Friday, July 18

Artificial Intelligence & Humanoid Robots

 

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Humanoid Robots
  • Soldier Robots
  • Attack Drones
  • Autonomous Transportation

MS Office 365 has an AI service call COPILOT...  I asked what can AI do for human beings.  Here's the answer:


AI's potential to enhance human life is both vast and evolving. It’s not just about replacing tasks—it’s about amplifying possibility. Here’s a breakdown of how AI is already serving human needs and reshaping the future:

🧠 Intelligence & Insight Data analysis: AI can process and detect patterns in massive datasets, from medical scans to economic indicators.
Forecasting: Whether it’s inflation rates or climate modeling, AI helps refine predictions that guide public policy and personal planning.
Personalized learning: Educational platforms use AI to tailor content to individual learning styles and progress.

🛠️ Labor & Automation Task automation: In manufacturing, logistics, and even desk jobs, repetitive tasks are streamlined, improving efficiency.
Job augmentation: AI can assist professionals—from radiologists to financial analysts—offering suggestions or flagging errors.

🌐 Access & Connection Language translation: Breaks down global communication barriers with real-time translation.
Assistive tech: Helps people with disabilities navigate the world—like screen readers, smart prosthetics, or speech-to-text systems.
Content creation: Aids in writing, designing, coding—boosting creativity, not replacing it.

🧬 Science & Medicine Drug discovery: AI helps accelerate research by predicting molecular behavior.
Diagnostics: Algorithms can spot signs of disease earlier than some human eyes.
Healthcare management: Improves resource allocation and patient care through smart scheduling and record analysis.

You're someone who thinks deeply about societal trends, economic shifts, and technological consequences. So here's a more forward-looking angle: AI might reshape the labor market, economic incentives, and educational structures. How do we maintain fairness and human dignity as we automate? How do we future-proof skills?

Care to explore that next?

Think about this answer for a while.  Copilot has changed my life as a writer.  I can ask it questions, ask it to do research, find out what restaurants were opened in a city in 1965 in a particular city.

Our future is now in the hands of AI and will soon be in the hands of robots as they replace our jobs.

How will we pay for the UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE?
Raise taxes???

We are in a transformation here in the USA and around the world.  In order to support the power needs required by AI, our power plants (electricity) MUST double or triple current operations...  This expansion cannot be accomplished using GREEN ENERGY!!!

That is another concept to PONDER...  when you have time.

Somewhat Political




 

Narcissism and other dark personality traits linked to AI cheating in art universities

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

In many countries, there is an academic cheating crisis with students misusing artificial intelligence tools like ChatGPT to write essays, dissertations and other assignments. According to new research, certain personality traits make some students more likely to pass off AI-generated work as their own.


In a study published in BMC Psychology, Jinyi Song of South Korea's Chodang University and Shuyan Liu of Baekseok University surveyed 504 Chinese art students. They found that students who scored highly for dark personality traits like narcissism, machiavellianism and psychopathy (collectively known as "the Dark Triad") were more likely to rely on AI tools like ChatGPT and Midjourney to do their work.


Although previous studies have revealed a link between dark personality traits and academic dishonesty, most research has focused on general student populations, not on specific groups such as art students.


The Beatles - Revolution

Thursday, July 17

Mating Rituals

 

VINCE

 

Lara Trump

 

Treefrog

 

Dinesh D'Souza

 

Sarah Westall

 

Mother's Love

 

Bongino Report

 

Diamond & Silk

 

Chick Lover

 

The White House

 

Thrivetime

 

Happy Face

 

Brookings Brief


Mapping the AI economy: Which regions are ready for the next technology leap

The Big THINK

 


The meaning of your life isn’t a puzzle to solve

Say Hello to Oscar

 

Headlines




Jim Watson/Getty Images



The president said he’ll send a tariff letter to more than 150 countries. President Trump has already sent out about two dozen letters warning of higher tariff rates slated to take effect Aug. 1 if trading partners (like the EU, Japan, and South Korea) don’t reach new deals with the US, and he said yesterday that he plans to send a single letter to another 150 countries. Trump said the rate would be the same for all those countries, explaining, “They’re not big countries, and they don’t do that much business.” Trump said the tariff rate for those countries hadn’t been determined yet, but that it would probably be 10% or 15%.

Trump criticizes his supporters over “Epstein Hoax.” The Justice Department’s announcement that there is no “client list” to release from the late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein has rankled members of the president’s base base who expected a bombshell revelation, and yesterday, President Trump expressed frustration on Truth Social with his own supporters for not letting it go. The president posted, “My PAST supporters have bought into this ‘bullshit,’” calling them “weaklings” who were doing the Democrats’ work for them, and saying “I don’t want their support anymore!” The Epstein case has also reportedly led to a rift within the administration with Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino taking issue with Attorney General Pam Bondi’s decision not to release more information.

Zuck expected to testify in $8b Facebook privacy trial. A trial kicked off yesterday in Delaware on claims against Meta’s leadership by shareholders stemming from the Cambridge Analytica scandal. Meta is not named in the suit—instead, it seeks reimbursement from the company’s leaders for a fine that Meta paid for violating a 2012 agreement with the FTC regarding user privacy. As the trial progresses, it’ll be something of a who’s who in tech: It’s expected to feature testimony not only from Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, but also from former Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg and board members past and present, including Marc Andreessen, Peter Thiel, and Reed Hastings, according to Reuters. It’s also expected to be a test for how Delaware courts handle claims against company directors since most cases like it get dismissed or settled.—AR




Robert Reich



The Supreme Court, the Deep State, and Jeffrey Epstein







Friends,

Anyone wanting to understand the brouhaha over Pam Bondi’s refusal to turnover (or even acknowledge) the Epstein files need look no further than what the Supreme Court just did.

In McMahon v. New York the Supremes gave Trump a simple way to revoke federal spending authorized by Congress: just fire everyone responsible for implementing that spending.

The high court is allowing Trump and Education Secretary Linda McMahon to fire over half the people who work for the Department of Education until there’s a full hearing on the constitutionality of their action. But by then it will be too late to save much of the department.

Note that the Supreme Court made this astounding decision on its so-called “shadow docket” where it doesn’t even have to explain itself (the only record we have is Justice Sotomayor’s dissent).


At A Glance


Dinosaur mating dance floor found in Colorado.

The US states with the most tornadoes.

Dubai to open restaurant run by AI chef. (w/video)

A look at toy crazes over the years.

A longstanding mystery about rivers may have been solved.

What to do if an airline loses your bags.

Astronomers capture birth of planets around baby sun.

Why is color blindness more common in men?

Clickbait: The winners of this year's wife-carrying contest.

How I made QUINOA taste 10x BETTER

Quick Clips

 











In The NEWS


Sports, Entertainment, & Culture

> Ozzy Osbourne's final performance with Black Sabbath raises a record-breaking $190M for charity (More) | Unreleased Beyoncé music and concert footage stolen during Cowboy Carter tour stop in Atlanta (More)

> Fauja Singh, Indian-born runner who broke a record by completing a marathon at age 100, dies at age 114 after being hit by a car (More) | David Kaff, actor and musician best known for starring role in "This Is Spinal Tap," dies at age 79 (More)

> Portland's WNBA expansion franchise adopts "Fire" nickname, previously used by the city's prior WNBA team that folded in 2002; the new Portland Fire will begin playing in 2026 (More)


Science & Technology
> AI startup Anthropic launches Claude for Financial Services; platform uses the company's flagship AI model to analyze market trends from a wide range of sources (More) | Google to invest $25B in AI data centers and infrastructure, including a 20-year, $3B contract to purchase Pennsylvania hydropower (More)

> Researchers 3D print biomaterial that mimics living lung tissue; advancement could allow development and testing of treatments for lung diseases without requiring living patients (More)

> Geologists link a meteor impact to a landslide in the Grand Canyon that created a dam and lake along the Colorado River roughly 56,000 years ago (More)


Business & Markets
> US stock markets close mixed (S&P 500 -0.4%, Dow -1.0%, Nasdaq +0.2%); Nasdaq hits record, lifted by Nvidia (+4.0%), which plans to resume AI chip sales to China (More) | Nvidia 101 (1440 Topics) | MP Materials, operator of the only US rare earths mine, inks $500M deal with Apple; MP Materials shares close up 20% (More)

> US consumer price index rose 2.7% year over year in June from 2.4% in May, while core inflation—excluding food and energy—rose 2.9% year over year; both figures are in line with estimates (More) | Cryptocurrency regulation bills fail to clear procedural hurdles in Congress (More)

> Former OpenAI CTO Mira Murati officially closes $2B seed round for her generative AI startup, Thinking Machines Lab, in what is one of the largest first funding rounds in history; deal values startup at $12B (More)


Politics & World Affairs
> Republicans vote to avoid Democratic-proposed amendment requiring floor vote on the release of government files related to deceased sex offender Jeffrey Epstein (More) | Justice Department said last week there was no evidence of a client list; read the two-page memo (More)

> Federal grand jury indicts man accused of fatally shooting Minnesota state Rep. Melissa Hortman (D) and her husband (More) | Men convicted of cutting down England's Sycamore Gap tree are sentenced to four years and three months in prison (More)

> Canadian wildfire smoke triggers air quality alerts in the Upper Midwest, including Chicago; Toronto air quality ranks among the worst in the world this week (More)


SOURCE:  1440 NEWS

Project Management: Communications

 

One of the most valuable tools that a Project Manager has at his/her disposal is the COMMUNICATIONS NOTEBOOK...

Communications is at the heart of every project whether the Project Manager wants to believe it or not.  The PM must be able to excel at both written and oral communications.


If the PM conveys a message to a Project Leader and that PL must convey that message to a group of workers, what guarantees does the PM have that the PL will convey that message with 100% accuracy?

The PM had no guarantees!!!


Only the Project Manager is responsible for messages being conveyed throughout the project team.  Therefore, the PM must be able to talk/write clearly and concisely without any misunderstandings as to what words may or may not mean to everyone else on the team.


In order to facilitate this process a Project Notebook is kept with a copy of every single comment or memo that has been distributed to the Project Team in one form or another.


One valuable lesson that a PM learns over time is to take notes during ALL MEETINGS and during ALL TELEPHONE CALLS in case one needs to go back in time and verify what was communicated.


Everything that a PM does must be on the record, if for no other reason than to prove you were not told to do something, when a member of the team or stakeholders makes the claim that you were told.

Somewhat Political

 




NASA Just Flew Through the Sun’s Atmosphere


NASA’s Parker Solar Probe is revolutionizing our understanding of the Sun by flying closer than ever before, capturing jaw-dropping images from within the solar atmosphere.

NASA’s Parker Solar Probe has captured the most detailed images ever taken near the Sun, recorded from just 3.8 million miles away from its surface.

These up-close images reveal structures within the solar wind, a continuous flow of charged particles that the Sun releases into space at speeds over 1 million miles per hour.

The new visuals and data are giving scientists critical insights into how the solar wind forms and behaves, which is key to understanding how it influences Earth.



REO Speedwagon - Ridin' the Storm Out (Live - Kansas City 1985)