Monday, May 15
Global Control of AI Needed
The "godfather of AI" told EL PAÍS via videoconference that he believed a letter calling for a sixth-month-long moratorium on training AI systems more powerful than OpenAI's GPT-4 is "completely naive" and that the best he can recommend is that many very intelligence minds work to figure out "how to contain the dangers of these things."
"AI is a fantastic technology – it’s causing great advances in medicine, in the development of new materials, in forecasting earthquakes or floods… [but we] need a lot of work to understand how to contain AI," Hinton urged. "There’s no use waiting for the AI to outsmart us; we must control it as it develops. We also have to understand how to contain it, how to avoid its negative consequences."
For instance, Hinton believes all governments insist that fake images be flagged. The scientist said that the best thing to do now is to "put as much effort into developing this technology as we do into making sure it’s safe" – which he says is not happening right now.
"We’ve entered completely unknown territory. We’re capable of building machines that are stronger than ourselves, but we’re still in control. But what if we develop machines that are smarter than us?" he asked. "We have no experience dealing with these things."
Hinton says there are many different dangers to AI, citing job reduction and the creation of fake news. Hint on noted that he now believes AI may be doing things more efficiently than the human brain, with models like ChatGPT having the ability to see thousands of times more data than anyone else.
"That’s what scares me," he said. READ MORE...
Sunday, May 14
My Mother
I would not be far off if I made the claim that she read a book a week, 50 books a year for 60 years... which would work out to about 300 books during her lifetime. The books were best sellers, historical, religious, archeological, etc.
Each summer we took a two week vacation that was totally based upon education. In the car, she would read a book out loud about the site we were going to visit. When the family traveled through Europe on our way to Cairo, Egypt, my mother had me read The Agony and The Exstacy learn about Michelangelo.
My mother, when we lived in Alexandria, VA took me to all sorts of museums and art galleries in Washington, DC and well as to the National Theater to see Broadway Plays: My Fair Lady, Carousel, West Side Story, The Music Man, and several others. Not sure why she took me and not my sister and I never thought to ask her.
My mother, more than my father, had a huge impact on my life and she will always be in my mind and heart until the day I die.
MANKIND and Religion
…26Then God said, “Let Us make man in Our image, after Our likeness, to rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air, over the livestock, and over all the earth itself and every creature that crawls upon it.”
- Different hair color
- Different sking tones
- Different physical beauty
- Different color eyes
- Different height and width
- Different intelligence
- Different physical abilities
- Different genders (male/female)
- Does God have red, black, or yellow hair?
- Is God short or tall... thin or fat?
- What color eyes does God have?
It's Mothers Day
Mother’s Day, holiday in honour of mothers that is celebrated in countries throughout the world. In its modern form the holiday originated in the United States, where it is observed on the second Sunday in May. Many other countries also celebrate the holiday on this date, while some mark the observance at other times of the year.
Anna Jarvis of Philadelphia, whose mother had organized women’s groups to promote friendship and health, originated Mother’s Day. On May 12, 1907, she held a memorial service at her late mother’s church in Grafton, West Virginia. Within five years virtually every state was observing the day, and in 1914 U.S. Pres. Woodrow Wilson made it a national holiday.
Festivals honoring mothers and mother goddesses date to ancient times. The Phrygians held a festival for Cybele, the Great Mother of the Gods, as did the Greeks for the goddess Rhea. Likewise, the Romans adapted the practice to their own pantheon. Some countries have continued to observe ancient festivals; for example, Durga-puja, honoring the goddess Durga, remains an important festival in India.
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Saturday, May 13
Small Nuclear Reactor - Powers 300,000 Homes
US tech company, Westinghouse, has announced the launch of the AP300, a smaller version of its flagship AP1000 nuclear reactor, in an effort to extend access to nuclear power as demand for clean energy rises.
The AP300 nuclear reactor is scheduled to be operational in 2027 and will provide roughly one-third of the power of the flagship AP1000 reactor, according to an official press release by the firm on Thursday.
"The AP300 is the only small modular reactor offering available that is based on deployed, operating, and advanced reactor technology," President and CEO of Westinghouse, Patrick Fragman, said in the statement.
"The launch of the AP300 SMR rounds out the Westinghouse portfolio of reactor technology, allowing us to deliver on the full needs of our customers globally, with a clear line of sight on schedule of delivery, and economics."
Westinghouse's decision marks a significant turning point in the nuclear industry's effort to reinvent itself in response to climate change.
Nuclear fission reactor electricity produces no greenhouse gas emissions, and smaller nuclear reactors are less expensive to develop.
The AP300 is expected to cost around $1 billion per unit, compared to the AP1000's anticipated cost of $6.8 billion.
It will produce about 300 megawatts of electricity, compared to the AP1000's 1,200 megawatts, and power about 300,000 households. READ MORE...
EVs and Hybrids
WHO HAS THESE NATURAL RESOURCES?
Did you guess CHINA?
If you did, you'd be right.
Additionally, CHINA has all the natural resouces to make EV Batteries for vehicles as well.
However, how much energy does it take to make EV Batteries and will that energy come from FOSSIL FUELS?
A hybrid car is part electric and part gas and may not be as expensive as a totally electric car, but with the hybrid, the cost of replacing the battery is $5-6,000. Hybrid batteries may last 6-8 years and some say 10. BUT... when you replace the battery, you will spend all the money you save, not buying gasoline...
While it may help the environment, it does not help you financially.
The totally EV cars have the same problem with having to replace batteries... BUT, they are much more expensive and in some cases too expensive for the average American Worker.
The problem with EV cars is going on a vacation and having to stop for a couple of hours to recharge... providing you can find a charging station that is open.
Currently, we have less that 10% of the charging stations needed to become fully EV. The charging stations are waiting for the increase in purchases of EVs before they spend the money on charging stations...
What this means is that the charging stations will always LAG BEHIND the purchasing of EVs... so, there will never be enough charging stations until the only car on the road is an EV.
There is no telling how long this will take as those who own gasoline cars, ARE NOT GOING TO PURCHASE and EV until they absolutely have to.
INTERESTINGLY, aircraft can only fly on jet fuel that is made from petroleum crude oil. I doubt we will ever ELIMINATE commercial or military aircraft. I doubt that millionaires and billionaires will ever give up their private jets...
REMEMBER..... DO AS I SAY NOT AS I DO!!!
REMEMBER...
only 1% of the population is ultra wealthy
only 10% of the population is super weathly
only 20% of the population is wealthy
THIS MEANS that 80% does not earn much money, nor do they have a large savings account
EVs and HYBRIDS are trypically for the 20%... NOT YOU!!!
Climate Tipping Point
With climate-enhanced droughts, heatwaves and fires ravaging three continents and the threat of a new surge in global warming, the world urgently needs to ramp-up solutions for slashing carbon pollution. But which solutions are most critical?
The organization Project Drawdown has detailed the potential, feasibility and cost of nearly a hundred climate solutions since it was set up in 2017.
Executive director Jonathan Foley, a leading climate scientist, spoke to AFP about how to assess and prioritize the actions needed to keep Earth liveable.
The following interview has been edited for length and flow:
Q: What are the three most important questions in assessing the usefulness and integrity of carbon-cutting solutions?
A: Is it available now and ready to deploy? Because we need to start bending the emissions curve immediately.
Is it cost-effective? Otherwise, it's not going to scale effectively.
Does it create co-benefits for people, especially in terms of health, jobs, equity, and justice? This will make it far more appealing.
Q: A lot of hope—and investment—is going into technological solutions such as filtering fossil fuel pollution or pulling CO2 out of the air. Comment?
A: While some very limited carbon removal will be needed by mid-century, the vast, vast majority of the work we need to do—more than 95 percent—is cutting emissions, and doing it now.
Of the five percent focused on carbon removal, I think it should be more than 90 percent nature-based removal, such as ecological restoration and regenerative agriculture. Machine-based removal is unlikely to work at any meaningful scale.
Q: We often hear that solutions are already available, all that's missing is political will. Is that it? READ MORE...
Friday, May 12
Artificial Intelligence Needs Oversight
EVERY TIME YOU post a photo, respond on social media, make a website, or possibly even send an email, your data is scraped, stored, and used to train generative AI technology that can create text, audio, video, and images with just a few words.
When a company builds its technology on a public resource—the internet—it’s sensible to say that that technology should be available and open to all. But critics have noted that GPT-4 lacked any clear information or specifications that would enable anyone outside the organization to replicate, test, or verify any aspect of the model.