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And you buy that shit because you have no Imagination or ability to see anything but more Status Quo.

I recognize the reality that you idiots lose EVERY F*&^ING TIME.

The inconsistency between public support for "progressive" ideas and progressive's inability to get elected beyond the coasts has existed as long as I can remember.

What has also existed as long as I can remember is the reliable stupidity of progressives where a single round of wins turns into condescending lectures, moral preaching, budgetary free for all and an assumption that their social issues are as important to the regular voters who voted for them in that round, thus leading to a HUGE swing of the pendulum in the other direction.

This is the reality you idiots refuse to acknoweledge to the detriment of us all.

The Democratic Establishment turns on any Progressive movement.

They would Rather Republicans Win actually.

No, they wouldn't. They would rather you stop being childish morons, drop the self-righteous purity requirements and, oh I don't know, win more than one election before trying to cram your entire agenda through while you can't even agree on they/them vs xi/xe. Oh, and stop calling every slightly Progressive leaning Dem the next FDR with the next Big New Deal blah blah blah.

Y'all have terrible electoral track records and you're falling into the same patterns of failure you always do at a time when accepting a smaller win would have outsized effects on our Republic and would actually endear you to the electorate enough to maybe last longer than a single round of wins.

Anyways, the clouds have cleared here, so I'm going to go sit the dark back deck, drink a beer and marvel at the stars and Milky Way.

Analysis: The next killer AI feature? No AI at all
www.computerworld.com

... As artificial intelligence creeps into every corner of our lives, an absence of AI may soon be a premium experience worth paying for. ...

AI may well be creating a killer feature that people will be willing to pay to possess. It's just not the one most AI-fixated entities are focused on creating -- quite the opposite, in fact. ...

That, in turn, is creating a whole new category of productivity experience that people are actually lining up to pay for -- a premium feature of sorts, related to AI and its presence in our lives.

Ready for the most delicious irony of all? The killer AI feature of which we speak is a lack of AI -- or at least the ability to disable and avoid it and use it only if and when you want. ...


Update ...

The US launches more strikes on Iran as the standoff over the Strait of Hormuz escalates
apnews.com

... The United States launched several waves of strikes on Iran into Monday morning over an Iranian attack on a container ship in the Strait of Hormuz that set it ablaze and left a crew member missing over the weekend. Iran retaliated by targeting countries across the Middle East.

Missile alert sirens sounded at dawn Monday in Bahrain, home to the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet. There was no immediate word on damage.

Iranian state media acknowledged the latest attacks on its soil early Monday, describing explosions in several locations with at least one person being killed.

Iranian attacks on Sunday stretched Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Jordan and even Oman " whose territorial waters with Iran make up the strait. The narrow mouth of the Persian Gulf, which once saw a fifth of all oil and natural gas pass through it, has become the key issue challenging an interim deal between the U.S. and Iran.

Iran and the U.S. are nearly at the midway point of the 60-day period of that deal, which was supposed to set up talks for a permanent end to the war. Instead, it has devolved into a series of attacks over the strait and its future, worrying world leaders the Iran war could resume. ...



__________
#13 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-07-12 09:16 PM
The cost of AI tokens (cost per transaction) has risen significantly.


Cost of AI token is NOT the cost per transaction. - see drudge.com

* 18% of organizations now orchestrating multiple agents across workflows, up from 9% in the previous period
* A $0.04 chat can become a $1.20 orchestration when it requires tool retrieval, planning and subagents
* AI coding costs are expected to surpass average developer salaries by 2028
* Despite enterprises spending an average of $11.5 million on AI in 2026, most struggle to demonstrate any clear return on investment.

* Recent tests have shown Chinese models to be much cheaper "per task" (not necessarily per token) and do almost as good a job as best US models, like Mythos, that run on more advanced hardware.


Nor does it matter how much money you make "per transaction" (however you want to define it), if you don't have enough of them (volume) to make a profit based on your costs structure - it's basic economics... hence, as I posted:

They are not necessarily losing money on every transaction because defining "transaction" in AI is very complex and involves many different, non-uniform costs.
However, they are losing a lot of money because the costs are huge, and they will definitely need a lot of subscription volume and high revenue growth to pay for their infrastructure, recurring expenses and continuous upgrades.

"Cost per transaction" is just one, poorly chosen, unit of many factors in trying to evaluate whether "Will the revenue generated by AI catch up to the CapEx for the hyperscalers?"
__________

@#12 ... They are not necessarily losing money on every transaction because defining "transaction" in AI is very complex and involves many different, non-uniform costs. ...

The cost of AI tokens (cost per transaction) has risen significantly.

Palo Alto CEO Arora says AI pricing needs to fall 90% as token costs skyrocket
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/07/09/palo-alto-ceo-arora-ai-pricing.html

... Palo Alto Networks CEO Nikesh Arora told CNBC on Thursday that high token costs need to come down as much as 90% to promote enterprise adoption ...

Rising token costs have emerged as a major pain point for businesses and put a strain on AI budgets. The current pricing, he said, makes AI tools increasingly difficult for businesses to implement. ...


... also, related ...

www.theregister.com

... To put some of these capex forecasts in perspective, I think Amazon is saying that it's planning north of two hundred billion in AI build outs this year. Microsoft's looking at one hundred and ninety billion. Google a hundred and eighty billion. Meta one hundred and forty billion. I mean this is a lot of money being tossed around for potentially no returns, right? ...

How the AI bubble could pop and take down the global economy, according to the BIS
www.theregister.com

... The central bank for central banks is concerned about the eye-watering sums being invested into AI, and it's raising the specter of a global recession should the bubble burst.

In its annual report for 2026, the Bank for International Settlements compared the current craze to historical events, including canal and British railway mania in the 1800s, electrification exuberance of the 1920s, and the dotcom boom of the 1990s.

The report states: "all shared one common trait: a genuine technological breakthrough that attracted capital in excess of what commercial returns could ultimately justify. ...



Will the AI craze burst? I hope not.

But I cannot predict the future ...



Sen. Lindsey Graham dies at 71 from aortic dissection, according to medical examiner's preliminary findings
www.cbsnews.com

... Graham's spokesperson said Sunday afternoon the cause of death was aortic dissection due to Arteriosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease, according to preliminary findings by the Medical Examiner of the District of Columbia. ...

__________
#7 | Posted by donnerboy at 2026-07-11 02:23 PM
If you think AI is just about automated office tasks then you haven't been paying attention.

Today's "AI" is, mostly automation.


AI's reach extends far beyond basic "office tasks" because it handles complex workflows, accelerates physical and digital problem-solving, and increases the overall speed of tasks with less human error.

Instead of just drafting emails or sorting data, advanced systems will coordinate projects, analyze deep patterns, and drive major operational shifts. There is even an AI running its own business in SF now.

"Luna / Andon Market: An autonomous AI agent given a budget and lease to run a real storefront in San Francisco."

That sounds like a really lovely marketing material template of almost any "AI" prospectus.

www.businessinsider.com - Claude Code's creator says his setup involves thousands of AI sub-agents doing 'deeper work' overnight - 2026-05-13

|------ Anthropic engineer Boris Cherny says his coding setup now involves "a few thousand" AI agents working for him overnight.

Cherny, the creator of Claude Code, described his AI workflow during an interview with Sequoia Capital on May 4.

His answers - including how he mostly runs the agents via his phone - highlighted how some Silicon Valley engineers are beginning to use AI systems less like chatbots and more like always-on autonomous assistants.

Cherny said he relies heavily on two Claude Code features built for persistent automation: /loops and Routines.

He said users can schedule /loops locally via cron, while Routines run recurring tasks on a server, allowing engineers to keep agents working after their laptops are closed. ...
-------|



Stories like this are popping up nearly every day now.

Yes, of course. There are also "stories" nearly every day that don't make it into popular, mainstream press.


"A pair of humanoid robots crossed a major medical milestone this week after successfully performing gallbladder removals in pigs for the first time ... "

Intuitive Surgical's DaVinci robots (and their copycats) are old news and have been on the market since early 2000s; if you have seen phrase "minimally invasive surgery" it most likely refers to all kinds of robot-assisted medical procedures, from head to toes.
"In 2012, it was used in an estimated 200,000 surgeries, most commonly for hysterectomies and prostate removals."

And robotics may or may not include AI, but often confused with AI because most are usually consumer-facing, even if it's as simple as Roomba.


The Singularity is Nearer.

Yes, every day, by definition... but none of what you posted before is even remotely close to Singularity, or much beyond automation of previously "manual" tasks.

In fact, most of what was described in that 'prospectus' I could run much cheaper on a network years ago with a logic module, few scripts and not very sophisticated task scheduler, with or without ERP or "supervising" the process.

I didn't call it AI.
__________

Meanwhile, back at the Kennedy Center...

Democrat announces whistleblower allegations of construction problems at Kennedy Center
apnews.com

... A Democratic senator on Saturday alleged that whistleblowers have detailed several problems stemming from rushed or improper reconstruction of the Kennedy Center, adding a new layer to the travails of the arts complex as President Donald Trump tried to seize control of it and its name.

Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island said in a release on Saturday that he had received a whistleblower disclosure from the Government Accountability Project, a nonprofit whistleblower protection group, alleging that "the Center rushed a series of renovations driven by the President's aesthetic whims and his desire to star in a series of televised events in December."

"The Center's subservience to the President's desires and its corner-cutting contracting practices have resulted in steel columns that are rusting through fresh paint, a reflecting pool that may have to be torn out and rebuilt, and a brand-new bathroom floor torn out over an offending tile color," Whitehouse continued. "This is waste, and it treats a national memorial to President Kennedy as if it were a private renovation project." ...


@#7 ... Probably because it would be unconstitutional. The feds can provide guidelines, standards, funding and assistance in implementing any new policies, but they must still be run by the states. ...

ArtI.S4.C1.2 States and the Elections Clause
www.law.cornell.edu

... By its terms, Article I, Section 4, Clause 1, referred to as the Elections Clause, contemplates that state legislatures will establish the times, places, and manner of holding elections for the House of Representatives and the Senate subject to Congress making or altering such state regulations (except as to the place of choosing Senators).1

The Supreme Court has interpreted the Election Clause expansively, enabling states "to provide a complete code for congressional elections, not only as to times and places, but in relation to notices, registration, supervision of voting, protection of voters, prevention of fraud and corrupt practices, counting of votes, duties of inspectors and canvassers, and making and publication of election returns." 2

The Court has further recognized the states' ability to establish sanctions for violating election laws3 as well as authority over recounts4 and primaries.5

The Elections Clause, however, does not govern voter qualifications, which under Article I, Section 2, Clause 1, and the Seventeenth Amendment must be the same as the "Qualifications requisite for Electors of the most numerous Branch of the State Legislatures." 6 ...


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