Auto Play

https://youtu.be/2WxUcBFi9Ec

Monday, February 26, 2018

Friday night March 2nd Witch Hunt and New Year's Lantern Festival



FULL MOON FOR MARCH 2018 


MARCH FULL WORM MOON & BLUE MOON at Coffin Rock at Midnight on Friday March 2nd  An exoricism of the blair witch will be performed.

Full Worm Moon OFA

Friday, February 16, 2018

Robot Zombie Apocolypse

This is why we need automatic rifles:
The Robot Apocalypse Has Already Started
BY DANIEL STARKEY

STAY ON TARGET
Boston Dynamics’ Latest Bots Can Open Doors, Watch You While You Sleep...
Man Creates Playable Organ From Furby Bodies, Summons Satan, Dooms Humanity
You probably heard things are going pretty bad. While people don’t agree on much these days, we all know stuff at least looks bad. Where it’s climate change, the sudden uptick in global conflict after decades of decline, or the extreme disparity between the wealthy and the poor, it’s just grim. All around. And while not all of it can be explained so easily, one of the reasons things seem shitty is that we’re witnessing the beginning of our end.

Most of the time when people talk about robots taking over, it’s almost always with a future-focused frame. We think forward to when one of us might lose our jobs, not when we’re going to have to confront the consequences of the rise of the machines. We speak about the days when we no longer have to drive, for example, and wonder about the endless possibilities and how it will free us from work and we’ll in a utopia soon. Sweet, isn’t it? Unfortunately, that’s not quite how it’ll go.

How do I, some random guy on the internet, know what will happen? Because we’ve been sprinting towards this future for over 70 years.

One of the reasons the US economy did so splendidly well during the 1950s (besides high taxes to support infrastructure development, supporting corporate expansion), was the fact that a good chunk of the jobs available at the time were industrial. Industry, while gross and polluting, has a lot of added value. As in, when you take a ton of raw ore and transform that into steel, you’re adding a lot of value. Most people can’t smelt metal at home (though many have tried or been forced to). So that means when you buy steel vs. the dirt and rock it comes from, you’re paying a huge premium — the work is hard, dangerous, and the equipment is super expensive. Blast furnaces aren’t cheap, nor is the health insurance on the people who work them.

Robot Devil
The robots of Futurama have a highly developed culture and fill a valuable role in human society. Seeing as they have their own bars, restaurants, and even soap operas, it should come as no surprise that they also have their own church. And you can’t have a good church religion without a devil, without THE devil, right? So, naturally… Robot Devil.

But now? Steelworkers, coal miners, automakers — the “blue collar” industries that rocketed the US to its superpower status over the 20th century — have largely been taken over by bots. In a recent segment on HBO, coalminers lamented that their style of work isn’t being shipped to China or hindered by clean energy. No, these jobs are evaporating because bots and machines have already come for us.

There’s a lot of incentive to automate these positions too — specifically because they pay so well. Many of those in heavy industry pull wages comparable to those in computer science or chemistry. Some even stack more paper than doctors or lawyers. Businesses don’t want to have to pay for that, manage taxes on those wages, or have to support the health and safety of their workers. It’s not really their fault; businesses are largely engineered for profit and profit alone. With that system, humans just aren’t worth the risk.

Plus, while a person might get sick, robots are (obviously) immune to the flu. Yeah, you have to maintain them, but when you’ve got a five-ton bot that can lift a car’s chassis on its own, and then weld new bits to it as it’s moving with 100% accuracy 24/7, you can accept a little down time for repairs from time to time.

As a result, most developed countries have fallen well behind their wage targets. People are making less than ever relative to the amount of value that they put into the economy. Again, that’s because of bots.

Even in the service industry, computers, scanners, credit card machines and better business management and organization have led to incredible leaps in productivity. Loss prevention software, cameras, etc. have also helped dramatically cut down on the lost inventory. And with everything labeled and tracked, people can find anything in just about any store in seconds. These are small boosts to our economy’s productivity that aren’t passed to employees. They’re also the beginnings of broader automation.

chinese robots dancing

There are only two things that might save your job, and neither will last long. The first is how expensive you are to replace. If you take a minimum wage cashier at a fast food joint, the second it’s viable to do so, corporations will replace those positions with bots. That’s regardless of any minimum wage increases or anything else. That’s just something we’re pretty sure will happen. After all, computers and the software that they run are getting cheaper and cheaper and cheaper every single year. At some point, no matter who you are or what’s going on, your job will be done better, faster, cheaper, and more reliably with a bot.

Complexity could save some jobs as well, though it’s not really clear which ones. Some writers aren’t long for this world. Neither are doctors, actually. You’d think that’d be safer because the education required is so ridiculous that it’s just something that seems like only a human can do. But that’s not going to help much. Doctors are responsible for knowing thousands of different medications, tens of thousands of different body parts, plus thousands more diseases and disorders. And they have to be able to figure out which things interact with which bits in which ways to cause or cure various symptoms and issues. Thing is, doctors can’t and don’t ever do that. And they never have. So much and so much complex knowledge, plus the interplay between each piece of a puzzle you can only see part of isn’t something that any human being is equipped to do. Medical mistakes are one of the leading causes of death for exactly that reason. Robots though? They got this shit, easy.

Computers, more than anything else, can handle vast quantities of information. For now, most of us are safe because computers are still expensive and can’t quite match us for pattern recognition — a defining trait of human intellect. They can analyze millions of case files and draw connections and correlations and causative links that no human being could possibly be capable of.

You might think that we could just ban robots and be fine, right? That we could stall this economic shift by avoiding the issue altogether. Unfortunately, that’s not how people work.

Businesses will still want money. A few countries, yes, may choose to outlaw AI once they fully realize how big the effects on their economy have been (I think it’ll be too late because governments don’t often move too quickly in response to possible world-ending catastrophes *cough cough*), but not everyone will. And those that don’t simply can’t compete, for the same reason that humans are obsolete for most positions. Businesses will keep pushing, too, because when you can cut out millions of workers and the wages you once paid them, you get to keep the rest. And, since businesses have only one motive…



That’s not to say that corporations are evil, just that they have no systems that exist to structurally discourage them from pursuing tactics that are awesome for themselves, but awful for everyone else — a tragedy of the commons for labor markets. And, in short, that means we’re doomed. Not ten years from now, but now. The time to start addressing these issues was back in the 80s, at the latest. Now, we’re going to need to scramble for new ways to organize everything in society. Elon Musk (and plenty others) famously said that automation will force Universal Basic Income down the line, but the real question is why it hasn’t already.

Saturday, February 3, 2018

The Day the music died.


Play American Pie, Don Mclean, youtube with lyrics.

They call it "The Day the Music Died." On February 3rd, 1959, a plane carrying Buddy Holly, J.P. Richardson Jr. (aka the Big Bopper), and Richie Valens crashed not long after takeoff, killing the pilot and all three musicians  See if you can answer the following trivia questions about "the day the music died."

Why Were Those Three on the Plane to Begin With?
The three were on a winter concert tour with Dion and the Belmonts, and they were playing nearly 24 concerts in less than a month. They were all traveling by tour bus initially, but the bus had severe mechanical problems including a lack of heat. Remember, they were traveling through the Upper Midwest in February—a lack of heat is not a tiny thing that can be ignored. Holly decided to charter a plane for himself and two band members, but Valens and Richardson managed to snag the seats instead. Valens won a coin toss, and Richardson convinced another band member to give him the seat because he was ill. The rest of the musicians continued on by bus.

Which Musicians Were Almost on That Plane?
Waylon Jennings was a guitarist for Buddy Holly and nearly ended up on the plane before giving up his seat to J.P. Richardson.  Dion, of Dion and the Belmonts, was supposed to go along with Holly on the plane. However, the high price tag of the seat—this was a time when musicians were not earning millions of dollars, remember—convinced Dion he was better off on the bus. As for those musicians who gave up their seats, one was Tommy Allsup, who went on to produce records, and the other was Waylon Jennings, the future country superstar. Jennings was particularly distraught after the crash because he and Holly had engaged in some light banter about each other's transportation having problems. Holly joked that he hoped the bus broke down again. Jennings joked that he hoped the plane would crash. Obviously, Jennings had nothing to do with the crash, but this tormented him for years.

What Songs Were Written about the Accident?
In 1971, singer-songwriter Don McLean released "American Pie," a song that forever immortalized the 1959 plane accident as "the day the music died." The song is about this loss and how it affected life afterward. McLean has said that he wrote the song as a way to salute Buddy Holly and the effect Holly had on McLean as a child and teenager; Holly's music had been a beacon of light in what was otherwise a rather restricted, poor life.  Although McLean has been notoriously tight-lipped about the precise meaning of the song's lyrics, he did acknowledge that he originally learned about the accident as he folded newspapers for his paper route on the morning of February 4, 1959. This is reflected in the song's lines "February made me shiver/With every paper I'd deliver." A less well-known musical tribute to Holly, Richardson, and Valens was recorded by fellow performer Eddie Cochran not long after their deaths. However, that song, "Three Stars," was released posthumously after Cochran's death in 1960 and failed to achieve the popularity later enjoyed by "American Pie."

What Were the Results of the Plane Crash Investigation?
An investigation conducted by the Civil Aeronautics Board concluded that the accident was due to inexperience by the pilot and to the bad weather. Although the pilot had over 50 hours of training on instruments, he had not become qualified to fly only on instruments, which was necessary due to the weather conditions. In addition, his training had been on planes that used an artificial horizon. The Bonanza was equipped with a gyroscope instead. For whatever reason, music lovers suffered a great loss that day.

Friday, February 2, 2018

One AI Assistant to rule them all...

I put all my AI and bots (Siri, Alexa, Google, online poker and chat bots) under the kimono of  of
my new one AI assistant to rule them all.  Meet Utsukushi: