What?! This is likely because of avobenzone, oxybenzone, octocrylene, homosalate, octisalate, and octinoxate. You can still find this stuff in sunscreens and there is no warning. What really got me upset is that I ordered a Korean sunscreen that was supposed to be free of this stuff, and Amazon sent over the U.S. version, which contained all the ingredients above, which I purposefully wanted to avoid by ordering the Korean stuff.

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It just amazes me that even today, this PHP date bug still is unresolved. PHP is a good example of a language that, as it grew, became disorganized, and you have all these obscure functions that never got fixed or deleted. People just created more stuff on top of it. The language needs a good cleanout.

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OpenAI will initially only release ChatGPT 5.6 to government-approved customers. I wonder if OpenAI felt that it had to have a model like Mythos, that was so good it was dangerous and too hot to handle for regular people. Maybe Google will do the same with their next Gemini model. Because if your LLM is able to be released to the public without hesitation, why it can't be that powerful, right? This is the new prestige. So powerful that the Trump administration restricts its use. Ooooo....

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There’s a ‘Trump account’ hack that can unlock decades of wealth-building for your kid. How many families will take advantage of this? Or is hatred for Trump so great that they will pass this up. Missing out on a real opportunity to get ahead.

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And then there's the Democrat way of getting more money: A new bill calls for $25 minimum wage, would that be enough in Oregon? Holy crap, this is going to kill jobs and cause companies to flee. Who can pay this money for unskilled labor? This is such a business-unfriendly state. No doubt this bill is sponsored by ignorant Lefties unfamiliar with basic economics.

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Survey says Portland has one of the worst downtowns in the world. Here's the survey – check it out for yourself. In North America, Portland was in the bottom 9 in every category, usually in the bottom 5. Dead last in terms of vitality. Are you seeing this, Tom Dundon? Forget underpasses, here's a homeless person camping out right in the street

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4 of 5 voters reject near $1B for Moda – even If Blazers Leave. Portland leadership has to face facts. We can't afford the Blazers anymore. The city is too poor. It would have to skimp on other core services just to help a basketball team. Tom Dundon is right. Why should he have to be the only one to pay for Moda renovation, when it's being used by others – concert perfomers, WNBA, etc. Why not hit them up for some cash? Oh yeah, then they wouldn't want to come to Portland. As Robert Kiyosaki says, the rich make money using other people's money. And the best time to make money is when you buy an asset, not afterwards. I say that it's highly likely the Blazers are going to leave Portland.

Heh, not to worry, guy. Ya won't have to worry about billionaires coming to Portland anymore! No siree!
And here's Multnomah County, still giving out needles to the homeless. Just not doing it near schools. But continuing to support the drug-using homeless lifestyle. And we wonder why the numbers just won't go down. 

Portland councilors share concerns over Mayor Wilson’s power over city budget. Gimme dats! say the socialists. 

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Portland Public Schools board passes painful $2.77 billion budget. I guess it's time to organize another strike again to get more money, right? Do it!

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25 June 2026

Medical students are using a popular research tool to pump out misleading studies. TriNetX sounds like a biomedical AI slop platform. The last thing we need in a world already immersed in trust problems.

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Louisiana man becomes first in region functionally cured of sickle cell disease. He was a beneficiary of Casgevy’s CRISPR/Cas9 technology. This is great because physicians treating sickle cell disease have one of the highest burnout rates. The article doesn't say why, but anyone who takes care of these patients probably knows. 

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HelloAI is very much like poe.com and is slightly less expensive. They don't offer as many models as poe.com, though, although you apparently get more on the paid tiers. I can find info on how many tokens each plan will give you, though. 
Lightning.ai is another platform with a similar business model, and a lesser model selection compared with poe.com. I do like the privacy of HelloAI and that their servers are located in Australia and Singapore. There is no desktop app for this, as far as I can tell. There are two Mac desktop apps which call themselves Hello AI, but they don't appear to be associated with this company at all, which is unfortunate.

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The Hotness Curve. This post has popped up on trending lists, and I link it not so much for the topic (this ronin is too old for this stuff) but for the data analysis. The way the polling results are diced and sliced to answer the questions that people would likely be interested in. Of course, ethnicity plays a major role in studies like this, and that factor is not mentioned at all. What was the ethnicity composition of the women that were displayed? Why did the author include AI-generated photos? How about the men that took the poll – do we even know anything about them? Apparently they were the author's X followers, so that a particular demographic right there. All I came away with is that if you're an AI-generated 35 y/o woman, you have a decade or so left of desirability. 🤪

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The Pizza Bakery. This is a nice way of visualizing where the bottlenecks are in vLLMs. nVIDIA makes the bakers and companies like SK Hynix make the pantry. Or at least they did until recently. Now maybe it's just Samsung and Micron?

And Apple is increasing prices on their hardware because of memory and storage shortages. I see that Micron and Sandisk stock is shooting up. 

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Well good to knowYour Brain Has Separate Circuits for Belly Laughs and Polite Chuckles. Wonder how this evolved.

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Chinese Supercomputer Overtakes U.S. as World’s Fastest. The LineShine is 22% faster the El Capitan at Lawrence Livermore. Musk's Colossus is up there, too, but didn't participate in these rankings.

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Films studio A24 is collaborating with Google DeepMind. Good. I hope we'll get better movies with compelling stories and less political activist actors to deal with.

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Building a website with AI can be opaque:
Claude and OpenAI are incredible tools — I use them every day. But when a non-technical person asks them to build a website, the AI gives them a developer’s roadmap. It tells them to sign up for Vercel. Set up a Supabase database. Create a GitHub account. Install Node, configure an API, deploy via CLI.

To you and me? That’s just a random Tuesday. To a 75-year-old who just wants a landing page? That is an absolute brick wall.
The author used theassistantbot.com to help her father build this site. I believe there are others that will do this, too, depending on the type of site. Maybe not automated to this degree, though.

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Portland's Moda Center renovation debate heats up as Blazers owner Dundon makes his case. Tom Dundon wants the city of Portland to pay for upgrading the Moda Center (his profit center). The implied threat is that he will take the Blazers elsewhere, and there will be no greater symbol of shame for the current Democrat leadership to be the one that lost the iconic basketball team. Whose games just a small minority attend. Dems don't want to be losers in the literal as well as figurative sense. Dundon holds the cards. So taxes and fees will just have to increase. Sorry, not sorry.

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Just yesterday after crowing about the great revenue Seattle took in last year, comes this article: Washington’s gas tax is going up, but state transportation revenue is falling short. Already falling down the other side of the Laffer curve, are we?

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24 June 2026

I knew it! Nature retracts provocative PD-1 study that tied lung cancer survival to treatment timing. Yet another Chinese paper is retracted. This one fooled a lot of people, including Eric Topol. But it never made sense that 3:00 pm would be the cutoff for efficacy. And the efficacy data for the morning group wasn't as good as previous data. Now we know – it was all bogus. I bed a lot of nursing schedulers are happy about this.

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AI models used to help diagnose medical conditions have a problem: They’re ready and willing to identify patients whose data was used to train them.
Here's the paper. If you read the paper, the real danger is nowhere near as bad as the journalist makes it out to be. It's basically a take off on references 5, 6, and 7 in the article, where Carlini et al was able to extract training data from a model. The model was old  (GPT-2) and so it's possible that things have improved. But training data is supposed to be de-identified anyway, so even if you can extract it, it won't tell you much. Unless you have some uniquely identifiable body distinction. But someone can't just take a new chest X-ray or mammogram and expect to confirm membership in the dataset. Doesn't work that way. So this paper has been hyped up. Relax.

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Poll: More than 90% of voters opposing data centers don't live near them. Interesting. If a company wants to build a datacenter in the middle of nowhere, I wouldn't want protestors for Seattle or Portland to come by to raise a ruckus. It doesn't concern them. It's a problem that may have been solved for that locale. The protestors that I've seen tend to be the most indoctrinated and uninformed people who just spew what their high school teacher or TikTok video told them. 

This is funny:
"The cleanest form of AI use is no use," Kaveh Madani, a water scientist and director of the United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health in Canada. "So when you could avoid using AI, don't use it."

Don't use it for simple things. Don't use it for calculations, directions, store hours, recipes or shopping lists, which are all searches people used to do without AI, but now do it with AI and waste power and water, Luccioni said.

"Yeah, it's great. You can generate a chocolate chip cookie recipe with Claude, or you can open a damn book. Like, those still exist. You really don't need Claude." 
And don't say "Thank You" or "Please" to your LLM. They don't care and it just wastes tokens, right?

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SK Hynix targets $29 billion US listing as AI demand surges. The world's chip makers are Micron, SK Hynix and Samsung, and since the latter two are Korean, it's not easy to invest in them as an American. But if SK Hynix can trade on the American market, that would be great. DRAM chips are in demand. Their stocks aren't zooming mainly because the market has apparently already priced that in. But maybe they will zoom

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Hospital workers' phones carry deadly superbugs.  Healthcare providers must have the toughest immune systems. 

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Older tech workers are tapping out early. Yep, if you can retire, it's great to do so. The workaday world is crazy. And you can make room for all those young CS majors who need employment.

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Treating autism with Bumetanide: Identification of responders using Q-Finder machine learning algorithm. Bumetanide? That's a strong diuretic. But it also modulates GABA-ergic neurotransmission, so that's why. But there are better drugs that do this, and don't make you pee so much.

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Vibecoding is becoming a deal-breaker test for software acquisitions. That's what they say, but take a look at this: The State
of Startups 2026. Everybody uses LLMs to code. As long as you know what the LLM has done, I say it's fine.

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Chinese universities are cutting language majors to make way for AI. Screw humanities! AI is everything! 🤔

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Is Trump getting retatrutide? So what if he is. The benefits of this medication are such that more people should be getting them.

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Holy crap! Google Poised to Lose Two More Senior AI Staffers to Anthropic. Now Jonas Adler and Alexander Pritzel are leaving. They worked on Gemini. What's going on at Google?

Google settles social medial lawsuit with teen, who also sued Meta. Teen gets money. Google gets to continue doing what it does. Sounds like a win-win, right?

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Tired of Dickovers? Me, too. But I've found that if you install uMatrix in your browser and disable scripting for main sites, you can avoid a lot of these.

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Different LLMs have differing expertise in biological sciences. This may help guide you as to what model to use for a biology type query.
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Seattle is proud that they're smashing records with tax collections this year.  It's unclear how long that might last, however. Meanwhile, Montana cut taxes and saw their revenue double. That's the way to do it.

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23 June 2026

Nvidia Touts ‘100% Reduction in Water Use’ With New Data Center Design. Yes, evaporative cooling is becoming obsolete, being replaced by dry (chilled air) cooling, dielectric (immersion) cooling and closed-loop systems. The water-propylene glycol solution mentioned in the article is part of a closed-loop system. This answers one objection. The other is energy. Here's an interesting dialog:

He's right. Fear of nuclear energy has put us back years from where we could have been today. We can solve the technologic issues to make datacenters less onerous and it could spur innovations in energy production as well, such as SMRs.
But another obstacle needs to be removed, and that is harder to fix: the power grid in the Western states. The grid needs to be updated to handle the growing demand, and electric utilities won't bother unless they get paid a lot of money. We know PNW emergy executives have the money. But until they start adding capacity, just adding power won't be the full answer. 

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Midjourney's Scanner has evoked a lot of discussion. Here's a blog post from Scott Alexander. Scott may be missing the point, but since he's usually a sharp thinker I'll chalk it up to his not being a radiologist. Here's another great piece from an engineer, who "sides with the doctors" about people getting overly scanned. 
But we're talking about an imaging modality that does not involve X-rays or require contrast like gadolinium which can remain in your body, even with the macrocyclic agents. So there is no downside to repeated examinations (except expense). It could be just what the doctor ordered to monitor a lesion that is deep and doesn't look ominous, but you're just not sure. Or it may be useful to monitor aortic aneurysms or pancreatic cysts. This technology is still new, so studies need to be done. The technology is bound to improve as well. I'm just impressed that you can get tomographic images with ultrasound like this. We used to call it "ultrasmoke" because what you saw were just acoustic echoes. So different now, with AI image processing.
I'm not saying that people should get scanned anytime they want for kicks. But in certain cases, this may be the ideal option to have. 

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ChatGPT app store falters six months after launch. I bet most people didn't even know there was a ChatGPT app store. Did you?

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Three things to watch amid Anthropic’s latest feud with the government. No doubt China is happy that Anthropic could be throttled. But yeah, we need to see what Congress does regarding American AI supremacy. I'm definitely getting nuclear energy fear vibes, and that AI technology will get unnecessarily throttled because of similar pure fear. We've already seen how scared people can be: nuclear, COVID-19, etc. Americans frighten so easily.

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How AI ate your RAM. I was reading this story in the context of the dropping stock prices of chip manufactures, especially the ones making DRAM chips. A Korean company, SK Hynix, announced that they were moving away from High Bandwith Memory chips for datacenters and making cheaper DRAM components. But companies like Micron make DRAM chips, so why is their stock taking a hit? Makes no sense to me.

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My Reddit RSS feeds have been glitchy lately. Now I know why.

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Weather Replay is a time machine for the weather. You can replay the weather from days past. Relive storms. So much time to waste. 

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Why are young people getting cancer at an earlier age? This paper suggests that it could be related to their biologic age advancing faster than their chronologic age. They define biologic age looking at Levine's PhenoAge, which is defined by rather crude blood  measurements: albumin, alkaline phosphatase, creatinine, C-reactive protein, glucose, mean cell volume, erythrocyte distribution width (RDW), leukocyte count and lymphocyte ratio. Nothing like gene expression, epigenetic markers, telomeric lengths or mutation frequency. So are people aging faster? What's driving it?

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Health board apologizes for phishing staff with with bogus vacation day. Well, there's a way to fix that, isn't there?

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AI and Math: State of the Art. Nice infographic on the advances made by AI in the world of advanced math.

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Could less caffeine be the smarter performance enhancer? Scientists find a surprising sweet spot. Aiming for peak physical performance, you don't have be jittery to get the most out of caffeine. Two double espressos before a run will make you run faster.

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Google’s online dominance is showing signs of cracking in AI era. I mentioned the departure of Gemini co-lead Noam Shazeer and AlphaFold's John Jumper. People are noticing that Google is not what it used to be.

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Good news: FDA approved a new sunscreen ingredient after many years. Bad news: the same regulatory culture that caused the delay remains firmly in charge. It's the federal government. Things are so political there, and we still only have an acting head (Kyle Diamantas), who is not a medical person. Congress won't approve anyone that Trump wants, who will really be effective. It's always got to be some compromise.

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Portland’s cost of living is ballooning as city tax, fee increases pile up. Residents feel the pain. Well, when the affluent flee the city, someone has to pay the salaries of the City Council, and the homeless services, and the attorney fees, and the maintenance and upkeep of their lavish offices. While citizens get less law enforcement, less use of their parks, less enjoyment of the city, and more crime, graffiti and Antifa protests (although that's died down of late).

Four electric Amazon delivery vans torched at SW Portland EV shop. What about muh climate? All that smoke and toxic fumes. Can't have nice things in Portland.

Why Oregon Drivers Continue Paying More at the Pump Even as Gas Prices Fall Across America. These articles appear over and over again, and state the same factors. Just be glad we're not southern California. 

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Medicare AI program made them suffer in pain. Now this is something I object to, and consider it a wrong application of AI. Apparently Medicare is paying a third-party tech company called Virtix Health to handle approvals, and they get paid based on how much money they save Medicare. So what do you think they'll do? Deny as much as they can, of course. This is yet another reason why I we should NOT have Medicare for all. The government should NOT be in the healthcare insurance business. Because they do stupid stuff like this. The federal government wasn't created for this, and it's so inefficiently run.

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22 June 2026

Mullvad vs The Great Firewall. Mullvad doesn't just use QUIC obfuscation. It also has the Shadowsocks protocol as well. However neither of these is foolproof, and if the government even suspects that you are using a VPN, your connection will be terminated. The blog post is a bit too complimentary. It's an arms race – let's see who wins. 

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It’s Never Too Late: Practical Tips for the Over-50 Encore Career Seeker. This ronin thinks 50 is still very young. You're as old as how you think.

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Good riddance, Tim. I can certainly understand this fellow. Clearly there was a change in how one viewed Apple after Steve Jobs was no longer around. We stopped being amazed at new products. We just hoped they wouldn't suck. And we hoped we would finally get what was already available on competitors devices, am I right? Tim was the operations guy, not the vision guy. Remember when Steve Jobs said “A lot of times, people don't know what they want until you show it to them”. That's the kind of guy Apple needs to helm the company.

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Why we should vaccinate wild animals. This seemed at first like a whack-o notion, but think about it. What would it be like if we didn't have to worry about rabies, which is truly nasty, and basically incurable? As long as we don't go overboard with this concept, it could make sense. But if vaccinations are anything like they are for humans, you're never going to practically vaccinate animals. There's just no way.

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Some Electricians Think Building Data Centers Is for Sellouts. This article sounds like a persuasion article. It wants to make prospective datacenter builders think twice. I am still in the camp that as much as the public hates datacenters, they love AI more, and will put up with building more datacenters. I strongly doubt that the world can go back to the old days.

Take this app, for example. They make you think you need AI help just to be yourself?

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Thank goodness the appellate court killed this law, which would enable kids to change their sex without informing parents. What a loony state.

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The other Portland’5 theaters have all had steep dropoffs. Attendance at the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall last year was down by 28% from its peak seven years earlier. The 300-seat Winningstad Theatre is drawing half as many people as it did in 2018.

“People are willing to come back and see commercial shows,” Lembo said. “They’re less willing, for whatever reason, to come back and hear the symphony.”

The same goes for other nonprofit arts organizations. The Oregon Children’s Theatre shut down operations last year as attendance fell and it lost the support of the Kaiser Permanente Educational Theatre program. That left a big hole in the Portland’5 schedule that Lembo said it’s still working to fill.
Who wants to risk going downtown anymore?

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Residential proxies are valued by web scraping companies like Bright Data and OxyLabs. Having access to them costs money, and I've often wondered how sites that offer residential proxies convinced regular folks to allow their home networks to be proxies for web scraping services. Who would agree to such a contract? Well now I know how they do. It's through people's Smart TVs. Of course!

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I link to this article not because of its content, but because of the special web design that explains things so well. I wish many educational websites would use a format like this to explain math or science concepts. Really spiffy.

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I saw this blog post about AI's PR problem. It's because college students blame AI on why they aren't getting paid as much with their bachelor's degree. The author cites this blog post doing a more detailed comparison of salaries. Here's what he said:

Median usual weekly earnings of workers with a high school degree only:

2000: $968

2025: $980

Median usual weekly earnings of workers with a bachelor degree only:

2000: $1,587

2025: $1,580

Median usual weekly earnings of people with a bachelor’s degree or higher:

2000: $1,705

2025: $1,747

These were corrected for the difference in cost of living, and the CPI(2025)/CPI(2000) is about 1.87.
Now, FRED is not really the place to look to get accurate salary stats. You need to go to the BLS site. Here's what it says:
So the actual 2025 weekly median salary for bachelors degree for men only is actually higher: $1,833. For men who go on to get an advanced degree, it's $2,298.  The FRED website that looks at only the high-achievers with only a bachelors degree (ninth decile) shows a median salary of $3,421 in 2025! It was only $1623 in 2000, and that was equivalent to today's $3,035.
So what this suggests to me is that AI is not holding everybody back.
The easy jobs are not paying as well (because AI can do it just as well or better). But if you are trained to do more complex tasks, you will stay get paid well. The low-hanging fruit jobs are gone. Hope you paid attention in school.

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21 June 2026

I remember when Midjourney was just another image generating AI app, like StableDiffusion and FLUX.

But they've branched into healthcare, and now they have an amazing device called Midjourney Scanner. Watch the video in the tweet. Ultrasound tomography is now a thing. One doctor was initially skeptical, but now sees that this could really change management of incidental lesions of uncertain significance. Studies are necessary to confirm this strategy but it certainly looks promising.

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What does it take to retire comfortably now? It's more than a million. You need $1.46 million now. And that's the low figure, assuming no surprises. 

Someone writes: I make good money. Why do I still feel like this? Looks like Robert Kiyosaki needs to write another book, or reissue his Rich Dad, Poor Dad books. You won't actually be "rich" until you get off the rat race and have income that is completely from passive sources. Only then you will feel rich. Just having a high income is not enough. 

But just having a million no longer impresses. The ‘Mass Affluent’ Are Losing Their Allure for Wealth Managers Navigating AI. That's right, if you only have a million in fungible assets, you just get an AI wealth manager. Human wealth managers are for the really rich. Such is inflation. 

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How Websites Actually Know Where You Are. I thought I was safe just using a VPN, but websites now check your timezone, and some (like NordVPN) will state that you are in the Icelandic timezone even though you set your exit node city somewhere else. And that's the giveaway that you're using a VPN. Check out your setup here.

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Morale is really bad at META. Never knowing when you might get canned. Surrounded by coworkers who don't speak English and exclude you. And your keystrokes are tracked.

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Humans May Soon Be Able to Regrow Body Parts—Including Fingers and Limbs—Thanks to a Groundbreaking Serum. This would be great. 

And a drug called ABS-201, which targets the prolactin receptor may allow bald people to regrow hair.

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20 June 2026

Nobel prize winner John Jumper jumped from Google to Anthropic. That's the second person to leave after Noam Shazeer. What's going on at Google? It seemed like they had gotten back their mojo.

Here's more on that FDA-approved sunscreen ingredient, bemotrizinol. Since reading about sunscreens as a result of this, I am truly surprised that the FDA has allowed the endocrine disrupter, homosalate, to be included in sunscreen ingredients without a warning. Women with a history of breast cancer might want to avoid using products that contain this ingredient, for example.

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Doctordle is a wordle like game where you have six chances to guess the current diagnosis in a clinical vignette, where clues are revealed little-by-little. This might be a way to test some of the medical AI tools. 

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Wet coffee grounds turned into high-grade solid fuel in just 90 seconds. It would be nice to be able to turn used coffee ground into a solid fuel source. You have to expend energy and expense to do this, so really the overall savings are questionable.

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A Trillion Dollars Isn’t Worth It If You Have to Be Elon Musk. Very true. Even the lives of many billionaires isn't worth it. Shrewd investing can make you a multi-millionaire. But to be a billionaire requires owning your own business and the stresses that go along with it. You must tolerate risk and put in considerable personal sacrifice and effort to achieve success, which not everyone achieves. Musk has no real family life in the conventional sense, and must take drugs to keep himself going. The title of the article should be "if you have to live like Elon Musk". The author of the article gets some things wrong. Musk does not "actively keep other people in poverty". And like so many people who don't know some of the wasteful uses USAID money was spent on. It's been said the foreign aid is "money going from poor people in rich countries to rich people in poor countries". The USAID was a jobs program for activists, with only a fraction going to fight poverty. I suspect that one of the reasons that protests have been fizzling is that the money supply is running dry.

This tweet sums up what USAID was really all about:
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Why people might ditch their smartwatches for something simpler. I think the real reason is that they're tired of having to charge their watches so frequenly, like a phone. A watch should just work.

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Hospitals that took on Medicaid are now suffering for it. Remember when states were pressured to take on Medicaid patients? Many saw the Medicaid expansion for what it was. But Obama wanted it, and it was eventually going to be the only way illegal aliens could get medical care. And it only worked with massive federal support. Now, states like Oregon are suffering because that federal aid is being withdrawn because it's unsustainable. It may be painful, but it's the only way to compel Democrat states to change their behavior.

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Of coursePutin is into the longevity craze. Why wouldn't he? And he's using his daughter to do the science. The author hopes that some good science will come out of it, but I think that's very unlikely.

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This is incredibleExosome therapy to treat burns is the way to go! Even better than spray on skin.  Here's the doctor who pioneered this technology. What an amazing result.
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What a wasteGangsta AI will submit queries to 9 LLMs to increase the likelihood of getting the answer you're looking for. But odds are that you don't really need to query that many LLMs at once. It's a big waste of tokens, and in light of the backlash against datacenters and the desire for energy conservation, is this really wise? Concern has even been raised that when healthcare really implements generative AI full scale, the effects on energy consumption might not be sustainable
We've made inference into a commodity when it actually isn't. The cost is hidden, but it's there. Nothing is free. 

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Lars Larson makes a good point. Law-abiding citizens have to observe burn bans, but law enforcement happily ignores the homeless. It's like during the coronavirus epidemic – we had to wear masks and stay home, and six feet apart, etc. The homeless were exempt. They can do what they want, wherever and whenever they want.

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Multnomah County – national laughingstock. Over woke policies. Nobody takes Oregon or Portland seriously anymore. They're a punchline.

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Gabe Newell is leaving Washington for Florida. Mayor Wilson says "Buh-bye". 
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19 June 2026

I Solved My Mystery Fatigue with AI. Amy is an AI nerd who gives a masterclass on how to use Skills for Codex and Claude Code to ingest personal health data and use AI to diagnose her mystery condition and reach a diagnosis. And she provides the code on her GitHub and walks you through it. And she's willing to help you get started. Her parting words stay with me – "Nobody is coming to save you. Go and take care of your own health."

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Wait, what? The Most Promising Ebola Vaccine Has Been Sitting on the Shelf for 15 Years. So much of vaccine development depends on money.

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According to data from Retraction Watch, papers by published by Chinese authors between 1996 and 2025 were around six times more likely to be retracted than those by American or British ones. Before the Chinese government banned the practices in 2020, universities often gave researchers publication quotas or paid them bonuses for publication. Authorities have also tried to tackle the problem by cracking down on paper mills and reforming academic evaluation. But reputations take time to repair.
Fool me twice, shame on me.

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How to Invest in IPOs. The best way is to have shares before they go public. I was hoping this article was going to tell me how to do that.

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Towards autonomous medical artificial intelligence agents. This is MIRA (Medical Intelligence for Reasoning and Action). Ugh. Introducing autonomous agents into healthcare sounds reckless. Let's wait on this.

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AI helped diagnose 18 children whose rare diseases had stumped doctors. Now this is where AI can shine. Let data analytics find associations between rare diseases and symptom/sign clusters.

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Very cool. whisperbridge is like StarTrek's universal translator. Real time translation, as if the other speaker was speaking your language.

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This hits hard. My Mathematical Regression. How sad it is to discover that you were a math genius when you were younger, and you hardly recognize your math scribblings from many years ago. Depressing.

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That's what I want to know. Phone Batteries Keep Getting Better. So Why Are We Always Charging?. You think that's bad, how about the Oura ring?

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Key FDA committee unanimously recommends Moderna's flu vaccine. No, not an mRNA vaccine from Moderna. Complete lack of trust.

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Jeff Bezos should stay out of movie making, no?

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N.L. health-care workers got an email promising a day off — but it was only a cybersecurity test. Reminds me of when OHSU did this. Yeah, that wasn't well received.

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Today, on my final day as Director of National Intelligence, I’m releasing never-before-seen communications and documents exposing how Dr. Fauci provided millions in US taxpayer dollars to fund dangerous gain-of-function research at the Wuhan lab, worked with politicized elements within the Intelligence Community to suppress the truth about his actions and hide the virus’ lab-leak origins, and lied to Congress while under oath in 2024. It’s time you know the truth.
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Did ASMLgive their tech to China? They say no, but I thought that one of their machines made it over. It was one of the few things that China could not copy. They needed a working model to study.

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Finding Your Wife/Life Partner in Asia. A Western man's guide to finding your Asian honey. Be careful. It's not as easy as it used to be. This website is not joking. 

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Student loan rates will rise on July 1. If you haven't saved up for college, you really must think hard as to whether it's worthwhile, especially if you need remedial courses at the start.

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Bend is now going to charge a fee to new homes that want natural gas. This was mainly motivated by a 20-something activist. Of course, wealthy people will want to cook with a gas stove. Restaurants don't cook with electric stoves – it just doesn't work. And this will make homes more expensive, which will make them less affordable. Is that the income inequality what you want, Bend? Plus, utility companies are questioning whether it is wise to put extra stress on the electrical grid. And when the power goes out in Bend, as it will do, people will have no way to heat their homes. The amount of the fees was determined by a "social cost" table developed by Obama's EPA, which is subjective. The truth is, climate fear mongering is not working anymore. The teachers still teach it, but people in the real world know it for what it is.

Take a look at the pollution from burning solar panels in Los Angeles. How green is that? 

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California's Billionnaires Tax will make it on the ballot. Let's see how the billionnaires feel who said they wouldn't mind paying the tax. Betcha they thought it wouldn't actually come true.
But the billionnaires won't be alone: California will raise healthcare premiums and also charge a new sales tax on software downloads. All this to support the fraud and grift, since federal money is being withdrawn. 

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Portland City Council continues to gnash their teeth with the lack of money they have at their disposal. Meanwhile, Portlanders plea to get their police back. The city continues to look like crap. And companies like Under Armour will continue to give up and leave.

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18 June 2026

Obesity Accelerates Cognitive Aging. Perhaps it might be more accurate to state that obesity is just associated with cognitive aging. It could be that whatever slows your brain, makes you prefer passive entertainment instead of active and mind-stimulating activities. Just losing weight, such as with a gastric bypass procedure, won't suddenly make you smart. 

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World leaders want American AI. They just don’t want America to be able to turn it off. Such is power. But giving access to a powerful tool like Fable (or Mythos) to everyone would be foolhardy. There is a risk that financial systems might be taken down or classified and compromising information might be hacked and revealed, risking security. There are bad people out there. We're at the point, where such power needs to be granted selectively. America felt this way when no one else had nuclear capability. Now very evil and corrupt states have it. Remember, you may not know what to do with powerful technology, but someone else probably does.

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These are the results of a CNN poll. How embarrassing it must be for them that people watch Fox News more than they watch CNN or NPR. And Newsmax has as much viewership as NYT, ABC, NBC or even BBC. CBS didn't even rate!  I thought it interesting that Joe Rogan has more viewership than the legacy talking heads. I never heard of Aaron Parnas or Heather Cox Richardson.

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Well it turns out the muscles can send an antidepressant signal to the brain through a protein called apelin. Exercise-induced increases in skeletal muscle-derived apelin enhance hippocampal plasticity via apelin and its receptor APJ signaling. Wow, a muscle-brain axis. Always something new.

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A paper came out recently that showed that a hobbled LLM was still able to pass a benchmark Q&A multiple choice test, but when it came to answering the same question in a different context, it couldn't offer the right answer. Sure enough, a study came out showing the medical LLMs that aced medical examination tests still performed poorly in the clinic. Real patient care is different.

Nonetheless, a report was published showing that MIRA (Medical Intelligence for Reasoning and Action) and Google's AMIE (Articulate Medical Intelligence Explorer)—perform at least as well as physicians. The datasets they used were curated clinical conversations taken from EHR interactions. Not quite the same as putting it in action in real life.

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The AI startup Subquadratic launched with a $29 million investment to produce an amazing 12 million token context window model promising faster inference and better accuracy due to their proprietary architecture which scales at less than quadratic order. They apparently use sparse attention, and this is but one of many architectures that have been developed to beat quadratic scaling. This is one to follow.

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Simon Willison thinks that GLM-5.2 is probably the most powerful text-only open weights LLM. It has a 1 million token context window. We'll see – I've been disappointed at the hype around Chinese models, so I'm skeptical. GLM-5.2 is in Ollama, so I can give it a try. Uh, on second thought, maybe I won't.

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Elon Musk predicts a Chinese 'Fable-class' AI by Q1 2027, prompting Tsinghua University's Jie Tang to say it will arrive sooner. I don't doubt Elon – the Chinese are good at copying. They probably had their copying machines on the day it was made available.

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Brave is offering a paid minimal browser called Origin that contains all the privacy protections but without the ad revenue stuff. It's $60 though. Is it worth it? One thing that Brave does better than the rest is fingerprint protection. Instead of having to cut back on the extensions you use and try to be as vanilla as possible, Brave takes the approach of randomizing certain parameters when you access a website to make it look you're someone else each time. But $60? And I can't use my necessary Firefox add-ons? Nah, I'll pass.

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Bryan Johnson is selling his longevity-promoting supplements and medicinals online. This is the guy that was doing home blood exchanges with his young son, so he's definitely, unconventional. Much of the stuff consists of diabetic medications, but I'm surprised that he includes the SGLT2 inhibitors, like Brenzavvy and Jardiance. Man, if you get Fournier's syndrome just because you wanted to stay young-looking, is it worth the risk?

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Google Gemini co-lead Noam Shazeer leaves for OpenAI. Oh well, that's the tech world. People change jobs all the time.

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Your PC Might Soon Demand Proof of Age Before Letting You Browse. This was bound to happen sooner or later. Because some people can't behave themselves. Someone will make a lot of money setting up alternate identities for people. Like in Minority Report.

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I can't believe that some people are still using Apple's Time Capsule. Apple's Time Machine software is useful, but it's slow. The times when you need to use a backup drive is rare for most people, so many don't buy anything more fancy. But it's nice to have that peace of mind. Do it, Apple, and upgrade this software. 

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California seeks to allow kids to 'divorce' their parents without cause. The state continues to be a fountain of moral depravity. There was a time when crap like this would be laughed at, and the sponsor thoroughly ridiculed. But today, people are too afraid to speak up. 

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And Oregon education officials recommend repealing, replacing compulsory school attendance rules. Oregon education is a joke. 

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While the initial budget pitched by Mayor Keith Wilson proposed cuts to Portland Police, Portland Fire & Rescue and Portland parks, councilors were able to include $3 million for urban forestry, and save some police support staff positions and a Portland fire engine. 

They also restored $2.5 million to Portland Street Response, Project Ceasefire, and summer Free for All programs.
Cuts to Police, Fire & Rescue and Parks, but money for NGOs and "street response". And "free" shit. Why are Portlanders getting for their tax money?

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Downtown Seattle lost 30,000 jobs, billions in office value since 2020 payroll tax. Good going, Seattle.
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17 June 2026

Someone created a astronomically-correct solar system, where you can play astronaut. This was vibe-coded during a marathon session with Claude Fable 5. Haven't tried it out, but it sounds impressive. THIS is how one should use artificial intelligence.

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Then there are people who waste tokens asking inane questions on Elbakyan's Sci-Bot, which seems like it's supposed to be a free version of Scite or Consensus or other deep research sites. Is this worth the expenditures on datacenters?

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This is a lesson for all those medical LLMs that claims to have done well on medical licensing exams. It's possible for bots to be pruned (deliberately hobbled) and still pass multiple-choice benchmarks, but when the question is asked directly, bots "often fail" and the correct answer won't be highly-ranked in the output. They call it the Benchmark Illusion.

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Is Apple following the same strategy that Microsoft did when they came out with Universal Windows Platform? I don't remember that campaign from 2015. I can see the appeal, but it's a technical nightmare, and may slow things down. We'll see.

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In this way, the emergence of today’s AI health products remind me of the rise, in the 2010s, of ride-sharing services such as Uber and Lyft. The taxi industry is heavily regulated, making it difficult for new players to enter the market. Yet by skirting and at times ignoring those rules, ride-sharing companies were able to acquire a critical mass of users in a short period of time. Pretty soon, governments had little choice but to adjust their laws to match what had by then become the status quo. The same pattern could end up playing out in medicine. Will regulations meant to ensure that medical products are safe and effective remain in force? Or will they instead be weakened or removed to clear the path for tools that everyone is already using?
Interesting perspective. Maybe the FDA will just throw up their hands and craft law around the usage.

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Amazon almost killed Best Buy, yet they survived. I still go to Best Buy and am glad they're still around. How did the CEO do it? Basically, he refused to give up, and chose to compete with Amazon leveraging their own advantages.

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You can start a business renting EV chargers. This is like buying vending machines and making money off the convenience. Or renting parking space. Cool. But be prepared to sustain damage. This kind of business probably doesn't work in Blue cities. It probably works in Japan or South Korea or Singapore – places where people respect property. Not in the U.S.

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Doom Loop. Under Armour is moving out of Portland. This is no small company. The number of employees who will lose jobs isn't reported in the article. Tick tock, Portland.

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Oregon cities rank lower in bike friendliness. Man, can't Oregon win something?

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Seattle City Light eyes biggest bill increases in recent memory. Well, with all the wealthy people leaving the city, someone's gotta pay, right?

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