April 2026: Artificial Intelligence

April 2026: Artificial Intelligence

Artificial intelligence (AI) has been a hot topic for several years, and this year AI has had widespread effects: AI expansion projects have created a shortage of computer storage (hard drives, flash drives), memory chips, and procssor processor chips. Bulk buys of power to run AI data centers have triggered a sharp rise in energy bills. Adoption of AI technologies has prompted many tech companies to begin mass layoffs of employees that managers believe can be replaced by AI agents. And some futurists have told dark tales of a future AI apocalypse.

We also talked about why the MacBook Neo might be a good upgrade for someone with an older Mac, how Tim Cook’s forthcoming retirement is in no way a demotion, and why watching Apple’s June World Wide Developer Conference keynote address is not only fun but informative.

A few items of interest:

  • In the Question and Answer session, someone asked what the red dot at the top of their iPhone screen means. A red dot on an iPhone indicates a new, unheard voicemail, or that an app is using the microphone. A red dot on an Apple Watch indicates a new notification has come in (a new text message, an app wants attention, etc.)
  • One person asked why Find My does not work on their iPhone or iPad. If Find My is not working, it is because Find My is not allowed to use the device’s location; this can be corrected in Settings > Privacy and Security > Location Services.
  • At one point, mention was made of a book, Sons of the Profits, or There’s No Business Like Grow Business: The Seattle Story, 1851-1901. This is a 1967 book by William “Bill” Speidel about Seattle’s colorful and unconventional early years. It is a fun read.
  • Two graphics showing how AI adoption may affect jobs in the next few years:

Short overview of AI

The following relatively short video (8 minutes, 15 seconds) reviews how we arrived at this point and suggests why you might want to take a skeptical view of both the claims of the wonders of AI and the claims of an AI-created doom.

Artificial Intelligence – A short overview

Click on the YouTube logo if you want to expand the recording.

Video of the April 2026 meeting: Artificial Intelligence

Video recording of the April 2026 meeting on Artificial Intelligence

The meeting video includes a showing of the shorter video shown above. Click on the YouTube logo if you want to expand the recording.

Transcript of meeting: Artificial Intelligence

This transcript was generated automatically by Zoom, and Zoom is sometimes (often?) creative. Use your browser’s find function to search for particular words or phrases.

18:32:47 Getting on to questions. Do we have any questions?
18:32:50 And what would these questions be concentric around? AI?
18:33:05 Um…
18:32:56 I’m going to get into that 7, so no, this is more like, um, I can’t find my mouse pointer on my iPad, and, you know, just, uh… Just questions, because if you don’t have questions, there are things that I was going to talk about, but…
18:33:14 I’d settled for questions right now.
18:33:20 Yes.
18:33:18 I have a question for you. I looked in my garage, I found a monitor in my garage, and the connection on the monitor is… it’s an old… it’s connected to my old computer. It’s a bunch of pins, like a 12-pin connection.
18:33:33 Yes.
18:33:34 And it’s… it was almost brand new. Is there any way that I could hook that up to either a modern-day computer with attachments or adapters or anything, and maybe even to my phone?
18:33:47 Um, the answer is, depending upon what it is, if it’s a VGA monitor, the answer is no.
18:33:55 VGA in terms of the resolution, and that’s because no modern device knows how to talk on a screen that small. If it’s a flat panel display, it’s probably at least, um.
18:34:10 a 1280 pixel across monitor, and there might be a way to get it to work. Um, but the fact is, you’d need a whole bunch of different adapters. You’d need a… you’d need something that was like a USB-C to VGA. I’ve never seen an adapter like that, so it might be a USB to something else to VGA, and you might spend like.
18:34:28 Okay.
18:34:33 $100 on adapters, um, as an alternative, you can get these small screens at Costco now. They’re made by Acer, and they’re, like, $89 or something, and they just plug right into a phone or into.
18:34:56 Oh, yeah.
18:34:48 an iPad or something using a USB-C, and it’s a much better monitor than that monitor in your garage. So, my feeling would be, even if it’s almost brand new, it’s so old that it’s not really brand new.
18:35:05 That’s for sure. Okay, I just wanted it sitting there, and I guess I’ll head out to the dump with that one. It’s not going to fit anything.
18:35:12 Can’t do that.
18:35:16 Well, I’ll take it over to Goodwill.
18:35:12 Um… The, um… Um, yes, you can take it to Goodwill. Goodwill may not have any use for it, but they will accept it.
18:35:24 And, um, almost anything you turn into goodwill, they actually ship off to Tacoma, and Tacoma has a really good electronics recycling facility. We don’t really have one on the peninsula.
18:35:39 You have to remember that their neighborhoods in Tacoma that have more people than all of Clallam County, so we just don’t rate.
18:35:49 I have a question.
18:35:51 Okay, I have an old computer, an old Apple.
18:35:51 Okay, thank you.
18:35:52 Yes.
18:35:55 And I’ve updated to this map.
18:35:58 And I wanted to get rid of it. How do I delete everything off of it before I recycle it? Like, I think Squim just had a, um…
18:36:06 Turn in your old electronic stuff.
18:36:09 um… gathering.
18:36:20 Right. But I want to delete everything off it.
18:36:12 Yeah, the, um… in SWIM, there’s at least a couple churches that, like, once or twice a year, have an electronics recycling event. Um… Yes, um, do you know how old the machine… do you know what model machine it is?
18:36:28 I’d have to get it for you, um…
18:36:31 I’ll go get it, okay?
18:36:34 It’s a laptop. I mean, it’s like a…
18:36:33 No, no, well, is it portable?
18:36:37 It’s like a iPad, a big iPad.
18:36:43 like a Mac.
18:36:42 Um, if it’s… If it’s old enough, if it’s new enough, you should be able to go on to Apple’s site, just type into Google, um, deleting… data prior to resale of, and then, say, MacBook Pro or iPad, or whatever it is.
18:37:03 Okay, okay.
18:37:07 Okay.
18:37:22 Okay.
18:37:05 And Apple has explicit instructions on what you do, step-by-step instructions. If you can’t do that because you can’t get into it or some other things, you can write to me and I’ll see about Plan B. But I really kind of need to know what model it is, but see if there are online instructions.
18:37:26 When they give you the instructions, they’re in alphabet… they’re not in alphabetical, they’re in numerical order. And you want to go through in person, because if you skip some steps, you might leave data.
18:37:37 Yeah.
18:37:37 You might leave data by accidentally removing your access to remove the data. And if you do that, that’s not good.
18:37:47 Okay, thank you.
18:37:51 Other questions?
18:37:55 Oh, Lawrence, have you heard about Tim Cook being fired?
18:38:01 No, he wasn’t fired. Tim Cook designated a replacement. Tim Cook is going to become the executive chairman of the board of Apple, and the Vice President in charge of.
18:38:19 Hard work, hard work.
18:38:29 Oh.
18:38:17 No, the Vice President in charge of hardware is going to be the new chairman, and he’s going to become a member of the board. So, Tim Cook isn’t really going anywhere, but the day-to-day decisions will be made by somebody else. He was not in the least bit fired. When Tim Cook.
18:38:35 took over. Apple was worth about $300 billion, and now they’re worth $4 trillion, so they’re not about to fire him.
18:38:42 Wow. you know.
18:38:45 Are they taxing on my health.
18:38:48 I nominate Michael to be president.
18:38:55 Go ahead, Michael. Say yes.
18:38:57 I wish.
18:39:01 He means president of smug, not of the country.
18:39:04 Right. President’s salary.
18:39:07 you’ll have the same salary I have.
18:39:11 We both have zero.
18:39:20 I have a question, another one.
18:39:18 Um…
18:39:22 So how is it… I don’t understand this.
18:39:23 Uh-huh.
18:39:27 like, I’ll have a conversation with someone,
18:39:31 And my phone’s in the room, but not on. I’m not using it.
18:39:34 And then, about an hour later, that whole subject that I was talking about comes up.
18:39:40 on my phone or my laptop.
18:39:44 It’s like somebody’s spying on me all the time.
18:39:50 But it’s not really that case at all. It’s basically just coincidence. You have to remember that the average person during the course of a day.
18:40:03 will be exposed to something like 3,000 commercials. And you see that the commercials are in things that you read, they’re in things on TV, they’re things over the air, and so on and so forth. And so, with 3,000 commercials, if you happen to be into.
18:40:20 you know, teddy bears, and you’ve looked out for teddy bears or something, and you’re talking to somebody about teddy bears, and then you go to your phone, and it’s got an advertisement for teddy bears, that’s really not because the phone was listening to you, it’s because commercials.
18:40:35 are pervasive and commercials are personalized. So, if that’s something that you’re interested in, you were talking about it to somebody, then it’ll probably… you’ve expressed that interest someplace else, and it’s going to show up in your phone or your computer.
18:40:51 Or even your TV. This one woman in town who, by the way, has… has covered all the electronics in our house with aluminum foil. Um, that’s as far as I’m going to go with that.
18:41:05 She says that the TV is listening to her because it has these things on TV about things that she’s done research on.
18:41:15 Okay. So… Um, but no, your phone’s not listening to you unless you turn it on, tell it to listen to you.
18:41:23 How about Alexa? I mean, I… people… I don’t have that in my house, but…
18:41:28 Alexa does listen to you constantly. And.
18:41:31 Like, I have to protect people if they’re gonna have a personal conversation with their spouse or their family.
18:41:38 They completely turn it all off.
18:41:41 So, listen.
18:41:42 Um, well, even then, because they’re powered by the… there’s no on-off switch, the only way to turn it off is to unplug it. But Alexa does listen to you constantly. It does wait for you to use the word.
18:42:02 That’s…
18:41:57 Alexa, to actually respond, but it is listening constantly. Um, Siri… Um, on my HomePod listens constantly, but the only thing it’s listening for is the words, oh, shut up.
18:42:14 The only thing it’s doing is it’s waiting for that word, and then it actually pays attention to what you’re saying. And most of the stuff that Siri does is local to the device, like my watch, which just said that it wanted me to say what it was I wanted, or your phone or something like that.
18:42:32 All of that transaction takes place on the phone up until the point where you’re doing something that you, um, can’t be answered on the phone. For example, um, the, uh…
18:42:49 Uh, the, um… I wanted to know when… some bridge opened. And so I was talking to somebody, and it wasn’t until I asked my HomePod, hey, when was this bridge open? At that point, that’s something that the HomePod could not answer, so it sent out a message to.
18:43:11 Apple, and it says, hey, when was this bridge open? Came up with an answer, and I had a date. But… All of that takes place on the HomePod, and the only thing that goes out to Apple is the request for information on when the bridge opened. It doesn’t get the rest of the conversation, Apple doesn’t know anything about it. Alexa doesn’t work that way. Alexa has zero intelligence on the device.
18:43:36 It all goes to, um… Amazon. So it’s a very different kind of security, which is something I will talk about later on as well.
18:43:47 Um, because it is…
18:43:48 Irma just says Alexa a little bit ago and my television just turned on behind me.
18:43:55 See, I think it… it’s hard for me to believe that.
18:43:56 You turned on my TV. I’ll tell you kind of funny story. We bought my wife a little speaker, a little Alexa speaker, and we set it up for her, and it was playing music one day, and it was pretty loud, so I went over to it and he says, Alexa, you know, play softer. And it didn’t do that.
18:44:23 Oh.
18:44:12 It just kept playing loud. I said it 3 times, Alexa, play it softer. And she stopped and she said, I don’t know who you are, but you’re on Sandy’s account. She wouldn’t respond to me. So I had to set it up with my voice signature for to make it work.
18:44:29 It’s funny, but I… they’re listening, that’s for sure. My television’s on, I’ll have to turn it off. Well, it’ll come back on if we say, Alexa, yeah.
18:44:33 Yeah.
18:44:43 spooky.
18:44:38 Yeah, the it does get kind of intriguing. I was. I was in someone’s Tesla, and they had.
18:44:49 What was the name of that movie? Fifth Element?
18:44:52 There’s a scene in the movie Fifth Element, which is a fantastic movie, if you haven’t ever seen it. There’s a scene in The Fifth Element where this professor is talking to an assistant, and the assistant is named Aziz, and he says, Aziz, light!
18:45:08 And, um, it gets lighter. And so he had… this guy had he had named the voice in his Tesla as Aziz.
18:45:21 And, um, it was hilarious listening to him converse with his car in his driveway. Um, I wasn’t willing to actually get in the car with him, because I happen to know he’s a terrible driver, but, um… Um, it was interesting to listen to him talk to his car.
18:45:42 his spouse, by the way, said that he talks to his car because that’s the only one who listens to him.
18:45:49 I have a question, and it’s about when you send out the invitation, you say,
18:45:54 Make sure you write… make sure that your Zoom is up to date.
18:46:00 And how do you do that?
18:46:10 Okay.
18:46:00 Yes. If you’re using… if you’re using a iPad or iPhone, Zoom automatically updates, if you have it set to do updates. If you’re using the Mac, you have to go up to the Zoom workplace menu, and there’s a menu choice there that says check for updates, and.
18:46:22 It’ll go out and see if there’s an update.
18:46:25 But on the iPhone and the iPad, assuming that you have automatic updates turned on, it’ll update itself.
18:46:33 Thank you.
18:46:38 Yes.
18:46:37 I have a question, Lawrence. On my iPhone, which I have an iPhone 15 Pro Max. There’s this red dot in the dynamic island, and.
18:46:50 I looked it up on Google, and they said it’s like your screen is being recorded, or your audio is being recorded, so I disabled all the apps from my microphone and camera, and the red dot was still there.
18:47:06 The, um…
18:47:06 And sometimes it goes away by itself, and other times it… comes back up.
18:47:14 Yeah, the, um… There’s been a lot of, um… misunderstanding about that. The it’s if you look at your phone when you’re actually talking on it, if you’re doing something like a video, you’ll notice that it’s not red, it’s green. And green is when it’s paying attention. Red means that it’s.
18:47:35 kind of acting in standby. But it is a good idea to go through your apps and turn them off for everything that’s not appropriate. As an example, there are lots of… I’m going to pick on games, because games are notorious for this. Games like to collect a whole bunch of… Games make more money from collecting information about you than they do from the purchase of the game. And so what they’ll do is, like, I had this game that wanted to know my location. Nope, not giving you that. Turn that off. The game wants to send you updates. Nope, I don’t care about that. No, it’s not updates as an updating the game, it’s updates in terms of.
18:48:11 You are now on the leaderboard and things like that. Nope, I don’t want to talk to my game. So go through and get rid of the things that are going to be listening to you or track your location, or track other things about you.
18:48:27 Sometimes trying to figure out how to do that is difficult.
18:48:31 But…
18:48:31 Well, I have Google Maps and Apple Maps tracking my location. But other than that, that’s the only thing I have looking at my location.
18:48:42 Would that cause the red dot to come up?
18:48:42 Uh, you… No, because they… they’re not recording your speech or your, uh, or your… or your video. So that shouldn’t cause the red dot… I don’t know.
18:48:55 That’s a good question. I don’t actually know the answer. I can’t give you a clear answer on that. But as an example, one other thing that you want to track your location is the compass on your phone. If it’s… if the compass is tracking your location, you can also use the compass.
18:49:10 to calculate altitude. When you bring it up, and it’ll say, hey, north is that way, it’ll also tell you down below you’re at 59 feet above sea level. But if it can’t track the location, it can’t tell you that.
18:49:22 Yeah, I I have that on also the compass.
18:49:25 For location. But would that cause the red dot? And then the other times I’m sitting in the couch and it just disappears completely.
18:49:44 But is it a security issue?
18:49:29 I don’t think so. And the, um, there’s been a lot of misinformation about that, and the answer is I haven’t paid that much attention. I go through… I make sure that… Well, it’s not, it could be a security issue in terms of privacy, but the reason why I go through and turn off things that I don’t want is that it greatly reduces the battery consumption. When I go to bed at night, I put my phone up to charge, because.
18:50:03 Why should I use the phone at night? And it’s rarely even at the halfway mark. And the way to cut down on your battery usage during the day is just make sure that everything that you don’t need turned on is turned off. And so, um… Do you need it to send you messages? If you don’t need it to send you messages, turn that off. If you don’t need it to track your location, turn that off. If you don’t need it to record your voice, turn that off. If you don’t need it to use the camera, turn that off. And if you do… if you are good about turning that stuff off.
18:50:35 It greatly increases the battery life of your iPod or iPad.
18:50:41 I have a question. When you’re using your iPhone a lot, you open up a lot of windows. There’s a ton of them open. And then I guess you can erase them all. Is it a good thing to do that, or does it make any difference? Are you sapping it when you’ve got a bunch of open windows for all kinds of things you’ve been into?
18:50:58 The answer is, if it’s not… if it’s… you can’t see it on the screen, it’s not really doing anything. So it doesn’t really help you. On older phones, when the iPhone first came out, yes, it would use up battery life if it’s stuck in the background.
18:51:15 But as it is now, what it’s doing is just a placeholder to launch that thing more rapidly. So, you can go and close them if you want to, but it’s not going to make any difference.
18:51:25 Okay, good.
18:51:27 So, if you have tons of apps on your, you know, like, I have friends who don’t…
18:51:31 have hardly any apps on their phone.
18:51:34 And you know, when you get a new phone?
18:51:36 They just load up all these apps, or, you know, and so how do you delete them?
18:51:41 Because I don’t want all these on here.
18:51:45 There are a number of different ways to delete them, and the easiest way is if you hold your finger down on it long enough, you see the app, you hold your finger down on it, it’ll start to move.
18:51:57 And there’ll be a minus sign, and if you press that minus sign, it kills it off.
18:52:02 No, I just did that, let’s see.
18:52:05 I guess you got to be careful there, because they all open up in minuses, and if you hit something else.
18:52:09 Yeah, you don’t want to delete everything, but that’s the easiest way. There are other ways to do it, though.
18:52:12 Yeah.
18:52:15 Okay, well, Steve, I’ll…
18:52:18 rely on you to help me with that, okay?
18:52:22 Thank you.
18:52:26 Uh…
18:52:27 And speaking of Steve, can you hear me? Hello?
18:52:34 us.
18:52:32 Yeah, so I can hear you.
18:52:34 Hey, this is Sherry Hamilton. Steve invited me. I haven’t been to this before, so I’m just listening and I’m going to keep on mute because I have two big dogs that bark at anything that is anywhere within.
18:52:51 hearing distance of them, so I will put this back on… on mute as soon as I’m done, but I just wanted you to know that I’m here.
18:52:58 Okay.
18:52:59 Thank you.
18:53:07 Yes.
18:53:02 Let’s see. I have a question. It’s kind of a simple question, I hope. I’m… We have one desktop computer and I use… I end up using my little iPad that has a keyboard for many functions, but I’m thinking about getting a notebook just so that I have.
18:53:26 more access to a computer. I don’t… especially… anyway, my question is, what is it that… there seem to be a lot of Apple notebooks, you know, the laptops available, different prices starting around $750 or so, and I’m just wondering… what they cannot do that only a computer can do. Is that a good question?
18:53:54 Uh, yeah, in fact, it’s something I wanted to bring up myself.
18:54:00 I’m not in the market for a new computer, because last time I checked, I have something like eight. Um… But, um, um, I was curious about the new Apple MacBook Neo.
18:54:15 mute. Right.
18:54:34 Oh.
18:54:16 Um, I went to… Costco to play with one, and I was quite impressed with what it did. The one that Costco was something like $599 and had a half terabyte drive, um… So it’s kind of in the mid-range of the NEO, and for $599, I was extremely impressed with how powerful it was.
18:54:43 The more expensive ones have different capabilities, like the MacBook Neo, as I recall, has two USB ports, so you can plug a mouse into it, and maybe something else, but not a heck of a lot of things. Now, the good news, bad news, is that’s not really a limitation.
18:55:01 You can go out and you can get these things called USB docs that you can plug into a Neo that allows you to attach a scanner and a printer and a bunch of other stuff. So that is not really a limitation. The half terabyte drive.
18:55:17 Could be a limitation if you shoot a lot of video, or you take a lot of photographs, and so on and so forth, because those things take up a lot of space. Now, the good news there is that if you have a dock, you can also take an external drive and plug it into it, and then you have more storage.
18:55:34 For the, um, for the MacBook. Where it really comes into play that you need a more machine… a larger machine is if you want a larger screen. The Neo has, I don’t remember exactly how many pixels it is, but it’s a fairly small screen, because it’s designed to be a.
18:55:51 a computer for students and easy to carry around on commuter train and things like that. So the screen’s not particularly large. If you want a larger screen, you’re going to need a more expensive MacBook.
18:56:06 If you want more storage, I think the biggest it has is a half terabyte drive. I don’t think it has larger than that, although I haven’t really checked.
18:56:17 If you need more than 8 gigabytes of RAM, you can’t add anything more. It comes with 8GB, and that’s it.
18:56:24 And you would need more memory if you do a lot of photography work, if you do a lot of video editing, if you… if you open up a browser with 40-some windows at once. If you’re using the things that suck up a lot of memory, you can’t really add more memory. So the more memory you’re using.
18:56:45 On the Neo, the slower it will get. But for 99% of the people out there, especially if they have an old Mac that can’t be updated, the Neo looks like a really good deal. If you do a lot of video, if you do.
18:57:03 audiovisual content, uh, if you do a lot of photography and you do editing of photography, you might need a more powerful MacBook. And the MacBook, some of the larger MacBooks also have more than just two.
18:57:19 ports so that it’s easier to plug stuff into them. As an example, um… I have a friend who’s got a MacBook that he has 3 displays. It’s got the built-in display plus 2 large monitors, and you can’t do that kind of trick with a MacBook Neo. But, again, for normal people, the MacBook Neo is quite nice.
18:57:38 Mm-hmm.
18:57:42 I have a Mac Mini, and they start at, like, $599, but it does not have a microphone, does not have a camera, does not have speakers, does not really have anything. You just get a box. You have to add your own keyboard, uh, camera, screen, all of that.
18:58:00 Why did I get the MacBook Mini? Because it’s incredibly powerful. It’s many times faster than a Neo, and I do video, so my MacBook Mini has 24 gigs of RAM, it’s got a 2TB drive, it’s got lots and lots and lots of ports.
18:58:19 I’ve hooked it up to two big displays, uh… It’s… it’s a very powerful machine, and it’s really quite small. So that was my choice, but it depends upon what you want to do. The… The Neo, I really took a liking to, but it’s not something that I would buy for myself.
18:58:45 Okay, thank you very much.
18:58:54 I just want to ask you a question. Why did you decide not to… are you not buying it because you just don’t need it, or…
18:59:17 No. Okay.
18:59:01 Oh, I don’t need it. And if I did need it, I’d need something more powerful. Um, I do a lot of video. I do… I have published just… just for… just for the smug, I’ve published something like 40 videos, and for my church, it’s something like 400 videos, so… That’s a… that’s a lot. Plus, I design websites and do all kinds of weird things that most people don’t do.
18:59:28 So, so just in your opinion, would there be any advantage? Generally speaking, I am not doing what you’re talking about that would be limiting… limited with the NEO. Um… I was doing some phone calling for an organization, and I ran… I was doing it on my iPad, and I was… I ran into a technology issue because I wasn’t able to, um, turn one speaker off and allow another one on, and I don’t really understand what that was all about, but I was able to.
19:00:14 If you can do it on the desktop, you can probably do it on the Neo.
19:00:04 accomplish what I was trying to do by using our desktop. And that was an issue that I just… I don’t really know if you could help me with that, if you would know…
19:00:19 I can’t thank you.
19:00:19 Okay, and would there be… I just wonder about getting maybe a more expensive MacBook.
19:00:28 is…
19:00:28 The thing about the difference between a low-level machine and a higher level machine, in addition to the ports and how much memory and so on and so forth it has, the higher-end machines.
19:00:44 Mm-hmm.
19:00:42 have more longevity. As an example, my spouse had one of the last Intel MacBooks, um, before Apple went to their Apple Silicon. But that laptop I still have today. Why? Because it has.
19:01:00 8 i9 processors in it, and the i9 is the most powerful Intel processor that you can get, and it has 8 of those, so it’s a real barn burner of a machine. It’s not as powerful as the most powerful Macs, but there’s still nothing wrong with it. And because it has an Intel processor, it allows… also allows me to run Windows on it.
19:01:24 Right.
19:01:22 which is not something that most Mac people would ever want to do, but it’s something that I do. So a more powerful machine usually means that you’ll have it longer.
19:01:35 Okay.
19:01:35 But the question is, you can go out and get two MacBook Neos for the price of one MacBook Air, so do you really need a more powerful machine? The difference between a Minneo and an Air isn’t that much.
19:01:51 Okay.
19:01:49 So it might be… it might be what you… what you need. What I would suggest is you go into Costco sometime when it’s not too busy, and just play with it for 15-20 minutes, and see if you… see if the keyboard and the screen size are comfortable for.
19:02:02 Mm-hmm.
19:02:06 for you, and there are some things that you probably won’t like. I can’t stand trackpads, but you can plug a mouse into a Neo.
19:02:15 Um, so just… just go and play with it and see what you think. It’s really hard to… It’s really hard to substitute.
19:02:19 Okay.
19:02:23 Somebody talking about a machine with actually sitting down and playing with it.
19:02:33 So, uh, Jolie…
19:02:27 That’s very good guidance. Thank you, Lawrence.
19:02:31 Yes.
19:02:34 This is Irma. I just wanted to comment on your question and Lawrence’s response.
19:02:35 Yes.
19:02:40 I went from a PC, a desktop, which I love, but I don’t like Microsoft for some reason.
19:02:48 Anyway, um, and I went to a MacBook Pro.
19:02:52 And it almost does too much for me. I don’t even… I mean, I have to take lessons on how to use it.
19:02:57 So my advice is go simple, and then go bigger.
19:03:02 That’s all I have to say.
19:03:10 Um, it’s now 7 o’clock, which means it’s now time for me to start the meeting. One of the things I’m going to do is figure out where my chat window is. I’m going to paste in the, um… URL for the, uh…
19:03:27 Uh… for the attendance form, because I would like to know.
19:03:35 attended. And so if you open up the chat window and it’s labeled down at the bottom of.
19:03:43 The screen is chat. The, uh… attendance form. I’ve now posted.
19:03:55 and… I am recording this, and I’ve got closed captioning turned on, and as long as Zoom.
19:04:03 cooperates and actually allows me to save the session, I’ll be able to post the video of the session on YouTube. A couple things I wanted to mention. One is somebody already asked if Tim Cook was fired. No, he’s not fired.
19:04:19 He chose his replacement, and he’s going to be moving to executive, uh… chairman of the… Apple Board of Directors. I wanted to mention the Apple MacBook Neo, and somebody asked about that. I was also going to mention the Worldwide Developer Conference. Apple has this every year. It, uh…
19:04:41 is going to be held in June, and if I can find… Uh… The link to it… I’ll tell you when it’s going to be coming up.
19:05:02 and things are slow.
19:05:08 It’s going to be June 8th through the 12th.
19:05:11 And on the first day of the, um… of the, um… conference they have, um… a, um… keynote address. It’s going to be about 10 o’clock, usually. 10 o’clock.
19:05:33 um… Pacific time, because Apple’s on the Pacific Coast, and in it they talk about their software developments and so on and so forth. The developer conferences for Apple hardware and software developers, and most of it is highly technical.
19:05:48 But the keynote is basically for everybody, and it’s open, and you can link and you can watch it on your Apple TV, you can stream it on your laptop or iPad. I wouldn’t watch it on the iPhone, because that would be brutal.
19:06:04 But, um, it’s free, and it’s always interesting to see what they have coming up.
19:06:14 I also wanted to show a cartoon, but I’ll show that in a second when I get around to the presentation. Most of what I’m going to talk about today is going to be about artificial intelligence in general, and the first thing I’m going to do is show a video that I created.
19:06:31 So, um… The video is about eight minutes, 15 seconds long. It’s not exactly short. You might have questions. I would recommend that you wait until the end and we can talk about it for the rest of the meeting.
19:06:47 But it’s kind of my view on artificial intelligence and where it’s coming from, and things that you need to… be aware of. But the first thing I want to do is to show you a cartoon.
19:07:01 And so I’m going to share my screen. Yes.
19:07:04 Hey Lawrence, it’s Sabrina. I don’t know if I missed it, because I logged on a little bit late, but did you already start the meeting?
19:07:13 Yes.
19:07:25 Yes.
19:07:13 I’m very sorry to come late to the meeting, but… I’m also at work, so I’ve turned off my camera again, and I really need somebody to replace me, because every single night I work, and I will not be… I won’t be around when the meeting starts, or…
19:07:33 very late to coming to the meeting, so I really do… would appreciate it if somebody could step up and take my place. It’s obviously not hard, but if you’re working nights, it is hard to.
19:07:47 log in. So, having said that, I know you mentioned it last meeting, I did watch it later on, and I don’t know if anybody has emailed you.
19:07:57 Specifically or yeah.
19:08:00 Yes, we we we talked about that during the Q&A session.
19:08:05 Oh, okay. Well, I can rewatch it then. Thank you.
19:08:09 Okay. I’m going to share my screen, and I’m trying to decide which screen I’m going to share. Maybe I’ll share that one for a change.
19:08:23 And… There’s probably nothing terribly interesting on that screen right now.
19:08:28 That’s pretty interesting.
19:08:32 Um… This is the cartoon that I was talking about.
19:08:37 That’s a good idea.
19:08:40 Uh, where is that cartoon?
19:08:47 I lost my cartoon. Oh, here it is.
19:08:55 Now, I cannot see my screen of what I’m sharing, so tell me if you see a cartoon.
19:09:00 Let me see one.
19:09:01 Okay. This is meant to be satirical, but it’s also quite accurate.
19:09:09 It’s not really big enough to oh there it’s get better. Okay, never mind.
19:09:09 Um, the…
19:09:15 The, um… the internet was created as a Department of Defense experiment during the late 1960s, and… The Department of Defense, it was done by the Advanced Research Projects Agency. They didn’t really have enough money to create the internet. So what they did is they farmed it out to a bunch of companies. The companies did various things. And for the first.
19:09:41 10 years or so, the internet was basically the Department of Defense, large companies, mostly telecommunications companies, because they already had networks, and universities and some research firms, and that was it.
19:09:57 Then, um… Under… Al Gore, when he was a senator from Tennessee.
19:10:08 Let me use…
19:10:07 I don’t remember what state he’s from. When he was a senator, he was pushing for the commercialization of the internet, and that’s when it really exploded in size. But even after it exploded in size.
19:10:20 The way the internet is designed is really not controlled by anyone, nor is there anyone who’s actually maintaining it. There are a whole bunch of people who write code, that code does something, people think that’s nice, they adopt it, and then it becomes part of the internet.
19:10:37 But there’s nobody overseeing it. And this is basically how it works. Down at the bottom, there are human beings, there’s the electrical grid, there are telephone companies, and then all the rest of it is basically built by volunteers and people who died 20 years ago, and nobody knows what their code does.
19:10:56 That is the internet. So if you went to know sometimes why the internet looks like chaos, it’s because it is.
19:11:06 Uh, it’s… That’s just the way it is. And I wanted to show this to you, because even though this is designed as a parody, it’s also true.
19:11:16 It is basically just a bunch of stuff out there that somebody thought was a good idea. And now I’m going to show the video that I created.
19:11:29 And… make this big enough. for you to see move that out of the way, which you probably can’t even see. But it bothers me.
19:11:41 Tell me if you can… the first few seconds are silent, but then it’s going to have sound.
19:11:46 And if you can’t hear it… Artificial intelligence in science fiction books and films is devoted to machines that can think, problem solve, and act independently of humans. These machines can be in the form of robots or giant computers, or a combination of the two.
19:12:02 Usually, for dramatic reasons, the artificial intelligences decide that humans are obsolete or a threat to the machines, or blight upon nature and try to exterminate them.
19:12:15 Artificial intelligence research has different origins. Over 50 years ago, NTT, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone started work on speech information processing, spoken Japanese is relatively simple with just 46 sounds.
19:12:32 But the Japanese language is most often written in kanji, a set of roughly 17,500 characters.
19:12:41 To graduate from high school, students are expected to know at least 2,100 kanji, as well as hiragana, a syllabic character set of 46 characters for Japanese words, katakana, a syllabic character set of 46 for non-Japanese.
19:12:59 words, and Roman ju, words written in the Roman alphabet.
19:13:04 Mdt wanted to solve 2 problems. One, have humans be able to write something in Japanese without using a typewriter with 17,500 keys? And two, have typed text translated into machine-generated speech?
19:13:20 These two processes are known as speech-to-text synthesis and text-to-speech synthesis.
19:13:35 Meanwhile, in the Us. Ray Kurzweil, while still in high school, created pattern recognition software to analyze classical music, and then synthesize new songs based on these patterns. After graduating from MIT, he founded Kurzweil Computer Products.
19:13:52 and develop pattern recognition software for recognizing printed text. Now called OCR, or Optical Character Recognition.
19:14:02 Kurzweil used these innovations to create machines that allowed the blind to read books by having the machines scan books and then speak at the text aloud, as well as having the blind type messages by speaking into machines that produced.
19:14:17 Printed text. Hey, Mac, an iPhone, an iPad, or an Apple HomePod is an inheritor of the research by NTT at Kurzweil.
19:14:28 You’re going to ask a HomePod to play Taylor Swift’s latest album, or ask your Mac to read aloud an email message.
19:14:36 or dictate a message and send a Memoji avatar to someone using your iPhone.
19:14:42 You can also create a video which animated figures can teach you about artificial intelligence using LiDAR mapping of your face to texture map a robot, a dragon, a panda, a koala, or a cute tiger over your face as you talk.
19:14:58 Is this artificial intelligence? It takes a staggering amount of computer power and is computationally much more demanding than a text message. But while it might be inspired by artificial intelligence, it is basically more of a sophisticated tool or toy than an example of machine thinking or problem solving.
19:15:21 Kurzweil, by the way, also came up with the Kurzweil curve, a chart that mapped the advancement of computer power to various benchmarks, such as the brain power of a mouse, a human, or all humans combined.
19:15:54 Your Matt can also speak using a wide range of voices with a wide range of accents and cultural attributes. For example, here is the word squim using just a fraction of the voices available on your Mac.
19:16:07 With a full list of possibilities displayed as well.
19:16:11 Circling, circling. Sacram. Second.
19:16:39 In this example, Moira, an Irish woman’s voice, reads the first sentence of the Declaration of Independence. Note that all these voices, Memoji and the video editing, was produced entirely on an iPhone or Mac.
19:16:53 Without assistance from any other source, with one exception.
19:16:58 When in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of nature’s God entitle them.
19:17:13 A decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.
19:17:21 Almost all of the current controversies about artificial intelligence concern derivatives of the text-to-speech and speech-to-text work done by NTT and Kurzweil.
19:17:32 Large language models, LLMs, are essentially massive compilations of how human language is constructed and used. The models are based on the texts of millions of books and countless billions of web pages sucked in and indexed over decades.
19:17:49 Most of the LLMs are based on data compiled before 2020 and know little or nothing about the present.
19:17:57 They also can’t tell facts from fiction, and H.G. Wells novel War of the Worlds is just as believable to an LLM as William Shire’s The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich.
19:18:12 Aside from not distinguishing between fact and fiction, LLMs also pose problems of privacy and security. When you send stuff to an online AI agent, that AI agent retains the information.
19:18:25 which it then uses to answer other people’s questions. You surrender privacy and security to the AI agent.
19:18:34 AI agents are also promoted for their ability to replace people.
19:18:38 While they can’t think and problem solve independently, their facility with language threatens customer service jobs, receptionists, secretaries, computer programmers, and other white collar jobs.
19:18:51 They may not perform these functions well, but they don’t need vacations or salaries or retirement.
19:18:59 Don’t tell an AI agent anything that is private. Don’t mistake a chatbot as a human being.
19:19:08 Be suspicious of online communications, which can include text messages, email, or web pages.
19:19:14 that solicit private or sensitive information or promote unlikely or irrational statements, situations, or forecasts.
19:19:24 Any person you see face to face is usually more trustworthy and worthy of your trust than an artificial intelligence agent.
19:19:33 The one item not produced in this video on a Mac or iPhone was the photo of a puffin using a typewriter with hundreds of keys. That photo was produced by Google Gemini.
19:19:45 It was asked to produce a typewriter with thousands of keys, but stopped at hundreds.
19:20:01 and. I lost my navigation. There it is. Okay, questions?
19:20:13 Yes.
19:20:12 I have one. You mentioned that the AI bot cannot tell fact from fiction.
19:20:20 If you were to ask it what the source of its information is, would it give it to you?
19:20:28 That depends upon the AI bot and having said that, you still can’t necessarily trust it. As an example, um, a, um… lawyer for the current administration, uh, submitted a brief to a court in which it cited a bunch of cases, all of which were made up.
19:20:51 Oh, wow.
19:20:52 When… when they were challenged on this, they asked the AI what was the source, and the source it was giving was made up as well.
19:21:00 Wow. Pretty amazing.
19:21:05 So… well, it’s happened… that was the one that was most famous, because it got blared across a bunch of papers, but it’s happened hundreds of times since then with lawyers citing spurious cases.
19:21:20 And to the point now that a lot of state bars have said that they will sanction lawyers who do things like that.
19:21:28 Isn’t that equivalent to perjury?
19:21:31 No, it’s not equivalent to perjury, it’s equivalent to judicial malpractice, and it’s a violation of their oath. You have to remember that lawyers have to be admitted to the bar, and to be admitted to the bar, that automatically makes you an officer of the court. You’re not paid by the state.
19:21:47 But you’re an officer of the court, and they have rules and regulations and codes of ethics and so on and so forth, and this is considered to be a violation of those. So there have been several lawyers where the sanctions against them were disbarment.
19:22:03 Hmm.
19:22:02 So that sanctions can be fairly heavy, but I’m using that as an example because people think of… of… courts of laws being fact-based. Somebody says something, you have to prove it, you have to give evidence. And, uh, if the evidence is made up, that’s rather difficult to prove. It’s easy to prove that it was made up, but it doesn’t help your case at all.
19:22:25 And as an example, the Secretary of Health and Human Services presented testimony to Congress with a whole bunch of citations for things that were backing up.
19:22:40 his point of view, those were made up as well. They were completely fictitious.
19:22:44 Now that, if it was at a hearing, would be perchery, right?
19:22:58 lying. I’ll just.
19:22:48 It wasn’t a hearing, but the, uh, they didn’t consider it perjury. They considered it to be… Um, I don’t remember what they said, but they didn’t… they didn’t…
19:23:03 his defense apparently was he thought it was real.
19:23:09 Hmm.
19:23:09 But again, I’m not trying to say that AI is evil or you can’t trust it or things like that. I am trying to say that what we currently consider AI, for the most part, is not.
19:23:25 artificial intelligence. It’s a tool that was created to manipulate language.
19:23:33 Hmm.
19:23:34 So if you have a conversation with Siri, Siri was developed by Apple specifically to act as it says, an intelligent assistant. So, if you want to know what time is it, you’ll get an answer. If you want to know what day it is.
19:23:48 Believe it or not, that’s one of the things I’ve asked in the morning, what day is it? Because I’m not working anymore, and one day looks a lot like the other day, so I’ll ask it what day it is, and I get back and answer.
19:24:01 That was designed by Apple for a very specific purpose.
19:24:07 what people are trying to do with AI now, though, has gone way beyond that. For example, Amazon and several other companies have tried to incorporate AI into their customer service. So if you go onto the web and you say, I want to return.
19:24:24 something, the AI bot will ask you, well, why do you want to return it? Do you want a refund? Do you want it in exchange? And so on and so forth. If you go on to the app, if you go onto Amazon’s site, nowhere, if you search through all of their menus, nowhere does it say.
19:24:40 anything about refund. You can return things, but if you want a refund, that’s not given. You have to actually go through this exchange with this bot in order to get a refund. And even then, it depends upon who.
19:24:56 who sold it to you, because a lot of the things sold on Amazon aren’t actually sold by Amazon, they’re sold by a third party. Amazon acts as a marketplace.
19:25:07 Um, and they want to replace the people who used to handle these questions with AI and get rid of those people, because then they don’t have to pay them anymore.
19:25:28 Right?
19:25:18 But it’s designed to be a tool, and what they want to put the tool… what use they want to make of the tool is the problem that a lot of people have. It’s one of the problems that I have with it. I used it to make an illustration. I wanted that puffin with a.
19:25:35 with a typewriter with thousands of keys, I didn’t get it, I only got hundreds, but still, it was a good illustration of why the Japanese don’t use Japanese typewriters, because it’s… it would be impossible. And I’m not an artist, so… Google drew that for me.
19:25:53 But it’s not really artificial intelligence, and it’s really not… problem solving. When I… When I have a problem, usually it’s a problem that I thought up or someone gave me, and then I had to think up an answer. What AI, the currently version of AI does, it goes out there and it looks for previous answers to that question.
19:26:17 And then it offers those, which is not really the kind of problem-solving that I used to get paid to do. Um… And in a lot of places, it doesn’t work. If you have a leaky faucet, AI can’t do anything about it.
19:26:36 there’s good things about AI, like, um, my son, um, travels all over the world hiking and
19:26:43 this and that. And he wanted to… he wanted to minimize his…
19:26:48 uh, packing and all that, so it taught him how to do that.
19:26:51 And then he works for Amazon, and he said… he’s made it through 4 layoffs, which is… he sometimes wishes he could get laid off, because they get 6 months of severance pay.
19:27:03 Plus their benefits for 6 months. But, and he’s sick of working there, but he said,
19:27:10 AI is not going to… he said he predicts that in the next 4 years, or 5 years,
19:27:16 They’ll be rehiring people because
19:27:18 The bots just can’t do what he does.
19:27:22 So, I have hope, but I, um, also am very suspicious about them, and I use AI for book club,
19:27:31 uh, you know, reading books and doing a presentation, or, um…
19:27:36 I look to how do I fix this broken pipe in my house, because I’m alone?
19:27:42 And how do I, um…
19:27:45 you know, you know, fix-it sort of things. They’re real good at that, but…
19:27:50 Otherwise, that’s it.
19:27:54 And I wouldn’t say that AI is helping you fix things. I would actually use the web more for that. The reason for that is that some things offered by AI don’t make any sense. As an example.
19:28:10 Electricity comes in different… there are different ways to measure electricity. You can measure in ohms, which is the voltage that everybody knows about, but you can measure it in amps, which is the pressure of the electricity, and you can also measure it in terms of volts, I meant to say volts.
19:28:28 amps and ohms. Ohms is the resistance. And I was looking at this one explanation of how to fix something, and it did not acknowledge the fact that there’s such a thing as resistance. There’s ohms.
19:28:42 And if you had followed this line of how to fix this piece of electricity electronics, it would have set it on fire because, again, it didn’t know anything about ohms, whereas if you looked it up on the company’s website.
19:28:56 It gave you very detailed instructions on how to fix their piece of equipment. And AI doesn’t necessarily know that.
19:29:05 So what about… is there AI Gemini or something?
19:29:19 Video.
19:29:07 Oh. Gemini basically is an AI front-end on top of Google. Um, and Gemini is what I use to create that… that, uh… uh, drawing. But… When I go into Google and I’m looking for search results, I don’t use Google Gemini because Google Gemini will quite often give you what is the most common answer, which isn’t necessarily the correct answer.
19:29:36 Okay.
19:29:40 Thank you.
19:29:39 Yes, Chris.
19:29:44 Recently, maybe 3 or 4 weeks ago,
19:29:48 I ran into an AI…
19:29:52 assistance, self-identified.
19:29:55 When I tried to call a law enforcement,
19:29:59 A local law enforcement?
19:30:02 Um, entity, and I can’t remember which it was.
19:30:06 But, uh, or why I was calling, even.
19:30:09 But I was very frustrated because…
19:30:13 if you run into it,
19:30:15 as a…
19:30:17 as a blockade for any other kind of…
19:30:23 phone inquiry,
19:30:24 It’s very frustrating because you never get…
19:30:27 You never get any help from it. It’s a barrier to get beyond or try to figure out how to…
19:30:34 get around it.
19:30:36 It’s just there, and it’s no help.
19:30:40 That’s all.
19:30:40 That that is that is one of the complaints about you have to remember the people who decide that they want to replace human beings with with AI. For the most part, they’re not people who are skilled in whatever it is they’re replacing.
19:30:57 They are the financial manager for a company who wants to get more profit so that the stock price goes up, or something like that. It’s not the people actually doing that job. So you’re basically having someone make decisions on what skills they need.
19:31:15 when they themselves are not skilled in the problem that they’re trying to solve.
19:31:20 I don’t know what they don’t know.
19:31:22 Yes, they don’t know what they don’t know. And one of the… one of the complaints about… common complaints about AI, and I’ve had this complaint myself, is AI is a barrier to the solution. If you don’t want 911 to be answered by AI.
19:31:39 Because, you know, your house is on fire. Oh, what kind of fire is it? Well, I don’t care, my house is on fire. Well, you need to tell me what kind of fire it is. It’s a chemical fire, you know, you don’t want to sit there and argue with a robot. You want somebody to show up and put out the fire.
19:31:54 Right.
19:31:55 And companies use… companies are looking to AI as a barrier.
19:32:03 Yeah.
19:32:01 to giving refunds. I can’t remember the name of a movie. It was a, it had… Catherine Hepburn and what’s his name?
19:32:17 Spencer! Spencer!
19:32:15 Tracy, I can’t remember his name. Anyway… sensor tracing. It was a black and white movie about this, um, department store in the 1930s, and people trying to return things after Christmas. Well, stores don’t like people to return things after Christmas because they have to give their money back. So if you have AI.
19:32:36 be the person they have to argue with, the AI can engage in circular reasoning that just frustrates you, and you walk away, and you don’t get your refund.
19:32:47 And companies think that’s a good thing. Now, me as a customer, I don’t think that’s a good thing. So you need to be a little bit skeptical when you’re dealing with AI or with a chat bot or with an automated.
19:33:03 Um, answering system. I don’t know how many of you have ever tried to call up Social Security, but Social Security, trying to get a human being to answer the phone is difficult.
19:33:13 And you don’t want to be stuck in that position. You’d rather a human being answer your question. But for a lot of government agencies, a lot of businesses, they want AI because they… They don’t want to pay people to do those functions.
19:33:29 Right. They don’t want a personal interface.
19:33:34 They don’t want to deal with the salary, the benefits, the retirements, the sick leave, they don’t want to deal with that.
19:33:41 The AI, as long as there’s power, it’ll work.
19:33:44 Which will cost all of us a lot of money.
19:33:47 Uh, yes, speaking of the costs of AI, even if you want to insulate yourself from AI, you can’t. And I’ll give you an example. I have, um… Mike, I have a whole bunch of storage on this computer. It’s like, I don’t know, 30 terabytes, that’s 30 trillion bytes worth of storage.
19:34:09 Well, I have it set up as mirrored storage, so that I take two identical drives, I put them into this box, and when I write something to that box, it writes it on two different disk drives at once, so that if one dies, I’ll still have all the data on the other one. It’s called.
19:34:38 Huh.
19:34:26 Miri. One of my drives is… it’s not… it’s not… it hasn’t stopped working, but I can tell it’s having problems. I wanted to replace it. I cannot buy a hard drive to replace it, because the AI companies have bought up.
19:34:42 The entire future production of hard drives for all of 2026.
19:34:49 And they’ve all… and they’ve bought up most of the memory being produced for 2026. So the price of memory and hard drives has gone up astronomically. This one drive that I paid $200 for last year to replace it today, they went $900.
19:35:06 And I don’t want to spend $900. So the AI is affecting you in different ways.
19:35:13 And isn’t it affecting us environmentally?
19:35:22 Yeah. Right.
19:35:17 It’s infecting us environmentally because it has a huge electronic cost, electrical cost. Washington State, you may or may not know this, we have the lowest electrical prices in the country. We have these big hydroelectric dams that produce.
19:35:32 We’ve got wind farms, we’ve got a little bit of solar, but basically we have the lowest prices in the country. But on the East Coast, they want data centers as well, and on the East Coast, energy is much, much more expensive. The bulk buyers get it at a discount. So what happened is Microsoft and.
19:35:51 Amazon and some others weighing in with these huge bulk buys to buy electricity at a low discount price, and there’s so little left over that the price for average consumers and small businesses has skyrocketed.
19:36:07 This one, I was reading the story in the New York Times about this one family in, um.
19:36:14 West Virginia, the woman has $200 a month as income that she gets from some kind of, uh… public assistance. I don’t exactly… that wasn’t clear in the article. What was clear, that she had a $997.
19:36:31 electrical bill for one month.
19:36:37 And that’s… astounding.
19:36:43 So, yes, it has effects beyond… Um, beyond the individual and it doesn’t make any difference what your attitude is towards AI. It’s expensive. It’s driven up the cost of memory, driven up the cost of hard drives, driven up the cost of electricity, and…
19:37:02 It’s not clear that that many people have actually benefited from it. The cost-benefit ratio for a lot of companies hasn’t shown up yet.
19:37:16 they just… they can’t prove that they’re actually saving money or making money off of it.
19:37:21 Right, right.
19:37:22 So, do you recommend using it? I mean, or what would…
19:37:28 slow all that… that process down.
19:37:35 Right.
19:37:31 Well, what would slow it all down is people being better educated, but that isn’t something that you have much control over. What I… the reason why I did my presentation as a video, I wanted to show you.
19:37:46 What you could do using a Mac and an iPhone without.
19:37:53 resorting to artificial intelligence someplace else. Just on your own phone, on your own computer, I developed that, uh, that, um… that video. In fact, I took a screenshot.
19:38:07 of the, uh… of my, uh… When I was producing that, let’s see, how do I share my screen?
19:38:18 Can you send that to us so we can look at it again, and um…
19:38:22 Oh, I’m gonna post the video, but I want to show you the, uh… Took a screenshot. This is my, uh… iMovie clip. And what I did is I took these little videos.
19:38:36 of texture map video basically pointed my phone at my face. I talked to it, and as my lips moved, it made these little creatures move their lips, and I recorded it on my phone, and then I sent it to myself as a message. And the reason I have.
19:38:52 So many is that there’s a limit as to how long one of these Memoji can be. It’s… I don’t know, 15 seconds or something like that. So when I wrote up my script in advance, I spoke into my phone, I changed the emoji, and then using iMovie, which is on your iPad, it’s on your iPhone.
19:39:14 Couldn’t do it.
19:39:10 Although, you’d have to be real glatton for punishment to edit a movie on your phone. It’s on your Mac, it’s free. I use that to collect the sound clips, which I created on the Mac, and I used, uh… my phone to create the animated talking heads, and that’s how I created the movie. So all this was done on my iPhone and my iPad, and the only part that wasn’t was that photo… that photo of a puffin.
19:39:41 With that huge keyboard. That was done on Gemini, and that’s simply because I’m a terrible artist. But this was all done on my Mac, with the intelligence on the computer.
19:39:56 Hmm.
19:39:55 or on the phone. And that’s… that’s why I did that video. I wanted to show you what you could do without using AI. And another thing to note is that, uh… Uh, when you use Siri.
19:40:09 If Siri can answer your question without talking to the internet, it will.
19:40:14 You can ask Siri what your name is. You can ask Siri what day it is. Siri knows all that stuff. It doesn’t need… it doesn’t need any particular help. If you want to know what the weather is, Siri knows that as well. It doesn’t need to ask the internet.
19:40:29 Why? Because your Mac probably knows that. It can get that from your Mac or your phone. If you have the weather app running, it could figure that out without talking to Apple. When it does talk to Apple, I want it to know when this bridge was built.
19:40:45 There was a story on the news about something, a problem with the bridge, and so I wanted to know how old it was. So I asked, how old was the bridge? Well, Siri inside of my home doesn’t know that, so Siri asked Apple, but it’s important to know how Siri does that.
19:41:02 Siri anonymizes the question. So it doesn’t… Apple doesn’t know that the question came… yeah, yeah, yeah. It doesn’t know — Apple doesn’t know who asked that question.
19:41:17 Apple does a search to find the answer, usually by checking something like Wikipedia or something, and then it sends back the answer. So Apple does not have that information.
19:41:31 Apple has the question, but it doesn’t know who asked it, and it sends me the answer back, and I found out when the bridge was built. So, Apple’s really, really, really invested in making sure that your privacy and security are secured.
19:41:47 When you’re using their automated assistant. Most… well, I can’t think of anybody else who’s doing that. Microsoft is not doing that. Amazon is not doing that, Google is not doing that.
19:42:02 ChatGPT is not doing that. They’re not doing that because they want your answers, they use your questions to incorporate into their knowledge base, and then they feed that back out to other people.
19:42:17 Wow.
19:42:18 Which is why, if you go into Siri on your Mac OS or on your phone, or on your iPad, it’s got a little checkbox that says, do you want to use ChatGPT? And it’s turned off by default. You have to explicitly turn it on.
19:42:37 And at that point, if you want to, then it’ll use ChatGPT, but it’s turned off by default because ChatGPT will not sign up with Apple’s privacy agreement.
19:42:51 There is a rumor. It’s been rumored for some months that Apple is going to partner with Google so that you will have access through Siri to Google Gemini. And Google Gemini.
19:43:06 is like the rest of Google, it’s driven by advertising. They say they anonymize their requests and so on and so forth, but the fact is, if you look at some page on your phone, and then you’re looking at a different page on a different subject on your computer, an ad will come up with whatever you were looking for on the phone, because Google shares that stuff.
19:43:28 I’ll bet you the reason why that’s taking so long is Apple wants to ensure that they anonymize requests made through Siri to.
19:43:38 Google Gemini. Why do they want to do that? Because Apple is invested in security and privacy.
19:43:46 And they probably want to maintain that in any partnership. And Google probably doesn’t like that too much, but on the other hand, Google wants access to the 2.5 billion users of Apple products.
19:44:00 Hmm.
19:44:02 They’re negotiating from a position of strength here. Um, but I’m sure that Google wants to.
19:44:10 See if they can finagle it. But if Apple sends them an anonymous request.
19:44:15 And Google agrees to it, then you’ll have access to Gemini.
19:44:21 But without violating your privacy. Having said that, there are still things you don’t want to do. If you want to write a ransom note saying that you’re holding the neighbor’s German Shepherd hostage unless you get $200,000.
19:44:38 Or 27 Bitcoin or whatever. That’s probably not a good idea to ask for, uh… And artificial intelligence, editing for your ransom note. It’s probably not a good idea. That’s… you don’t want to let the AIs know that you’re committing crimes. For one thing, once it leaves your home and it’s out on the internet.
19:45:04 It’s really easy for somebody to get a search warrant and seize that as evidence, so you don’t want to do that.
19:45:10 If you’re gonna do a ransom note, do it the old-fashioned way. Find a newspaper someplace, cut out all the little letters, glue them, make sure your fingerprints are in the glue, and mail it off.
19:45:25 I could comment on that, but…
19:45:29 Like with Donald Trump.
19:45:29 I think…
19:45:32 I’ve used a… I’ve used it a couple times to write some letters, and it does a great job of writing letters for you by giving it its basic information. It comes out really good. Except the one time when I said, I’d like to write my wife a love letter, so I gave it all the basics and everything, and it came out really good, and I presented it to her, and she said.
19:45:50 Who wrote this? It just wasn’t me.
19:45:56 Bad book.
19:45:56 Man. Speaking of which, that reminds me, I have another demonstration that I was going to show you. And this one is about writing, and I’m going to… share my screen again.
19:46:11 If I can remember where… Oh, there it is.
19:46:16 the stupid… screen sharing, it annoys me because some of the controls in, uh… In, um, Zoom are at the top, and others are at the bottom.
19:46:28 Um, and it’s for the same function. I’m going to bring up.
19:46:35 a really poorly written scientific paper. Can you see the poorly written scientific paper?
19:46:40 Yes.
19:46:41 Okay, you probably can’t actually read it because it’s too small.
19:46:44 Yeah.
19:46:47 Okay, this is on the regression analysis of economic factors influencing immigration rate in Lithuania.
19:46:55 which I know is just hot on the tips of everyone’s tongue is something you want to know about. I’m going to take this opening paragraph.
19:47:03 I’m going to copy it. And I’m going to paste it into pages.
19:47:09 If I can remember where pages is. I can’t remember pages.
19:47:13 Sorry, down here.
19:47:16 pages. Okay.
19:47:22 Yes, open the new version. I should get rid of the old version.
19:47:27 and we don’t want to do that. We’re going to create a new document.
19:47:37 and we’re going to paste in that text.
19:47:44 and I know it’s too small to read, so I’m going to blow it up.
19:47:51 Hmm. I don’t know how to increase the size. Oh, let’s it’s up here.
19:47:58 Let’s make it 200%. Let’s make it 300%.
19:48:04 And here you go.
19:48:07 Okay. Now, this is Apple Pages, and it works the same way in Microsoft, but you can’t do some of the things I’m going to be doing. And it says that this is not a particularly well-written thing suggesting that it becomes a very… it wants an article there, it wants.
19:48:27 It wants to change an article here, it wants to add an article there, um, so on and so forth. But even if you went through and fixed all those problems, it’s still pretty terrible. So I’m going to… highlight it all. Got to come up to this little icon here, which you can’t see very well. It’s called Show Writing Tools Panel. So I bring up Writing Tools, and I say, I want this to be concise.
19:48:53 And I press this, and it thinks about it, and it rewrites it.
19:48:58 more concisely. You see, it’s shorter, but it also reads a little bit better. The paper presents the results, I still need to go through and do some things. Um… to emphasize the immigration rate, reduce the unemployment rate. There’s still things here that I need to do. And the things that it needs to fix are done by… highlights them by underlying them in red, and decrease.
19:49:24 The Gini coefficient, which Gini is a term of Arrington statistics.
19:49:30 This is shorter and it’s easier to read than the original. And this was done in pages.
19:49:36 The important thing to note is that it also took place entirely on the Mac.
19:49:43 Is this artificial intelligence?
19:49:48 I would. I say yes.
19:49:48 Yes, no? This is kind of a borderline, it’s a little bit more artificial intelligence than those texture map on the phone. Speaking of which, I was talking about texture map. If I take out my phone, there’s this little black bar at the top.
19:50:07 That’s got a whole bunch of LEDs that fire off and get the contours of my face, and then when I was talking with a tiger, it painted the tiger over the contours of my face. That’s how I had the tiger top.
19:50:22 using the phone. And if you have a phone that does facial recognition, an iPhone that does facial recognition, you can do the same thing. Send, um, they’re called Memoji.
19:50:33 It’s not a… it’s not a emoji, it’s a memoji.
19:50:37 This is a little bit closer to artificial intelligence, but it’s still using the large language model tools that were developed basically way back in the day by NTT and by Kurzweil. It’s taking what they know about language, and they’re saying, well.
19:50:54 In English, this paper presents the, there really should be an article there. So it flagged that and said, you know, you want to put an article there, and then it suggests to put an article there. But when I told it to do it more concisely, that really is getting.
19:51:11 A little bit up there. It’s something that an editor would do.
19:51:15 Having said that, and having demonstrated, and having… and knowing that this is still.
19:51:20 all on the Mac. Is this artificial intelligence?
19:51:32 Did it independently discover a problem? No, it was built to do this sort of thing.
19:51:40 did it independently solve the problem? No, it actually suggested things, and I had to make the decision.
19:51:48 So it’s not an independent entity that’s going to take over the world and launch nuclear missiles. We still don’t have that. And I’m hoping we don’t.
19:52:02 This is an artificial intelligence tool, but it’s not artificial intelligence. In the classic sense of, can it think on its own? No, it can’t. It’s a tool you still have to do the thinking. And, um… When the gentleman was talking about the love letter to his spouse that his wife challenged and said, uh, who wrote this?
19:52:25 That is the important thing. When you’re using tools like this, you.
19:52:31 The individual still have to make the decision. As an example, a different example.
19:52:39 Um, I can’t, oh, um… There’s a phrase for when you want to rig something up and it’s done in a haphazard fashion. What’s a way to just talk… what kind of phrase do we use for that?
19:52:56 I’m… what I’m looking at is trying to save a way… I want to use the phrase jury rig without saying jury rig. How do you spell jury rig?
19:53:04 Jerry rigged. Jerry-rigged!
19:53:09 J-E-R-R-Y.
19:53:07 How do you spell it?
19:53:12 Not really. It’s spelled J-U-R-Y, as in rigging a jury.
19:53:18 Well,
19:53:19 The Jerry rig is actually a misunderstanding of the original phrase. And it came about during World War II because we were fighting the Jerrys, so jury became jerry rig.
19:53:29 Uh-huh.
19:53:31 I wrote a paper, and it wanted to replace jury rig with jerry rig.
19:53:37 And I said, no. I had to make the decision, no, because I happen to know more about the origin of that phrase than the computer did. But the computer is using these large language models, which a lot of people contributed to, and a lot of people got it wrong.
19:53:56 So what you’re saying is AI could change our language.
19:54:01 Um, I think it already has. I’ll give you my favorite example.
19:54:16 Right.
19:54:08 What city… well, you… I gave you an example when I was showing you that. What city do I live in? I don’t actually live in Scrint, but I live in Squim. How do you pronounce Squim?
19:54:19 CEQA!
19:54:21 Well, that’s the way that it’s written. Um, I have my… I have Siri on my phone is set to use the voice of Moira. Moira was the voice that read the Declaration of Independence to you. Why do I have Moira as my voice on my phone?
19:54:39 I just like that voice, and also, I get a kick out of it every time it mispronounces swim.
19:54:47 Oh, Larry. I had a similar problem with Siri and I told her that she was pronouncing it wrong, that the E was silent. And from then on, she said swim.
19:55:07 Oh, okay. Okay.
19:55:00 Yes, well, in my particular case, I’m using an Irish version of Siri, so I just left it that way because I think it’s funny. But if it is pronouncing it correctly.
19:55:15 if you… if you… there’s a… there’s a… there’s a state right in the middle of the country.
19:55:21 It starts with an M, and the people in the north call it Missouri, and the people in the south call it what?
19:55:28 Missouri.
19:55:28 Missouri. Which… which one is going to win?
19:55:35 Missouri.
19:55:36 I have a theory. People are beginning to pronounce place names.
19:55:43 The way they hear them said in Apple Maps, and the way that they hear them said in Google.
19:55:50 So if you’re using Google Maps, Google will say, turn right on something or other road. Well, there’s this road in Columbia, Maryland. I can’t remember the name of it. It’s named after the developer of Columbia. Columbia was one of the first planned cities in the United States.
19:56:06 And this road is named after that developer. Well, most of the people in town pronounced his name one way, but after Google Maps became prevalent, people started using Google Maps.
19:56:22 After a few years, everybody in town pronounced it the way that Google Maps pronounced it. So… Will AI change the way we look at a lot of things? It already has in terms of pronunciation. We tend to pronounce place names the way that Google Maps and Apple Maps pronounce them. We tend to pronounce a lot of other things the way that the national.
19:56:45 Newscasters pronounce them. The national newscasters are deliberately chosen from the Midwest, for the most part, which is not West, but it is kind of in the middle.
19:56:56 Tom Brokaw was from Texas, but he’s kind of the exception and he even has a Midwestern, more of a Midwestern accent than a Texas accent. We are gradually changing our pronunciation of a lot of things based upon mass media.
19:57:12 In the old days of radio, you heard radio, but you only heard radio for a couple hours a day, and then it was doing something else. With TV, TV’s much more prevalent, and with Siri, and with Google Maps and Apple Maps, it’s in your pocket.
19:57:29 So it’s changing the way. Yeah, yeah, I know. It’s changing the way we pronounce.
19:57:38 place names. And I think in time, it’s also going to end up changing the way we do other things as well, because it’s setting a common standard.
19:57:47 By the way, who are the biggest users of.
19:57:53 of, uh… internet tools in the world.
19:57:58 English students.
19:58:00 Chinese. More Chinese people speak English than Americans speak English.
19:58:13 There are about 334 million English speakers in Japan… in China, and there are about 320 in the United States.
19:58:24 That’s… what?
19:58:24 I have. I have a daughter that’s teaching Chinese children over Zoom.
19:58:30 And she’s got about 20 students, and they’re little kids from 7 to 10, 12 years old. And she’s making living. She lives in Bordeaux, France, and she does it into the folk, the little kids in China.
19:58:44 And she’s doing fine, but she, uh, they’re really into learning the English language there.
19:58:49 Right.
19:58:50 Yes, they’re they’re really into their learning the English language, and I have a friend who lives in DC, and she was born and raised in Maryland, so was her husband. Her child, who is now 8, has attended nothing but Chinese school, so… She’s doing that because she wants to make sure that the child is literate, and what language makes sense in her case, she thinks it’s going to be Chinese. So, there are lots of… there are more English speakers in.
19:59:20 China than there are in the United States, and they’re rapidly becoming a lot of Chinese speakers in the United States and other countries, simply because China is China. And I mention this because when you’re talking about changes that come about, cultural change can come about for a lot of different reasons.
19:59:40 And population is one of them. But the way in which, um.
19:59:45 Apple Maps pronounces place names the way in which Google Maps pronounces place names. I think that’s going to gradually become.
19:59:54 more of the standard. And yes, you will run in things like jerry rig and jury rig.
20:00:05 Simply because language changes over time.
20:00:13 I can’t begin to tell you how many people have said, uh, what was it?
20:00:20 Oh, it’s a it’s an idiom that comes up all the time. People mispronounce the idiom, and they don’t really realize that they’re mispronouncing the idiom. They’re dropping a whole word that changes the meaning, and over time, that’s just the way people talk, and they think that’s… it doesn’t make any sense anymore, because they dropped that one word.
20:00:40 Um, but, um… Um… with, uh, with… The tools that Apple is providing you today.
20:00:50 I’m not afraid of Apple’s technology. I understand how it works, and I also understand that I, ultimately, choose how to use it. If it wants to put a comma, and I don’t want to put a comma there, I don’t. Speaking of commas.
20:01:06 And commas are important to me, because I used to be an editor.
20:01:09 There’s something called an Oxford comma, and an Oxford comma says when you have a string of things, you put a comma in there to separate the individual things, so you don’t end up with strange construction.
20:01:24 Quite often, I will put in commas that Microsoft Word or Pages will say, no, there shouldn’t be a comma there, because it doesn’t require an Oxford comma. But there’s a different kind of comma that I use all the time. It’s an aspirational comma.
20:01:41 People think of aspirational being, it inspires you. But in this case, I mean it allows you to take a breath, an aspirational comment, you put that in a place where it breaks the phrase up so that you don’t lose oxygen.
20:01:55 If you read a long sentence with no commas, you will mentally start gasping for air. So if you put a comma in there, it breaks it up and it’s easier for you to digest. And that’s an aspirational comma. And I argue with pages and Microsoft Word about.
20:02:12 Mm-hmm.
20:02:12 Operational comments all the time. And that’s perfectly okay because it’s my choice. It’s my tool.
20:02:22 Right.
20:02:20 I’m not their tool.
20:02:25 I use dot dot dot instead of commas.
20:02:31 Let’s not editorial right.
20:02:30 Yeah, well, I used to do that when I was… Yeah, I used to do that a lot, but when I actually had to edit a newspaper in a magazine, I cured that myself of that time. This one book, it’s called Sons of the Prophets. It’s a history of Seattle. It’s an actual.
20:02:49 History of Seattle called Sons of the Prophets, spelled P-R-O-F-I-T-S, and it talks about the people who founded Seattle, and they founded Seattle because they wanted to get rich. They would go out and they would do things like round up house pets and sell them as a dog team to people who were going to Alaska. So they have.
20:03:08 you know, these little dogs, little dogs, they sell 12 of them to say, yeah, this is a trained dog team. So this guy spends several thousand dollars to take this trained dog team up to Alaska, and harnesses them all, and the dogs just sit there and look at him like he’s an idiot, because.
20:03:27 Okay.
20:03:25 Yes. So Sons of the Prophets. This guy, almost every single paragraph in the book ends in an ellipses, and after a while, I wanted to set it on fire, but it is a really funny book, and I can actually recommend it.
20:03:40 What’s the… who’s the author?
20:03:41 I don’t remember. I read it 50 years ago, but it’s Sons of the Prophets, P-R-O-F-I-T-S.
20:03:48 Interesting. I grew up in Seattle.
20:03:49 And it’s a history… it’s a history of Seattle, and it’s hilarious, except for the ellipses.
20:03:57 Um, any questions?
20:04:00 No, but a comment. You are just great, Lawrence. Honestly, what a great program.
20:04:08 Lawrence?
20:04:11 Uh, just on the subject of…
20:04:08 I don’t know. Yes.
20:04:14 Uh, pronunciation.
20:04:17 Uh, being, being an English major with history of the language,
20:04:22 courses way, way back in my background. I’ve been noticing that
20:04:28 some broadcasters.
20:04:32 on TV channels have adopted
20:04:36 Occasionally pronunciations.
20:04:40 patterned after UK.
20:04:44 pronunciation.
20:04:47 Yes.
20:04:48 instead of Midwestern or… or, God forbid, any regional taint,
20:04:54 In the U.S., it’s UK, and I… I’ve been…
20:04:58 checking… well, you can… you can Google a word, and then…
20:05:04 with the word pronounced,
20:05:07 Right next to it, or pronunciation, and you’ll find…
20:05:10 All kinds of sources that will tell you… that will sound it out for you.
20:05:16 Um, and I’ve just been astonished.
20:05:21 things I’ve found.
20:05:24 Well, the, um… it’s interesting about that, because with the advent of TV, one of the first TV programs we had that was from outside of the United States was BBC was broadcast, like, an hour a day in the 1960s. My family didn’t have a TV until I went to college, so I don’t know this, but I’ve heard.
20:05:41 that they would have these BVC broadcasts, and people started watching them, and then people started using some British syntax simply because they were exposed to it. And I read a lot of English novels, and I would think I’d see things like whilst, and I’d make fun of my daughter, who lives in England, every time she uses Welts.
20:06:02 Um, so yes, that does… that does exist. I actually bought the Oxford American Dictionary for my phone, because you can get either a British or an American pronunciation for some words. Some words.
20:06:18 in British, they just don’t use those… that letter or something, and I think, why is it there? Like, um… Worcester is an example.
20:06:35 Yeah.
20:06:30 If you look at how it’s spelled and how it’s pronounced, they have nothing to do with one another. And there was this when the Fasham, which was a family name that’s actually spelled with, like, 14 letters, most of which they don’t use.
20:06:44 So it does get interesting. The idiom I was telling you about earlier where it’s changed over time, the idiom is couldn’t care less.
20:07:02 Mm-hmm.
20:06:54 That means that you could not care less, but you hear people say all the time now, could care less, which is not the same thing at all.
20:07:06 But that’s an example of language changing over time.
20:07:11 Lawrence, on that note. You may want to watch David Mitchell’s program about the Queen’s English. It’s a YouTube, he’s got a channel on YouTube, he’s a British comic.
20:07:22 The Queen’s English, David Mitchell, YouTube.
20:07:25 Okay. That sounds worthwhile. If nothing else, it’s something I can send to my daughter to torment her.
20:07:32 He covers that very same thing. that particular idiom.
20:07:35 My daughter. My daughter has three degrees and I only have two, so I, uh… I don’t let that stop me when it comes to making fun of her, but when it comes to language, uh, two of her degrees are in linguistics, so, you know, I have to be careful because she’s the expert.
20:07:56 Any comments about what I’ve said. I will give you a quick summation. One, I’m not afraid of AI. Two, the AI that we’re talking about today is not really AI.
20:08:07 Three, be very, very, very skeptical when you use AI. Remember that you’re in control, and if it’s not the tool that you need for the problem at hand, give up on it. And that includes things like chatbots. When they say that they won’t give you a refund.
20:08:24 If you want a refund, find some way around it. And I’m not saying that sometimes it’s not going to be difficult to do, but you should be in control, not this computer sitting under someone’s desk in Ohio.
20:08:40 Um, any questions?
20:08:47 Okay. As you heard from our president when she stopped by briefly, she doesn’t want to be president anymore.
20:08:56 Do we have any volunteers to be present?
20:09:05 Someone suggested Michael, and I’m more than willing to say Michael can be president.
20:09:12 I think all of us should ask Michael to be president.
20:09:16 Yes.
20:09:12 Did Michael?
20:09:17 Where’s Michael?
20:09:19 He might have dropped out because he was running away.
20:09:24 Oh, no, he’s still on. He’s just being silent.
20:09:26 Yeah.
20:09:28 I agree. Michael… Michael should be president.
20:09:33 It’s like…
20:09:30 How did I get volunteered? What does the president do?
20:09:33 I’m voting.
20:09:35 Oh, this is Michael.
20:09:35 I second the nomination. I second denomination.
20:09:42 Oh, we have a quorum.
20:09:38 I don’t think we have a quorum. There’s more people in the… in the smug group than this, right?
20:09:50 As far as I’m concerned, we have a quorum.
20:09:54 Come on, Michael, give back to the group. We all want you.
20:09:57 What is the president do? I’d have to ask.
20:09:57 Yeah, come on, Michael.
20:10:02 You’re gonna have to change hats, but other than that.
20:10:02 Uh, the president basically… Yeah, that’s about it.
20:10:06 What? What? I didn’t hear that.
20:10:10 So you’re gonna have to change hats. But other than that.
20:10:08 I’m doing the you might have to change.
20:10:12 Oh, I could do that.
20:10:19 Okay. What do we want to do next month?
20:10:16 All right. I think it’s settled, Lawrence.
20:10:22 Can we send you suggestions?
20:10:25 Yes, you can send me suggestions. I will point out that actually, I should look at my calendar.
20:10:32 To be on a trip. That’s going to…
20:10:34 By the way, I just read recently that the new library in Squim is open, so is it possible that in the summer we might have a meeting or two in that library?
20:10:45 Uh, either in that library or at my church, which is another possibility.
20:10:51 Uh… let me go to… May 1, 2, 3. Okay. I’m going to be gone the start of the month, but I’m going to be back well in time for… The meeting. Um, I did go to the new library on their opening day because I wanted my late spouse and I have our names on a plaque near the front door, because we donated to the building, so…
20:11:19 I do feel that we should utilize the building, but I haven’t talked to him about that yet. Um, if you haven’t been to it, it’s well worth the visit. It’s just a… It’s just a pretty building. And it’s got spaces for children, and it’s got a little courtyard outside where you can sit around and read in the sun if you want to. It’s just really nicely done.
20:11:46 But the day that I was there was also full of people, because it was the… it was the first day it was open. So I need to go back.
20:11:55 But I would like to have a meeting in person, either there or at my church sometime this summer. Last year, we… or was the year before last? It must have been the year before last. We had a Saturday meeting.
20:12:14 Right.
20:12:11 Which seemed to work because people don’t like driving at night, and uh… During the weekday, people might be having some else to do, so we had a Saturday meeting, and we had a decent turnout. So, um, that might be what we aim for.
20:12:27 Um, for topics for next month, um… Email me suggestions. This artificial intelligence presentation that I did was based on an email suggestion.
20:12:44 It can be on hardware or software. So, just… Send in suggestions.
20:12:54 Do you have any idea of what IOS 27 is going to look like?
20:13:01 Um… If I did, I couldn’t tell you because I signed a developer agreement with Apple.
20:13:08 Oh, okay.
20:13:08 So, um… I will tell you that according to the news sources, it’s going to have more AI in it, but exactly what that means, I don’t know. I’m hoping that the rumored.
20:13:24 partnership with Google comes to fruition, and I’m hoping that if it does come to fruition, it comes with significant security and privacy controls. That’s Apple’s strength right now, and I’d like them to.
20:13:38 keep that. I myself am quite paranoid. If you saw through the… you could probably see from the iPhone literacy sessions that we had that, um.
20:13:51 I’m really big into paranoia. Paranoia is a good thing. I recently discovered someone who had never put… they had never password locked their phone, and I didn’t even think that was possible until I saw their phone, and their phone is really old and on old versions of iPhones.
20:14:07 Yes, it is possible not to password lock them, but paranoia for something that costs… the total cost of a phone, you go out and buy the cheapest iPhone out there, it’s $2,000. You may not think it’s $2,000, but if you took… have the total cost of your contract over two or three years. It’s about $2,000 and it’s got a staggering amount of personal information. So protect it.
20:14:33 Be paranoid. Don’t give it a simple password. Don’t name it after your puppy.
20:14:39 Um, be paranoid.
20:14:40 So maybe more comment… a class on that would be great, on privacy and, um…
20:14:48 Don’t you agree, you guys? I mean…
20:14:51 All right.
20:14:51 those of us who don’t know that.
20:14:54 What about the, um…
20:14:57 The, uh… oh, now I can’t find the word.
20:15:01 We won’t be able to use, uh, our airport capsules.
20:15:06 with iOS 2.7, is that right?
20:15:10 Oh, you… you… if you have a time capsule, which is the, uh.
20:15:16 It’s an airport router, but it also has a disk drive in it, so you can do wireless backups. The time capsules are formatted with HFS+, which… it doesn’t make any difference what that means. It’s an older way of formatting a drive.
20:15:32 And starting with iOS 7 and with macOS iOS 27 and macOS 27, you’ll not be able to back up to an HFS drive anymore. Hfs is quite, quite old.
20:15:48 And it’s very slow, and it’s got lots of problems, and Apple’s just basically discontinuing it. You can still read things from it, but you can’t. You can’t wirelessly back up, which is a problem for me, because that’s how I have my.
20:16:03 uh, laptop backed up. I don’t plug it in, I just… It just automatically backs itself up wirelessly, and I’m going to have to come up with another solution to that. It’s not a big… problem. But yes, that is something that is coming down the pike, and that might be something that Apple talks about in their keynote in June.
20:16:25 Okay. Related.
20:16:27 Related question.
20:16:29 Um, other…
20:16:31 Legacy equipment.
20:16:34 I…
20:16:37 trips across something that, uh, a neighbor thought they were helping me by giving
20:16:43 To me, which is an airport extreme.
20:16:48 And I… it’s just been sitting in a paper bag for, I don’t know, 5 years or something?
20:16:49 Yes.
20:16:54 What should I do with that?
20:16:58 The airport extreme probably will still work as an airport as a Wi-Fi station. The airport Xtreme, unlike most Wi-Fi routers, actually has a firewall built in. The downside is that if it’s been.
20:17:13 If it’s really called an Airport Extreme, it’s using an older version of Wi-Fi that is quite slow compared to the current ones, and the firewall that’s in it hasn’t been updated in five years or more.
20:17:29 also a problem. When it comes to something I should mention when I’m talking about Wi-Fi speed, you can get Wi-Fi now that will run faster than a megabyte a second.
20:17:40 Um, and it’ll run faster than 100 megabytes a second, which is quite fast.
20:17:46 That won’t make your internet any faster. It means the speed from one machine in your house to another machine in your house will be fast. But your interconnection from your home is whatever your internet provider.
20:18:02 has. And if it’s 10 megabits per second, that’s as fast as it’ll go, regardless of the speed of your Wi-Fi router.
20:18:10 Where it’s important, though, is the newer versions of Wi-Fi, in addition to being faster, also have better security. So a device that supports Wi-Fi 6 and Wi-Fi 7 is actually much, much more secure.
20:18:27 than one that has 802.11. G, which is what older ones have.
20:18:35 Can I put this…
20:18:37 this box in the trash, then?
20:18:46 Okay?
20:18:40 You can put it in the trash, or you can give it to Goodwill. Believe it or not, there are people out there who want those old… they have, like, uh… They have older machines that they don’t… they can’t afford to upgrade, but they need a good Wi-Fi router, and then you plug it in and set it up, and it’s up and running.
20:18:58 So what about the security issue with whoever data is on it?
20:19:07 Yeah.
20:19:04 Um, on the router itself, it’s not going to have any personal information other than someone’s account when they originally set it up. So they… No, and Airport Extreme does not have a disk drive.
20:19:11 So it’s not a backup device like, uh, the other… Oh, okay.
20:19:21 Yeah.
20:19:19 The time capsules have a disk drive, and uh… Um, and I’m going to have to give up my time capsules, because… If I can’t back up wirelessly to them, I don’t need them anymore.
20:19:36 It was interesting, when I got the time capsule, uh, Kathleen had just gotten a MacBook, which is why I got the time capsule, and she wanted to know how she was going to back it up, and I said, turn it on. She turns on her Mac, and I pointed at the time capsule, and it starts backing up.
20:19:52 It was that simple. And without the time capsule, it’s going to be a little bit more complicated to back up a laptop.
20:20:04 Other questions?
20:20:06 I I have one specifically, you know, probably other people won’t be interested in it, but my find my app stopped working on my iPad. I cannot get the thing just to work again.
20:20:20 Um, I googled it, said it’s a common problem with iOS 26, but if I put in 26.2, they’ve found a solution for it. I mean, it’s working fine on my phone, and I did put in the latest, uh.
20:20:37 update, which is 26.4, and it still has that problem.
20:20:43 I don’t have an answer, because I haven’t run into that. I’ve heard of people having that problem. What is the device specific model?
20:20:53 It’s an iPad air. iPad Air 5.
20:21:04 It sounds old.
20:21:02 Huh.
20:21:06 Okay, hold on.
20:21:01 I think. No, it’s not. It’s been a couple of years. I’d say less than a year old, I’d say.
20:21:11 Okay.
20:21:12 Have you… have you shut the machine down entirely?
20:21:15 Yes. Nope.
20:21:26 How do you do that? I went to that, and I couldn’t see how… I went to…
20:21:16 And that didn’t do anything. I don’t have an idea. Um, before you log off, if you haven’t signed in, please sign into the sign-in form, which I…
20:21:32 Chat? No?
20:21:33 Yeah, if you go to the chat, just click on the link there that says forms.gle, and then it’s got an address. Click on that, and it’ll open up your browser window, and there’ll be a form that you fill out with your… Um, with your name and phone and email address.
20:21:56 Okay, thank you.
20:21:59 Any other questions?
20:22:01 Can he delete the Find My and reinstall it?
20:22:04 No, it’s… it’s built into the operating system. It’s considered… It’s not part of the operating system, but the operating system doesn’t want you to kill it.
20:22:13 So another thing that was suggested when I googled it was to reinstall the operating system. And I don’t like the sounds of that.
20:22:27 This… yeah, on an iPad, that’s kind of a problem, because the… the way to reinstall it is to basically.
20:22:38 You said it, yeah. As if you were going to sell it.
20:22:37 reset it, and… And yes, and that’s kind of extreme, unless you’ve got it all backed up on the…
20:22:46 Well, it is backed up on the, you know, on, uh, uh, on the… shoot.
20:22:53 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
20:22:53 In iCloud? Yeah. It’ll take a little while to put everything back, but it’s still kind of extreme. You can reinstall the operating system on your Mac at almost any time because on the modern Macs, one of the OS 27.
20:23:15 Mm-hmm.
20:23:20 Mm-hmm.
20:23:11 The operating system is held in a different part of the hard drive from all of your data. So if you, say, reinstall the operating system, it just writes it to that part. But in iOS, it’s not segregated. It’s segregated that way, but it’s not… You don’t…
20:23:26 User accessible.
20:23:28 you know, the tools don’t exist for you to just write to that part. It wants to redo everything.
20:23:36 Yeah. No, no, I appreciate the the thoughts anyway.
20:23:36 Sorry about that.
20:23:41 I’ll give it some… if… send me a… send me an email, I’ll look into… Um, because not having Find My turned on is not a good thing, so…
20:23:51 And it’s turned on, and I can find it from my phone, but I can’t… Find my phone on it, or anything else.
20:23:58 Yeah, that’s… that’s not good. So, send me an email, and I’ll… I’ll see if I can come up with a thought or two.
20:24:05 Okay, thank you.
20:24:08 And if there’s nothing else, then I want to say goodnight to everybody.
20:24:13 Thank you, Lawrence.
20:24:12 I have a question. It’s got to do with the connection here. I can see everybody, and I can hear everybody, and I think you can hear me, but I can’t see my photo on here anyway. My picture.
20:24:27 It’s on the list, it says my name and then me.
20:24:23 Um, it should be in the list…
20:24:30 and I can see talking about. I can’t see it on the display of the gallery or anything.
20:24:32 Oh.
20:24:36 It’s a nice palm tree you got going there.
20:24:38 So…
20:24:40 Uh-huh.
20:24:41 Yes, yes.
20:24:39 Can you see that? I can’t even see that. I didn’t even know what I had back there. I used to have…
20:24:45 So there’s a bunch of, at least on mine, there’s a bunch of different icons, not icons, but pictures across top of people, and then there’s an arrow at the end of it that you can click on, and that shifts a whole bunch of new people in, so it’s because you can only display 5 at a time on mine, anyway, with my old system.
20:25:04 Well, I see a lot of people’s names on the bottom with no pictures, just names, and I see, but I see about 5 of us now, several people have left. But I’ve never did see my face, and not that I’m egotistical, but I just never saw it. But I could hear you, and you could see me, I guess.
20:25:21 Yep.
20:25:23 Yeah, I don’t have an explanation that, but Zoom is weird, too.
20:25:27 name.
20:25:27 Yeah, I could see you, Joey, on the bottom of the five. You’re the last one.
20:25:34 Yeah, palm trees in the background.
20:25:35 Yep.
20:25:32 Show palm trees in the background. I think that’s what I… I used to have snowstorms back there, but I didn’t change it.
20:25:33 Yeah. Palm tree beach…
20:25:41 Ring time. Okay, I was just wondered, because I… I enjoy the session very much, and I could see everybody talking, but I’m… I know you heard me, but I couldn’t see myself.
20:25:53 Yeah, before you completely log out, you might want to go and check to see that you have the current version of Zoom, which is… 7.0.0.
20:26:02 7.0 point 0.
20:26:06 Okay. I thought I did that before I signed on, but I’ll get checked for updates.
20:26:11 Anyway, I thank everyone and have a pleasant evening.
20:26:13 Oh.
20:26:17 Yeah, thank you, Lawrence.
20:26:18 Thank you, Lauren.
20:26:19 Yeah, thanks, guys. Bye.
20:26:21 Lauren, you’re just the best.

Security, Privacy, and Apple Intelligence

The January 21, 2025, meeting started, as usual, with a Question and Answer (Q&A) session.

Things we talked about in the meeting:

  • Brief mention of the lawsuit against Apple over privacy and security in Siri, and comparison with previous lawsuits against Google and Amazon’s Alexa
  • How Apple handles security and privacy in iOS, iPadOS, watchOS, and macOS
  • Apple Intelligence in action: Image Playground (on iPhone, iPad, Mac)
    • Not the same as Apple’s Playgrounds app (a free application for teaching the Swift programming language)
  • Comparison to Microsoft, Google, and Adobe AI efforts
  • Apple Intelligence in Apple Mail, Apple Messages, Apple Photos, Apple Pages
Apple Intelligence logo

Video recording of the meeting

Click on the YouTube logo for a full-screen view.

Transcript of the meeting

Use your browser to search for specific words or phrases if you don’t want to read everything.

18:33:22 Getting back to what I was talking about earlier.
18:33:28 You were recording in time lapse and the way to fix that is to open up the video in iMovie. And I don't know that you can do this on a phone. You might have to do this on a on a computer, open it up in iMovie and go into
18:33:46 I can't remember where it's located. There's one of the menu options about the video And if you play it, if you tell it to slow down the video it'll stretch it out again.
18:33:59 So that it doesn't you don't you're not showing several minutes worth of stuff in 18 seconds.
18:34:07 Yeah.
18:34:07 But, um. Imovie can both slow down the video as well as speed up a video.
18:34:14 I see. Okay, I'll give that a try. Thank you.
18:34:14 And… And also one other thing is if you're going to share it with her or you're sharing it with anybody.
18:34:24 When you are done modifying the video. Go to the file menu and export it and export it as an MOV file, as an M4V file.
18:34:36 File, not as an infinite. As an MP4 file.
18:34:41 The reason is that MOV files are proprietary to Apple. And while a lot of video things will accept them now.
18:34:52 Your average PC user probably won't be able to read it.
18:34:57 And so if you export it to MP4.
18:35:02 Then at that point, everybody can that can see it.
18:35:07 Oh.
18:35:08 The mov file format has a lot of special things like the slow down, speed up and other things that other movie formats don't support.
18:35:19 So um exported as an MP4.
18:35:24 Before I put our stuff up on the website, which I admittedly haven't done in a while, but I'm going to in the near future.
18:35:31 I exported as an MP4 so that I can upload it to YouTube or send it to somebody MP4 is not as compact.
18:35:42 Is MOV. So the file get larger, but at least people be able to see it. And I'm sorry disappeared there.
18:35:53 Oh, I'll just ask you real quickly, though, if she has Apple products would it work with the mov File.
18:36:04 Okay.
18:36:01 It'll work with the MOV or the MP4. The apples are fairly much format agnostic.
18:36:10 I do all my video editing on a Mac because it's much, much, much more flexible than doing it on a Windows machine, our church We stream our video and we put it up on YouTube, but I do all that work from home.
18:36:27 I see.
18:36:25 I don't do it at the church. It drives you nuts to try and do this on a I don't know, Windows machine.
18:36:35 Well, boy, you know, we just I just want to state our appreciation for you. Both George and I think it's just fabulous that you're that you continually meet together with people who are interested in learning and sharing information.
18:36:53 And the fact that you're even open to some of these questions that come up which may be really, really at the bottom level of understanding. We just appreciate you, Lawrence.
18:37:05 Thank you.
18:37:06 I've been doing this for a long time. Kathleen and I started the South Bay TRS-80 users group.
18:37:18 In 1977. A long time ago. We were both much younger.
18:37:20 Oh my goodness.
18:37:25 Yeah, yeah. You've had a long journey together. Yeah, thank you.
18:37:29 Yep.
18:37:31 Okay, I'm going to go ahead and mute myself and turn the video off, but we're here.
18:37:36 Okay.
18:37:37 Will be listening.
18:37:41 I need to do something, which is what I want to turn that on.
18:37:46 And I want to turn on that. So that I… And… Before someone asked, I forgot to… make a sign-in sheet, I think.
18:38:03 So let me check that quickly, but I don't recall that I did so. I might have surprised myself and done so.
18:38:20 Yeah, I didn't. Oh, hell.
18:38:30 So much for bookkeeping. We're in the middle of the question and answer session after a short brief pause because the internet went out.
18:38:42 Anybody have a question?
18:38:45 Well, go ahead. Go ahead.
18:38:45 Yes. Lawrence, what speed do you get on your computer?
18:38:53 Generally. Yes.
18:38:54 Are you talking about internet speed? I'm paying for one gigabyte download and 30 megabytes upload, which doesn't really have anything to do with reality it's about If I'm lucky, it'll be around 400 megabytes download and 30 megabytes upload.
18:39:17 Quite often less than that. 30 up.
18:39:20 30 up you said.
18:39:24 To reasonably upload a video to somebody you can't really do so with less than about 10 megabits. I shouldn't say megabytes to 10 megabits per second.
18:39:35 Is about is slow as you can go to upload a video without someone dying of old age in the meantime.
18:39:45 It just takes a long time. Megabits per second And you divide that by eight, that's how many megabytes so 10 megabits per second is about one megabyte per second.
18:40:03 1,000 megabits per second, which is what gigabyte is. You divide that by 10 and that's about 100 megabytes per second.
18:40:14 Theoretically. And in practice, there's a lot of stuff that goes on to slow it down.
18:40:22 Kathleen and I noticed that every day between about Oh, six and eight, we will lose the internet for a while.
18:40:33 And that's not unusual. The reason is that everybody starts using the internet.
18:40:39 Around six to eight local time. And most people do not have a path to the internet straight from their computer to the internet, it goes out to a concentrator for an entire neighborhood.
18:40:53 And so that entire neighborhood goes out at once. When we were on the East Coast.
18:40:58 I once, back in the days before they had better security.
18:41:01 I found out that there were 255 people in our neighborhood, which is the maximum number that you can have in a local cluster.
18:41:10 So when they would come home at 5, 36 o'clock. Things just went down to a crawl.
18:41:17 But on the East Coast now you can get fiber link internet, which is a gigabit up and a gigabit down.
18:41:27 I don't expect to have that. On the peninsula before, say.
18:41:38 Right.
18:41:35 No, 2050 or something. One of the things that The new administration wants to do, for example, is to get rid of the subsidy for rural internet.
18:41:49 There's been a subsidy has been available for like 10, 15 years And one of their proposed savings is just to get rid of that.
18:41:57 So I don't think that things will get better anytime soon.
18:42:03 Well, what about the thing that musk has? Is it Starlink or something?
18:42:10 What's funny?
18:42:09 Starlink is, like a lot of things, is downlink um oriented. Dish has satellite downlink But it's down link only.
18:42:21 To in DISH if you go if you want to send something back, you send it over your telephone line.
18:42:27 And over your telephone line, basically you're going at modem speeds from the 1990s.
18:42:33 So, um. In terms of upload with Starlink it's really next to non-existent. If you think about it.
18:42:42 To run and to run a internet peering environment, that's where a whole bunch of cables come in and it sends it out to everybody over the neighborhood.
18:42:52 That's usually done with a router that consume several thousand watts. Satellites You have a powerful satellite, if it's 10 watts They're just very low wattage.
18:43:08 So essentially, the wattage of the of a light bulb.
18:43:14 Is what powers the satellite. So you're sending that very faint signal down with low wattage to the ground Where it's then amplified and distributed.
18:43:24 That's okay going one way, but when you have a whole bunch of signals coming the other way, it can't possibly handle it. So satellite is satellite is is not really a two-way communication. It's basically one way. The weather satellite beams down
18:43:39 Photographs and video of the Earth. But if we tried beaming that stuff up to the satellite, it would just clog it.
18:43:48 That's why for satellite television.
18:43:51 There's one beam coming up and one beam going down. And once it hits the ground and that one beam coming down is distributed.
18:43:59 But there's very limited amount going back up. And even today, most satellite TV really isn't satellite TV. It's coming over.
18:44:08 Ground or suburbs. Oceanic cables or something like that. It's not really It's not really coming from the satellite. The satellites are distribution points.
18:44:20 Gps, for example. In order for GPS to work on your phone, you have to have a minimum, I think, of five satellites that it can reach at one time.
18:44:31 And most often the seven to nine, if you're closer to the equator than we are.
18:44:37 And it's takes those very minuscule amounts of information that's getting from those to figure out where you are. But you're transmitting nothing the other way.
18:44:50 So satellite is basically just one way.
18:44:54 Yeah. Well, they didn't say anything about the ups and downs of it.
18:44:58 You know, I mean, I heard about you know I'm always complaining about speed
18:44:59 Well. If you're sitting… Yeah, but if you're typing a message And then you press return to send a response, that's upside.
18:45:11 Yeah.
18:45:10 It's not going to the satellite. It's going over a modem or if it's going over some cable someplace, it's not going to the satellite.
18:45:16 So Starlink wouldn't do you any good at all. Right?
18:45:20 It's good if you're doing something to receive content. Like, for example, television programs that you dish works fine for that. But in terms of sending signal back. No, it doesn't work.
18:45:33 Right. Right. Well, there are also…
18:45:35 Most people are really happy with it though, aren't they? Sterling.
18:45:38 Which? Yeah, but most people just consume content.
18:45:44 They just, they're not really doing anything they're not replying to anything.
18:45:43 Oh, yeah, that's true. Yeah.
18:45:49 Now, you don't happen to have a really good Verizon signal where you are, do you?
18:45:55 I have a good Verizon signal because I have my phone use Wi-Fi.
18:46:02 So when I'm in my own home, I can get a good Verizon signal, but that's not because it's coming over the air.
18:46:08 It's coming over a cable. When we…
18:46:10 Right. Yeah, yeah. So Verizon has a really good that that uh internet package that they offer separate from the phones is Working really good here so man it's cheap, relatively cheap. I have Verizon service from my phone so it costs $45 for a good package
18:46:33 Yeah, a lot of people that I know who live in cities, they also like the T-Mobile.
18:46:33 You know, more speed
18:46:40 Yep.
18:46:39 But do you have to live in a city that actually has a good T-Mobile infrastructure like Chicago.
18:46:46 But… That was one question that somebody wanted me to talk about was what was a good cell phone service and what was a good internet service locally?
18:46:57 And the answer is I can't talk about that because i can't talk about Unlike the East Coast, it's not flat around here.
18:47:04 And what works for me, I live in sunland won't work if you live up on Bell Hill. And if you live up on Bell Hill, it's not what somebody in Carlsberg can do. And if you live in Carlsburg, it won't help you out.
18:47:18 Someplace else. It's just it's extremely episodic. If you go online and you say, what are the best internet providers in swim and you get this list, all of that's paid advertising. It's not based on anything at all.
18:47:35 And some of the people that appear in those listings don't even have service locally.
18:47:40 So the answer is you're pretty much have to try it. Talk to your neighbors and see what they say.
18:47:49 Because there's no way I can give you a way There's no way I can give you a… a good answer.
18:47:58 If you live in Squim, there are certain few blocks downtown. And when I say few, like 20 blocks downtown where you can get high-speed cable from a company Nicola or something like that.
18:48:13 Every time I see the name, it reminds me of the cough drops.
18:48:18 They have good high speed cable. And also, if you live in Squim, Olipin is a good source. It's not cable. What they do is they put a a dish on your dish on your house and you get and you
18:48:32 Basically a microwave link. To wherever their local transmitter is. And depending upon whether or not there are buildings and trees in the way.
18:48:41 Olepen may not be able to do anything for you. Those are two examples that work, but only if you're in Squim.
18:48:50 If you live… someplace else, your best bet is just to talk to your neighbors and see what they say.
18:48:59 We're not going to get good self service on the peninsula. We're not going to get good internet service on the peninsula.
18:49:07 And a lot of that has to do with the fact that, let's put it this way.
18:49:11 Victoria B.C. Has more people just in the town of Victoria than in all of Clallum County.
18:49:19 And Clallam County goes from
18:49:24 I can't remember the name of the little village It goes, anyway, 70 miles from here to the to the Pacific Ocean. And there are 70,000 people we probably have a lot more deer than that.
18:49:36 And deer don't use the internet. You know, we just we're just not a big market.
18:49:44 That's one reason also why. When somebody wants to know how long does it take to get from Seattle over here, I say, well, if the wind's blowing, it could take hours.
18:49:53 Because you've got the fairies to contend with and you might close the bridge and we might have an avalanche or mudslide or You know, we just We're not in a metropolitan area for which I am very grateful But when it comes to
18:50:10 Cell service and internet bandwidth, there's just no
18:50:13 Nothing has passed in Washington. When we moved here because the speed limits were so slow, when we first moved here just coming into the state of Washington, you know, I couldn't in the highway and I could only go 60 and stuff like that. And I said, and then you get here and all the water, like you said, and everything.
18:50:34 Yeah, we're about 35 miles or so from Seattle. However, it takes, you never know.
18:50:47 Yes.
18:50:39 Yes. My mother kept on trying to get me to invent a Star Trek transporter pad because then she could have gone to visit my daughter in england She could have visited my brother Alexandria, Virginia, she thought that was a good idea.
18:51:00 But I wasn't able to quite manage that.
18:51:05 Lawrence?
18:51:08 Yes.
18:51:05 Lawrence, I have a question. I remember quite a while ago, we were talking about copy machines.
18:51:14 And you said instead of dealing with their software you connected them to something on the computer. What did you do and how do I do that?
18:51:26 Oh, um… If you have a printer.
18:51:32 Mm-hmm. Yeah.
18:51:32 Most printers have a copy function. So you just go there you put the whatever it is you want copied down and you go to the copy menu item press it say how many copies you want and copy it.
18:51:47 The um If it has a sheet feeder, you can even give it a stack of things to copy and press copy and it'll copy the entire stack.
18:51:56 So I don't use copy machines at all. The other thing.
18:52:01 Okay, and what i'm trying to do is I'm trying to copy something and download it to my files.
18:52:10 And I'm having trouble doing that. It doesn't it doesn't it will it will scan it But it won't download it.
18:52:21 So I'm wondering if there's some kind of trick or something.
18:52:25 Cindy.
18:52:26 Actually, there is a trick. Maybe. It depends upon how new you're new computer is and how it was cooked up to how it was hooked up to your printer.
18:52:38 I have… two printers. And I did not use the software that came with them.
18:52:46 I used, I just hooked them up. And then I told Mac that Mac software to talk to them. And in the setup, one of the things you can do is you just tell it.
18:52:57 You find the… printer on your network and ask it to install a driver on your computer for that printer.
18:53:09 Dior Mac ships with thousands of print drivers for all kinds of printers. And you find the one that matches or the one that's close.
18:53:18 And you're up and running. If your printer is also a copier, it'll also do scanning And to scan it, you use simple text. Actually, it's called Preview now. Simpletext was an old name.
18:53:31 Preview.
18:53:31 What is it?
18:53:36 Yeah.
18:53:36 Let me show you. Let me find something to print.
18:53:43 First of all.
18:53:59 Okay. Let me… share my desktop.
18:54:09 Yeah, go ahead, let it do that.
18:54:16 First of all, go to settings And in settings If you go down to printers and scanners.
18:54:25 You tell it to add printer or scanner He goes out and looks. Yeah, go ahead.
18:54:31 It goes out and looks on your network to see what it is. You say that you have something that tells you what it thinks it is. You say add it.
18:54:38 Well, they've already added it, so I'm not going to do that.
18:54:47 Mm-hmm.
18:54:41 Instead, I'm going to say that I've already added those I'm going to go down and preview allows you, if you look at a photograph.
18:54:53 It opens in preview. So we're not going to use it for that. We're going to go up here to the file menu and say.
18:54:59 Import from scanner And Rachel is the name of one of my printers.
18:55:06 That I hardly ever use it for printing. I use it for… scanning mostly.
18:55:14 And it's doing an overview scan and it goes and does an overview scan.
18:55:23 And so I go then and I select what I want scanned
18:55:31 I draw a little box around what I want scanned and I say scan And when I'm scanning it, I also have a different things that I can do. In this case, I want to save it as a PDF So I say scan
18:55:47 And it goes and scans it. And then I say save By telling it to.
18:55:56 Save and it's uh Wicked.
18:56:02 Media card.
18:56:07 And then… I go find my scanned item.
18:56:16 And it's hiding behind something that I saved here. Oh, it saved it in documents.
18:56:23 If you don't tell it not to, it'll save it in documents.
18:56:33 Actually, I don't know where I'd saved it. If you don't know where something's saved, you just go through this Same pre-process again say
18:56:47 Actually, I just tell it to go find it.
18:56:59 It didn't work. Why didn't it work?
18:57:02 Could you put this step by step in the newsletter?
18:57:06 If someone reminds me.
18:57:10 Because I'm always wanting to put something in them.
18:57:16 Printer and mail it to somebody you know And…
18:57:26 I spent 20 hours getting it done that I don't know the steps that got me there.
18:57:26 Okay.
18:57:30 So here is my Wikipedia. Friends of Wikipedia card.
18:57:37 Wikimedia is the company behind the nonprofit behind Wikipedia. And I donated money to them. So they sent me a card.
18:57:46 Which they don't normally do. I'm kind of surprised they did this. Probably because they want more money.
18:57:52 But that was a physical object that now I have something I can send out to people.
18:57:56 And when you save it, you can save it also as a JPEG in case if it's If it's a…
18:58:10 If it's a photograph that you want to save as something but if you if you Send me a message. I can see if I can… write out the steps and put them on the on the website. It's it's not all that complicated.
18:58:28 But the first time through, it's less than intuitive, I will admit.
18:58:34 You're looking at, especially since one of the tools that i use preview people normally look at if you click if you click a… photograph for example And… Here's a photograph. It comes up and it opens in preview. Preview is the program that just opened that thing.
18:58:57 Which is something I wanted to talk about today, by the way.
18:59:01 I've got to show my screen so you can see what I'm talking about.
18:59:07 So Lawrence, would she be able to use the zip drive in her printer?
18:59:08 This? Yes.
18:59:13 And then just take it to her. Computer.
18:59:17 A zip drive or maybe if she probably doesn't have a zip drive. Zip drives don't exist anymore.
18:59:22 Oh. Oh.
18:59:23 It might have a CD, I might have a sd card in some printers, but those are actually fairly rare.
18:59:33 I practice.
18:59:33 Image is being shown in preview and preview is if you take a screenshot or something and click on it, that's what it opens up.
18:59:43 And reason, I wanted to show you this cartoon because it's something that you should keep in mind.
18:59:49 A lot of people when they when they say that you are the product and they're talking about Twitter and Facebook and so on and so forth.
18:59:58 What they're saying is that basically is saying Twitter and YouTube and not so much YouTube Twitter and Facebook and so on and so forth.
19:00:09 They make their money by selling your content. And the content that you provide them is your name, your contacts, your friends.
19:00:18 Your purchase history, your advertising preferences and so on and so forth.
19:00:24 This cartoon is saying that you are not, this device is not your device.
19:00:31 You are the products, you are the devices device it owns you, which is somewhat cynical but also somewhat true.
19:00:42 And I just thought I'd share that with you because it cracked me up when I saw that.
19:00:50 We are at the end of our… Q&A questions period but if anyone has one more question, I'll try it.
19:00:57 Yes.
19:00:57 May have one. Are you aware of a problem with CarPlay in the iPhone?
19:01:04 Where if you ask Siri to play a playlist It just plays some random song and ignores your comment.
19:01:13 And that's been going on. I went on the internet And I Googled the problem and it turns out a slew of people have the problem.
19:01:23 And it goes as far back as IOS 17 and a half.
19:01:27 And it's still present today in 18.2.1.
19:01:31 Yeah, the problem with that is that when you
19:01:38 Apple uses car parlay so you can do things like tell it to play Taylor Swift or something like that.
19:01:46 When it comes to When it comes to playlists though, that's much, much, much harder.
19:01:53 Taylor Swift, if you If you download a Taylor Swift song and it's on your phone, you tell it to play Taylor Swift.
19:02:02 The metadata, the information that tells that what Taylor Swift is, is embedded in the song.
19:02:11 So when you download Taylor Swift to your iPhone. It knows that that's Taylor Swift because Apple's metadata says so.
19:02:20 But if you say, play my Sunday afternoons playlist, it looks through your metadata and it can't find that because it's not really on the device that's in your That's in your own part of the operating system.
19:02:33 Supposedly
19:02:38 There's two parts of the operating system. There's the part that belongs to Apple, and Apple uses it to talk to its stuff.
19:02:45 And there's your stuff. And Apple can't touch your stuff. And the reason is that it's the only way to protect you in case someone seizes your phone.
19:02:58 So if somebody takes your phone They might have the phone, but they can't touch your stuff.
19:03:05 And neither can your car. And this came up because this came up because a security engineer was going down the road one day Security engineer at Apple was going down the road one day And his kid said.
19:03:21 Play such and such. And it played this kid's playlist that he didn't even know was on his phone.
19:03:27 And the security researcher said. That is not a good thing.
19:03:33 Because other people would do things like they knew that they'd steal someone's phone, they wouldn't give them his password.
19:03:40 And they beat him up and he still wouldn't give him the password, but they knew he was girlfriend with Gina. So they call Gina. Anyway, call Gina and say, Gina, I lost, you know, soon I lost my daughter because he's telling me the password to my phone and they give him the phone.
19:03:57 So Apple said, your stuff is completely under your control.
19:04:03 Apple can't touch it. And when you say play Taylor Swift, okay, I can do that.
19:04:11 When you say… Yeah, but if you say play the Sunday playlist, nope, not going to work.
19:04:10 Yeah, that works fine. That works fine.
19:04:17 Yeah, the only problem is the only problem is If you're alone in the car to play a playlist, you have to manually click on one of the songs in the playlist and it'll play the rest of the playlist automatically but
19:04:33 That's not a good thing if you're driving and you want to just have Siri do it and you can't.
19:04:40 Yeah, my solution is not something that Most people will go with because most people will go with because It costs money and that's how I use XM Radio.
19:04:53 And unless I'm on a ferry or in a tunnel or something.
19:04:51 Oh, okay.
19:04:56 Or if I'm going through a Are there tall trees or going through a valley or lots of other exceptions. It works fine.
19:05:04 Right.
19:05:06 It was kind of a shock when I moved back from Japan because in Japan.
19:05:10 All of Japan can be covered by one satellite. One TV satellite, one radio satellite.
19:05:15 Hmm.
19:05:17 So if you go anywhere in Japan, you can listen to the same radio station anywhere in Japan.
19:05:26 Right.
19:05:22 You don't ever have to switch it to the local channel, especially when I was in college going between here and Washington State University. I'd have to switch the radio about a dozen times to get up.
19:05:33 Right. Right.
19:05:33 A decent signal. Well, in Japan, anywhere you go in the entire country one You just leave it on the radio station that you like.
19:05:42 In the UK, where basically BBC, leave it on the same channel.
19:05:48 In the United States, it doesn't work that way. So when XM Radio came out, I was on the East Coast.
19:05:53 I went for that in a heartbeat. But it doesn't provide you the same richness that you can provide with your own playlist on your own phone.
19:06:03 Right.
19:06:05 If they give you that, if they give voice access to that They can get voice access to too much else.
19:06:13 And so Apple said, no. Also, the National Transportation Safety Board said, not a good idea.
19:06:21 Because again, if it's a two-way thing. As you're traveling down the road.
19:06:29 You're the um you're the your phone is also picking up local things from the environment and putting them up on the screen. Like, for example, it'll tell you that the speed limit dropped from 30 to 20 when you're in 10.
19:06:40 Right, right.
19:06:41 You have it on there. So it's getting information from the outside world. And the National Transportation Safety Board doesn't want people to mess with that.
19:06:49 So it very much is limited by the government for safety reasons.
19:06:54 And it's limited by Apple for privacy and security reasons.
19:06:59 Though Apple is never going to fix that issue.
19:07:05 I wouldn't say never, but until they can figure out a really clever way of insulating it in such a way that it can't mess with the car And it can't mess with your privacy and security.
19:07:18 They probably don't consider it broken. There are lots of things that you may think are broken because they don't work the way you want.
19:07:26 Right.
19:07:25 It doesn't necessarily mean that Apple thinks they're broken because As you can tell just by their computer ads.
19:07:32 What they sell a lot of is convenience, but they also stress privacy and security.
19:07:40 Right. Thank you. That explains a lot.
19:07:43 Yeah, probably not what you wanted to hear.
19:07:48 One last thing.
19:07:47 I have another iPhone question. And that is, I recently, I have an iPhone 16 and I recently did the update.
19:07:56 That they suggested was necessary. And I've lost Siri.
19:08:03 I mean, she doesn't answer me anymore. So I wondered if anybody else had that problem.
19:08:08 Um. I haven't had that problem, but I suggest that If you go into the settings and just look for the setting for Siri as well as the setting for Apple intelligence You might want to look at both of those.
19:08:24 Okay. Okay.
19:08:26 Apple intelligence. Works with Siri in 181 a little bit different than it did Prior to that.
19:08:33 Yeah, I did that earlier and I could make her she wouldn't talk out loud. I could access her by pushing the button on the side.
19:08:42 Of my phone and saying hey siri she would be there, but she wouldn't talk.
19:08:47 And I asked, you know, just have asked So.
19:08:50 Is it possible that you might have turned the volume down?
19:08:52 It's… No, but I'm going to do what you said.
19:08:58 Yeah.
19:08:59 I might just go up to Verizon, which is where my carrier and just say Help me, guys.
19:09:06 I will warn you something about the Verizon store. And in fact, all the local phone stores.
19:09:12 They're not actually run by Verizon or AT&T or anybody. They're run by a contract.
19:09:18 A contractor and they only get paid if you do something that they make money from. So if you go up there for general questions. Sometimes they're just not going to be particularly helpful.
19:09:32 Because they don't get reimbursed for that.
19:09:36 Okay. Thank you. Yeah.
19:09:42 Is Apple ever going to learn how to alphabetize Is there a reason they don't?
19:09:47 If you're talking about things like titles. Probably not. I used to work as a librarian book titles are alphabetized by something called the Anglo-American cataloging Rules. So for example, if you're Title is The Great Gatsby. You don't put it under thee you put it under
19:10:12 Great and a man for all seasons is under man not a And you have MC and then MAC was a person's name.
19:10:24 Are both alphabetized as if they're MAC. Makes great sense for books.
19:10:31 Apple doesn't do it that way because And they really can't.
19:10:38 There's a technical way that they could do that sort of thing But it would take forever. The other thing is that in terms of Apple actually does a really good job of alphabetizing for most things quite well, because unlike the American
19:10:58 The ASCII american standard code for information interchanges, which is what computers use for assigning characters.
19:11:08 An uppercase a is a 65, a lowercase a is a 97.
19:11:12 So if you computerize things, if you tell the computer to alphabetize things.
19:11:17 It'll have things that are all uppercase at the top and things that are all lowercase down at the bottom.
19:11:22 Apple doesn't do that. So they're really good at alphabetizing. But when they're coming to things like names and titles.
19:11:31 No, it's… That's a…
19:11:33 Well, when I first got an Apple computer, which was in 2010, and right off the bat like on the internet, you find something and you, oh, I want to keep this article and what do they call that and you could
19:11:46 Throw it in there. Just tap it and it would save it for you. But it wasn't alphabetized.
19:12:01 Oh, actually they can do that kind of appetizing almost instantaneously.
19:11:53 And I thought this was so great for just a little while then I had such a long list. And then I'm having to drag everything and And I've…
19:12:08 Oh.
19:12:08 I shall show you because I need to move on to the demo and I'll I'll do that as the first part of the demo.
19:12:13 Okay.
19:12:20 I need to. You probably can't see these, but I've got these things on the screen that are kind of messing with me.
19:12:28 So… I have to move them out of the way.
19:12:34 I have a folder here called AI Illustrations. Actually, that's not
19:12:42 That's not what I wanted.
19:12:59 Here we got things in alphabetical order. If you click up here, it's alphabetical order by either ascending or descending by name If you go over here, it does it by date modified. Here it does it by kind.
19:13:13 I'll give you a more extreme example.
19:13:28 Here they're oftentimes by name. I click on it again. It doesn't in reverse alphabetical order.
19:13:33 Here it does it by date. Here it does it by size.
19:13:39 Here it does it by kind. And you can even do it by color.
19:13:40 Okay.
19:13:48 Right.
19:13:44 You notice that I have these little green And blue dots, well, that's by tags. I can go through here and I can just make a tag for this particular thing.
19:13:54 I don't want to mess it up because that actually tells me something.
19:13:58 But to change the alphabetizing, just click on the head of the column.
19:14:04 Okay.
19:14:04 And you can do it by any of these things. And if you see something you wanted to advertise by something that's not shown.
19:14:11 You go up here to view, show view options there are things that may not appear. Like these are date modified, but you can have it by date created, date last open, date added.
19:14:24 Version, comments, all kinds of different ways that you can have things
19:14:30 Hey, okay. Awesome.
19:14:33 I did not want to do that. So I won't do that.
19:14:40 And if you find views that you want, go back to this show view options.
19:14:45 If you pick out the ways that you want it to
19:14:52 What those column headings are supposed to be. Push this thing down here to say use as defaults. And that way any new folders will have those same options.
19:15:03 Available to you. Like I want tags always because i use colors to uh colors to to keep track of things.
19:15:10 Uh-huh.
19:15:12 If something's blue, it means I've blacked it up. If it's something else.
19:15:17 May not have backed it up.
19:15:24 Before I do anything else and get on to, I was going to talk about Apple intelligence and security.
19:15:30 I wanted to show you a video.
19:15:38 And this is the video. This is a van called OK Go.
19:15:46 And you probably won't be able to hear this because I don't know, maybe you can or not.
19:15:55 I'm going to…
19:16:07 This video is a video rock video that you can get on YouTube.
19:16:13 It's made with 64 iPhones. And at various times they will do things that go between screens.
19:16:23 So for example, this guy can stick out his hand and it goes across to the screen next to him.
19:16:29 And they do all kinds of Funky things.
19:16:41 And I mentioned this to you because if you ever want to do something funky with your phone.
19:16:45 And that's a funky thing that you can do with your phone.
19:16:50 But it was shot on iPhones and it uses iPhones as the As the… catchy technical gimmick.
19:17:04 Another thing that I wanted to just briefly mention. Mr. Lockwood asked me if I knew anything about using a phone with two eSIMs.
19:17:18 And the answer is yes. If you have a phone that accepts two eSIMs, it means you can have a primary and secondary phone line on it. So one phone, two phone numbers means you have to pay for two phone numbers
19:17:35 And you get to describe which one is the primary or secondary. You can also have one as a business and one as a personal.
19:17:43 And if it's a primary, it's going to be a P. A secondary is going to be an S, and if it's obviously business, one's going to be a B and one's going to be a P.
19:17:51 But you can separate it that way. You get two different phone numbers. You have all kinds of different things you can do.
19:17:59 A primary phone number means that if you make a phone call.
19:18:02 That's when it's that's the number it's going to use. But um the things that you can do is you can also say for messages in FaceTime, you could use either. For a default line is going to be one For cellular data, you're only going to use one.
19:18:19 This way you can have a cheapo line for one and the other one on unlimited or whatever you want to do.
19:18:27 In playing around with this, I also found out that you can have different ringtones. So you can assign the ringtone If you call on the secondary line can be different from your primary line.
19:18:38 And I've done that because I now have Both Kathleen's line and my line on one phone.
19:18:46 Because… I want to be able to receive her phone calls.
19:18:53 And that's too small to tell but anyway. It was fairly transparent.
19:19:00 But I would suggest that if you do want to try this that the first thing you do is go online and get some instructions. Apple has to support line explaining how how… how you can use it with two sims and that's not what I want. I want this.
19:19:22 And I also want to talk briefly about security. This is a screenshot I took.
19:19:30 Of something that says chase wants to know if I recognize this charge for $200, $385.
19:19:41 $560. And yes, I recognize that no wrong charge.
19:19:47 I did neither of those. Instead, I went up and I declared this to be spam.
19:19:51 And why did I do none of those? Because I went up to the address line, which is right up here where it says this.
19:19:57 Chase Fraud Protection. And if you hold down your mouse button on it, it shows you what address it really came from.
19:20:05 And this came from Kenneth Duncathan iCloud.com, which is not chase So if you see something suspicious.
19:20:17 To come up here and click on the on the um who it says it's from to find out if it's really from them.
19:20:27 Are they also are they also all at once of just getting tons of ads in my email or very, well, they're not even some of them, I'm sure it's not even legitimate ads but um
19:20:43 The answer is for something like that, just go up and mark them. Make sure you mark them.
19:20:49 As spam. Because if you don't mark them as spam, you'll just get more of them.
19:20:55 Right. Well, I've always, what I've done before I was done before i because i usually say subscribe and subscribe. And I would unsubscribe.
19:21:05 Now that what they're doing, you go there to unsubscribe and they want your email to unsubscribe.
19:21:12 Yes. Don't unsubscribe. Because the reason why you shouldn't unsubscribe is not obvious.
19:21:15 Right.
19:21:19 If you unsubscribe it, it says unsubscribe That's a live one.
19:21:25 Yes.
19:21:25 So you've told them it's not a random number. Now, if you are getting messages from, say, Swains and you don't want to get messages from Swains anymore.
19:21:34 Go ahead and unsubscribe if you're getting them from JCPenney's and you know it's from JCPenney's, go ahead and unsubscribe.
19:21:37 Yes.
19:21:42 By the way, JCPenney still is selling goods. They just don't sell it in stores.
19:21:48 So if it's a legitimate company, you know it's legitimate and you don't want to get their messages anymore, just say unsubscribe.
19:21:54 But otherwise, just go market as spam. And that's true for messages. This past year, you might have noticed that we had an election the state actors, meaning other countries use the excuse of our elections to just fill our mailboxes, our messaging full of spam.
19:22:18 And it was they've done this in the past, but nothing like this time.
19:22:22 I was getting a couple hundred messages a day that were just people trying to find out if I existed.
19:22:31 And what you do is you go up there and you, again, say just that you mark it as a to delete and the Mac will ask you, do you want me to block this? And you say yes, and it'll do so.
19:22:43 The problem is that sometimes you can't really tell. This says the USPS package has arrived at the warehouse and cannot be delivered to you.
19:22:52 Okay, now this sounds like something that you would care about because the United States Postal Service seems legit.
19:22:58 But if you look at the URL, it doesn't end in USPS. There's this hyphen and then it's got this stuff here.
19:23:05 This is who actually sent it. It wasn't sent to you by the US Post Office.
19:23:11 It looks legit, but look at this email address, this URL, and you'll see that it's not the US Post Office.
19:23:19 And this one here, your vehicle has an unpaid pole bill To avoid excessive late fees, go and promptly pay 699 and it gives you this thing.
19:23:31 Easy drive. But this is, again, it's not a legitimate Also, I haven't traveled on a toll road in a long time.
19:23:44 Eva with JobMatch, Lisa here is at info for the UPS position. Click here, blah, blah, blah, for an interview.
19:23:52 I did not. Try out for a UPS position.
19:23:57 So that's not a, this is another one where it says There's a post office.
19:24:04 Address and that's not really a post office. Something that I found that I really liked is this chart Which is what people think
19:24:18 Our problems with illegitimate actors and what is actually the case, reported cyber attack causes In 2024, 7% were beaches.
19:24:32 Based on privilege misuse. 23% were miscellaneous heirs, 26% were social engineering. Social engineering means that somebody got in by pretending to be somebody else.
19:24:44 8% were Well, actually basic web attacks 33% were system intrusion where they actually got into the system.
19:24:57 But this is the incidence that reported the ones that were reported most often were denial of service attacks, which is they didn't get into the system at all they just gunged it up so bad that you couldn't use it.
19:25:10 So you see what actually happened and what most of the attacks were there's a complete misconnect In terms of academia.
19:25:22 In terms of what people are publishing. And what incidents they actually… talk about. You'll notice that you'll notice denial of service attacks gets a lot of attention in academia, but in terms of total problems, it's really not It's outsized compared to the real problem.
19:25:45 News coverage talks about denial of service attacks. If Twitter goes down.
19:25:50 But 66% is lost or stolen assets And again, you can see that what's actually going on and what's actually happening are not the same thing.
19:26:02 And what people look for is not the same thing. So what I want to tell you about is basically what you should be concerned about.
19:26:11 You should be concerned about your password. If you have a simple password and simple means under 15 characters you are vulnerable.
19:26:23 If you reuse a password. You are vulnerable. Not only are you vulnerable, you're extremely vulnerable.
19:26:31 If someone breaks into, you offered a campaign donation to some guy who is running for state representative.
19:26:41 Somebody hacks his site. And they get your credentials. Well, you had never intended to log into his site again. So you use the same password that you use for everything else.
19:26:51 Except that now that person has a legitimate username and a legitimate password that they will then try against banks insurance companies credit unions, anything that involves um something of value to people. So that's why you you want to make sure that you have your password down safe.
19:27:16 You want to make sure that, and safe means 15 characters or more.
19:27:22 And you also don't want to ever reuse a password for anything.
19:27:27 It doesn't make any difference if it's a simple thing or it's a useless thing.
19:27:32 Don't every reuse a password. Because as you can see.
19:27:37 In terms of the amount of stuff that people have that they have control over that lost and stolen assets is mostly your data that was lost.
19:27:49 Breaches in terms of banks and so on and so forth, that's actually fairly rare where people run into problems is lost and stolen assets.
19:27:58 Now, how can you write a a password that's going to be difficult to… to break into? And the answer is.
19:28:09 You make it long but easy for you to remember. So as an example.
19:28:18 You live in Squim. I like the… Lavender.
19:28:33 This has upper and lowercase characters And it has a number and it is.
19:28:40 33 characters long. It's easy to remember.
19:28:44 2024 doesn't necessarily mean you like the Lavender Festival 2024. It means that you set this password in 2024.
19:28:53 So like in 2026, you look at that and you think.
19:28:56 I should change that because it's been up there for two years.
19:29:01 So this is an easy to remember password It's easy to type. When you have something like
19:29:33 If it's hard for you to type, you won't type it that often.
19:29:37 So find something that's easy and fast to type and is long. And more than 15 characters is long.
19:29:44 You will find stupid companies that say that, oh, they don't accept a space as a character So if in that case, you just have to say i
19:29:58 Like the lavender. Let me make that uppercase just for the heck of it.
19:30:09 The dash is a special character that almost everybody allows. But some stupid things, including Microsoft, don't like spaces.
19:30:18 So this has a special character. It's got numbers. It's got upper and lower case.
19:30:23 And it's fairly fast to write. So the simple way to keep yourself safe.
19:30:30 Is to have long passwords and never, ever, ever reuse them. This way, if they break into your account at Bank of America.
19:30:40 They might cause damage, but they won't be able to get into your bank account at sun soundt sound um bank here in swim because you have a different username and password there.
19:30:55 Yes.
19:30:54 Hey, Lawrence. But if you have, say, for instance, 100 passwords and each one of them is a passphrase like that.
19:31:03 Back to the same problem is how do you know which phrase goes with which You know, account.
19:31:09 That's where you use a password manager. And I highly recommend 1Password.
19:31:17 What is the name of the name? I just got this wrong earlier today. Sequoia.
19:31:23 Comes with a password manager. Built in. And the same password manager is built in to Sequoia It's built into the current iPhone and iPad operating systems.
19:31:36 So, and if you tell them to sync to each other via iCloud.
19:31:40 If you make a password on your Mac and later on you're using the bank app.
19:31:45 And you want to know what the password is, you can look it up on your iPhone.
19:31:49 Because it syncs to your phone, to your iPad, to your Mac.
19:31:54 All together. And Apple now bundles that into Sequoia to uh iPad, OS 18 and into iOS 18.
19:32:08 So that's the easy way to keep track of it. And if you're not on the current operating system, I highly recommend 1Password.
19:32:20 One password you do have to pay for, and if you use it on both your Mac and your iPhone, you'll have to buy two copies.
19:32:27 One for the Mac and one for your iPhone because the iPhone version is It's got the same name, but it's a different thing. So they charge you twice for it.
19:32:37 But Sequoia would work for both.
19:32:42 If you have the current operating system on your Mac and the current operating system on your iPhone, yes, it'll work for both.
19:32:50 The trick is make sure that you go into your iCloud preferences and sync them.
19:32:56 So that they talk back and forth to each other.
19:33:00 Lawrence, I have a quick question. I use 1Password.
19:33:03 Yes.
19:33:06 I just got a new iMac. And it's got the built-in password program and it keeps popping up and getting in the way of my 1Pass work.
19:33:13 Is there a way for me to turn that off?
19:33:17 I haven't wanted to. So the answer is I don't know.
19:33:22 I don't know.
19:33:21 Okay. It covers up it covers up the 1
19:33:29 Thing that pops up that you click on.
19:33:32 It should disappear if you just click anywhere else.
19:33:38 But I don't know if you can turn it off because I haven't wanted to.
19:33:36 Yeah. Okay. Thank you.
19:33:47 Mm-hmm.
19:33:42 I have both 1Password and I have passwords, which is the Apple application. And I'm going to be switching everything to passwords Because among other things, they don't charge you a subscription fee.
19:33:52 Oh.
19:33:56 So.
19:33:58 How much trouble will that be?
19:34:05 You have to export your passwords from 1Password, which is a pain.
19:34:10 Yeah. Okay. Thank you.
19:34:11 It's not impossible. In fact, 1Password even has a built-in menu that tells you how to do it.
19:34:18 You probably won't be able to figure out how to do that without looking at their documentation.
19:34:22 Yeah.
19:34:22 And passwords itself, Apple's passwords has a page that tells you what format it needs to be in.
19:34:31 And you can do it.
19:34:34 Okay, thank you.
19:34:37 I wanted to… spend what little time we have left because I got sidetracked on other things, talking about apple intelligence One thing that's different, you'll notice that almost everybody wants to have artificial intelligence embedded in something They think that you went to buy.
19:34:55 And most of the things that people went to embed it in, I find horrifying.
19:35:00 If any of you have ever had a Roomba, a Roomba originally said that it had artificial intelligence and then I kind of backed off of it because people have had Roombas know that they're actually pretty stupid.
19:35:12 They've got a good algorithm, though. Roomba goes along until it bumps into something and then it bumps into something and it slowly starts turning in a direction until it can free itself and then it goes off until it bumps into something else.
19:35:25 And some of the more advanced ones. Can actually keep an internal map. It draws a map of where it's vacuum.
19:35:33 So it figures, okay, I went in a straight line here. I should be able to turn around.
19:35:38 180 degrees and go in a straight line back the other way and get the entire floor by doing this.
19:35:45 So that's not really artificial intelligence. They actually built some intelligence into the to the robot. But a lot of the ai stuff Intuit is talking about that they have artificial intelligence in their accounting software I don't know about you, but I would prefer that the only intelligence involved in keeping track of my accounts is mine.
19:36:09 I don't want something to come in from the side and decide, oh, no, you didn't pay enough for that bill. I got to bump it up or drop it down or not count it this month.
19:36:20 I don't want artificial intelligence in. In accounting.
19:36:25 I don't trust it yet in cars. You know, there are things that… I don't want to do.
19:36:31 Apple has their artificial intelligence, which they call apple intelligence And it now exists on the iPad, the iPhone, and in the Mac. And on the Mac.
19:36:43 There's a this menu item that appears in Sequoia says apple intelligence It is turned off by default.
19:36:52 So Apple says, hey, they've added Apple intelligence to Sequoia. Well, I'm not seeing anything different. You have to turn it on.
19:36:58 So here's the menu item on your settings. And then you go through and just turn on the parts that you wanted to pay attention to.
19:37:08 And one of the things that I should have mentioned this earlier, somebody was saying they say, hey, Siri.
19:37:12 You no longer have to say, hey, you can just say, Siri.
19:37:16 And then my HomePod is yelling at me.
19:37:22 My HomePod is upset because I called it. But you don't have to have that hay anymore.
19:37:31 Right. I'm pot is yelling at me.
19:37:34 You have to turn it on. And same thing on your phone. You have to turn it on.
19:37:40 And then you can do some things that are fairly clever, like for example It will… It's useful.
19:37:51 It gives you new ways to look at your mail, for example. It'll summarize things.
19:37:56 If I look at, if I get a mail coming in, it'll give me a summary of the message.
19:38:00 It looks through the content and gives me a summary. What Apple does, though, that's extraordinary is how they've done that.
19:38:10 They don't offer this on all Macs. You have to have one of the last two models of iPhone and you have to have a recent Mac.
19:38:19 Why? Because it takes a considerable amount of horsepower and it takes more memory in order to do these tricks.
19:38:28 And that's because Apple does as much of a processing as possible on your computer.
19:38:34 So if you ask at what time is it? It'll tell you what time it is. It would do that before.
19:38:40 If you ask it how far between here in Seattle, it can actually do that kind of calculation.
19:38:46 On your device, as long as it has an internet connection and ask how far away is Seattle.
19:38:52 It'll come back with an answer. But what the question was, it doesn't pass on.
19:38:57 The Apple intelligence only passes on the necessary information to answer the question.
19:39:03 How far is it from here to Seattle? The only thing it really needs to know is where is Seattle? Because it knows where you are.
19:39:12 And then it does, with the original question why you wanted to know about Seattle.
19:39:16 Doesn't know. Doesn't care because the rest of it's done on your machine.
19:39:21 And the summary, when it's summarizing messages, the messages are already on your machine. It does an analysis of the words in there and says.
19:39:29 Okay, Barbara wants to know if Shishimata water your lawn tomorrow.
19:39:34 Okay it'll give you that summary before you even open the message.
19:39:38 But there are other things it can do. And among the things it can do is a new app that you probably didn't even notice, but you might have.
19:39:49 What is it called? Image Playground.
19:39:54 Image playground exists On the iPhone, the iPad, and on the Mac.
19:40:01 And these are images that I created with Image Playground. But before we get into that, I want to get into that I lost my… folder here. I wanted to show you some things that I did.
19:40:19 I wanted a picture of an Asian water dragon reading a book. Now, something that you need before you look at these photos something you should know Asian dragons do not have wings.
19:40:32 Asian wagons don't have wings because they don't need wings in order to fly.
19:40:37 And as a result, Asian dragons have four limbs. I have four feet.
19:40:43 And you have four limbs, two hands, two feet. European dragons have six limbs.
19:40:50 Four legs plus two wings. Technically, that makes them a bug.
19:40:55 I did not want to bug. I wanted an Asian water dragon. So I went into Adobe Firefly And I said, I want an Asian blue water dragon reading a book.
19:41:06 And it gave me this. And it gave me… Actually, I should just open them all up at once.
19:41:17 Different kinds of variations. The very first one I got was this one down here.
19:41:23 Where it's reading a book, it's reading a book It's reading a book.
19:41:29 It's reading a book. It's reading a book.
19:41:33 Slightly different. Each time. And then this one's a little bit different. That's because I said I wanted a Asian Blue Dragon.
19:41:43 Reading a book in the style of Hiroshige. Hiroshige is a famous Japanese illustrator of the 19th century.
19:41:50 So this one's a little bit more nuanced than that one.
19:41:56 For example. And this is another one.
19:42:01 This is Hiroshige and this one is Hiroshige. You notice that this second time it threw in We got way water is because it's a water dragon. This one's got waves because there's a water dragon, but now it has flowers too because you know hey
19:42:15 It's an Asian dragon.
19:42:19 Did you notice that one of those had a book that had two spines?
19:42:23 Yes, I did notice that. We'll get to that in a second.
19:42:30 I didn't do quite as many with many Microsoft co-pilot.
19:42:35 Simply because I don't like the dragon. It doesn't have… It doesn't have a… any wings, but this one looks to me look an awful lot like a horn toad like I used to see down in Texas.
19:42:49 This one's a little bit more dragon-like. And the nice touch is that it's actually oriental writing here.
19:42:56 And this one's back to being a hoard and toad. So Microsoft does get Microsoft does.
19:43:02 Some points, particularly for this one. And this one also, I said in the style of Hiroshige, so it made it slightly different This they consider photorealistic And this one's more of a woodblock print.
19:43:16 Hiroshige did woodblock prints. Then we come to apple
19:43:27 Apple intelligence. Again, it's a blue water dragon reading a book in a library.
19:43:34 And this is Apple's blue water dragon. This is the photorealistic and this is one that I say was a illustration. So that's not bad.
19:43:44 Except that the first time that I tried this. No matter what i tried I said it was an Asian dragon that I wanted.
19:43:51 I got wings. And instead of reading a book for some reason, it's playing cards.
19:43:57 And I can't really explain it. It's just… Not the Asian dragon that I wanted.
19:44:13 Then I said I wanted to This is an Apple intelligence. This is what it is good at.
19:44:20 I said that I wanted a penguin cheering on its team, its basketball team And you notice that even the basketball team in the back are penguins. So this is a penguin with a basketball so that you know it's a basketball
19:44:35 And the team in the background and those are penguins as well.
19:44:39 So that's not half bad.
19:44:46 And here are different pictures of me. Now, this is the photograph that it started with.
19:44:53 It's a picture of me. Done in Apple portrait mode.
19:44:57 Taken with my iphone. And here's what it came up with.
19:45:05 I said that I want a scholar down reading a scroll in the style of Hiroshi So apparently scholars are glaring a lot so Even though my original photograph didn't have me glaring Because I'm a scholar, I have to be looking sad or glaring or something.
19:45:21 And here I said that I wasn't a scholar. Here I said I wasn't a scholar and it's it created that from based upon that picture.
19:45:35 So how does it do that? Well, let's try something again and something again
19:45:46 Giant toad. Swallowing.
19:45:51 Test. Here's a giant toad in front of a castle. Not quite what I wanted.
19:45:59 Because it's not doing much in the terms of swallowing, although it does look like a giant toad.
19:46:07 And you're going to have space themes So now we have… giant toad and because it's a space theme and now it's got constellations in the background And if you find one that you like, you say done And it makes it larger and then you can just drag it off onto your desktop.
19:46:27 So this is Apple intelligence. It did not go out to the internet.
19:46:33 Except for just a general idea of what a toad looks like and what a castle looks like. But what I was asking for It did not send that out.
19:46:41 So it's an interesting way to create an interesting way illustrations for illustrations for something that you're trying to do.
19:46:49 But there are limitations, definite limitations.
19:47:05 You say politicians screaming at protesters with rifles there's a good chance it won't do that.
19:47:11 Says unable to use that description. So it also kind of censors you.
19:47:19 The reason for this is it doesn't want to be on the front page of the New York Times Saying that people were creating hate speech using ample intelligence.
19:47:29 So it does limit in terms of what it is that you what you can ask for.
19:47:37 But if you want to um
19:47:48 Birthday cake for a girl. Comes up with a birthday cake and it gives you different variations Like if you decide that you want to blue birth day take for a girl. Hopefully it'll change the color Okay, that's kind of a…
19:48:11 Almost a teal, but sure Oh, 315th birthday.
19:48:18 A very old girl.
19:48:24 Anybody have a suggestion if something you want me to try?
19:48:27 I have a quick question right quick, though. Is this just for the Mac or is it on iPhone and iPad
19:48:35 It's on your iPhone, it's on your iPad. You just have to look for Image Playground.
19:48:38 And… Well, I did a search and it doesn't find it.
19:48:43 Okay. I am, yes.
19:48:43 Are you using iOS 18? It's on mine.
19:48:49 I'll take a better look. Thanks.
19:48:50 Oh, a question. Did you… I don't remember if I had to download it or not.
19:48:57 Did you turn on at… Did you turn on Apple intelligence on your iPhone?
19:48:57 You have to turn it on.
19:49:02 I did, yes. I just did.
19:49:04 Yeah, you might have to download it.
19:49:09 Okay. Suggestions, and it's something you want me to try.
19:49:22 I asked it to do SpongeBob SquarePants smoking a reefer and it wouldn't do it.
19:49:27 Yes, it won't, because it recognizes those as either restricted by content being the reefer or restricted by copyright.
19:49:38 Right. So then I asked for a square sponge smoking a cigar It will do that.
19:49:47 Where? Yellow.
19:49:57 Sponge smoking a cigar.
19:50:06 I, uh, uh. Need to get rid of the birthday things.
19:50:14 So…
19:50:14 Okay, that's a little bit weird, but that's a little bit weird
19:50:30 So I went to download Image Playground and there's a charge for it.
19:50:37 But the description of the in-app purchases are all in Japanese, Chinese, whatever.
19:50:43 So I can't read them. Okay, so we want the Apple one.
19:50:45 Then it's not apples.
19:50:50 Yeah.
19:50:50 Okay, great. Thank you.
19:50:54 Okay. I'm going to skip the image playground because you can play around with that if you have uh
19:51:05 If you have the right operating system And I went to go on to something else, which also is with Apple intelligence And I can never find it. Oh, there it is.
19:51:16 I don't use pages that much.
19:51:23 You'll have to forgive me if I don't seem to know what I'm doing.
19:51:39 This is a complex sentence. This sentence has… 206 words and it's one sentence.
19:51:48 And… That alone should tell you just probably too much.
19:51:54 Let's make this a little bit bigger so you can read this.
19:51:59 Fantastic piece of prose.
19:52:05 And we get 200. Ah, we can get to 200. Okay, this is just a terrible piece of prose. It's one sentence so Just trying to read this out loud, you'd kill over in a faint just from lack of breath.
19:52:18 So I'm going to select this, I'm going to go up to the edit menu to writing tools, which is something new.
19:52:25 And I say that I want this to make this friendly.
19:52:35 And it comes up and i copy that.
19:52:40 And I come down here and I paste that And it makes it gnarly.
19:52:46 Friendlier, but also way too big.
19:52:53 You'll see that among other things, it's much, much shorter than the first one.
19:52:59 And also it's more than one sentence. It's at least three sentences that I can see.
19:53:06 Okay, other possibilities are other possibilities are for um for writing tools, I come back I try it again and I say I want it professional
19:53:24 And I copy that. I'm going to paste it in, get giant text again.
19:53:36 Make this 11. There's a possibility that that's may even be longer than the original.
19:53:47 But at least it's now multiple sentences, I think.
19:53:54 Actually, it might be exactly the same thing. Oh, well, so that didn't work out so great.
19:54:02 Possibly because i didn't do them. And we're going to go up to writing tools and we're going to say concise.
19:54:17 And we copy that.
19:54:36 And… So as you can see, it made some fairly made some fairly decent changes here. And I looked at these earlier and they basically say the same thing.
19:54:49 This is an example of Apple intelligence. And it didn't have to reach out across the internet to do that.
19:54:56 It just sees that this is a big huge, ridiculously long sentence If you have a sentence that goes on for more than three lines, it's probably too long.
19:55:05 So the first rule of thumb is break it up into individual sentences.
19:55:09 The second thing is to get rid of repetitive prose. It managed to do that.
19:55:16 Things that are repeatedly used over and over and over again. Got rid And if I really worked at it, I could get a professional one that would actually be shorter than the original.
19:55:28 Possibly, but. It's built into the… It's built into Apple intelligence.
19:55:39 It does the same sort of tricks on your email. You write something. There's a commercial on TV where this guy who's writing this nasty notes to his supervisor and then he asked to rewrite it as something friendly and it comes across and he gets a compliment
19:55:59 From his coworker. That's done with Apple intelligence and it's actually quite good. What it will not do, which is what you see the news stories about.
19:56:10 If you ask it to write the great American novel, it won't.
19:56:14 You actually have to write something and it'll help you rewrite it.
19:56:18 Now, there are other ways to do this. Microsoft has had editing tools built into Word for quite a long long time and you can have add-ons Let me bring up Word.
19:56:33 This is Word. There's this thing called Grammarly, which is a plugin that you can buy or you can use the free version.
19:56:43 That as you're doing things it'll do things make suggestions on how to do it better.
19:56:50 But this little symbol that I have here, because I have a Microsoft account for the entire office suite That little symbol means that Copilot is here. So Copilot will allow me to create a draft using co-pilot. Again, I'm a decent writer. I don't need co-pilot's help.
19:57:08 But for this horrible, horrible sentence, which I did have to deal with.
19:57:12 I did use some AI to figure out how to make it comprehensible. I figured out once this is actually syntactically, it makes sense.
19:57:22 In terms of syntax, it just doesn't make sense in terms of human beings understanding it.
19:57:29 And I'm a firm believer that policies and procedures If they're meant to be followed by individuals, they should be able to be read by individuals.
19:57:38 If you need a lawyer, then it was poorly written. So this is something that's built into pages and numbers and pages and numbers and keynote.
19:57:52 As well as Apple Mail and Messages. On your iPhone, iPad, and Mac.
19:58:00 And it's all part of Apple intelligence. But it won't work if you don't turn it on.
19:58:05 Apple Intelligence does not work. With Microsoft. It does not work with with… Chrome does not work with Microsoft Edge, things that aren't made by Apple doesn't work with those.
19:58:24 Yes.
19:58:23 Lawrence, I found it does work. With non-Apple things.
19:58:32 If you go into Word and put that same sentence and you right click.
19:58:38 You'll get the writing tools instead of being in the edit menu like it is on all the Apple products. You just select the paragraph and then right click and you'll see writing tools come up.
19:58:52 Is it Apple's writing tools or Microsoft's?
19:58:55 Apple.
19:58:57 It is possible because Apple let their developer conference did say, if you want to incorporate these tools in your software, do it. But for the most part, right now, it's just Apple stuff. I haven't noticed that with Word, but I'll go and look.
19:59:12 I tried it with Word and PowerPoint. They both work great by just right clicking after you selected it and then it comes up with the editing tools and It's the same as the one you see in pages and numbers.
19:59:26 I have my own best idea on how to improve PowerPoint.
19:59:32 Throw it away and use Keynote. Keynotes much more intelligent.
19:59:40 Keynote will read PowerPoint. So you don't even need PowerPoint. I use Keynote for everything.
19:59:46 When I was working for the government, I used to have to do presentations using PowerPoint.
19:59:52 And people would say, oh, your slides look so great. How'd you do that? I used Keynote.
19:59:58 And then I export it in this PowerPoint and went in used them at work, but PowerPoint i PowerPoint was originally designed as a outlining.
20:00:12 Application just to do outlines. And Microsoft basically destroyed it. The guy who sold PowerPoint to Microsoft.
20:00:22 Is to this day a millionaire, but he really, really resents what they did to his software.
20:00:29 And things like access. Their database they bought the name Access from Tandy Corporation.
20:00:36 And access was a calendar. When it was running on TRS-80s.
20:00:42 Microsoft bought it because it just wanted the name. They threw away the application and created a database.
20:00:49 I could tell you horrible tales about computers. Anyway, any questions about that? I realize that was a short demo, but that's really pretty much all you really need to know.
20:00:58 You need to turn on Apple intelligence on your phone, on your iPad, on your Mac, if you want to use it.
20:01:04 And then it works with keynote and numbers and pages and pages Safari and Messenger and And the image playground Just pick out something you'd like to stick on a card someplace and just go play around with image playground.
20:01:25 It's something to note about it. Apple Intelligence, which I should Bring up and go away.
20:01:34 I don't want to keep you. Yes.
20:01:35 Florence. And passwords, do I have to enter all of my various passwords or does it automatically find any of them from any other programs and automatically bring them in?
20:01:49 Apple passwords will, as you're going to websites and entering your name and password It's keeping track of those.
20:01:56 Apple passwords. And to some extent to some extent 1Password does the same thing.
20:02:06 But if you've been to, if you just downloaded and installed Sequoia this week.
20:02:14 It doesn't know about anything you've done in the past. Oh, actually, that's not true.
20:02:18 Come to think of it, that's not true because even your old passwords. Safari, for example, has been keeping track of them for quite some time. If you go into Safari settings There's a section here on a section here Passwords. It's been there for years.
20:02:37 And the only thing they've done in Sequoia is they've instead of being as part of Safari now, it's now a separate application but Safari has been keeping track of passwords for years.
20:02:50 But it won't know if it won't know if If you go to a website using chrome Edge or Firefox, it doesn't know anything about it.
20:03:03 Yes.
20:03:01 Lawrence, I have a question. With the apple intelligence or any artificial intelligence can you take some sort of a legal jargon or like some sort of insurance jargon that Who in the hell can understand it all and have it simplified in very simple
20:03:24 Things that you can understand.
20:03:25 Yes. The answer is yes.
20:03:30 Okay. And how would one approach that?
20:03:33 You just copy it out of off of their website, for example, is a good place to find the fine print for your insurance contract, just go onto your website and ask for a copy or scrape it off of your PDF.
20:03:46 And then paste it into pages and say, go to the writing tools and it'll simplify it.
20:03:53 Thank you.
20:03:54 One thing I wanted to show you. I told you that Apple doesn't go out and send your entire request. There is an exception. If you want to use chat GPT and you have a chat GPT account.
20:04:07 You can set it up so that it will use chat GPT. I don't want it to use ChatGPT.
20:04:13 Because I don't want it to have that out there. One of the things that happened with ChatGPT, ChatGPT is the AI interface that's been in the news over the past year or so.
20:04:25 They had a data breach. Several months ago.
20:04:30 And if you had a chat GPT account then whatever you had in your account.
20:04:38 Not necessarily has but me personally has be in somebody else's hands.
20:04:42 But if you wanted to use ChatGPT, you can allow Apple intelligence to go out and talk to chat GPT. But I didn't want it to, so I turned that off.
20:04:57 And the reason why the rules are slightly different, you have to be signed into ChatGPT in order to use it.
20:05:05 And so it might stay on your computer if you're doing Apple intelligence. But as soon as you start using chat GPT, it has to send the request to ChatGPT.
20:05:15 So it's no longer just on your computer. Yes.
20:05:16 Lawrence. I don't have a chat GPT account.
20:05:21 But Siri does say that it got some stuff from ChatGPT.
20:05:32 Oh, and I don't need an account then.
20:05:27 That's because it makes a request from ChatGPT. You don't. It depends upon what it is. For example, if you there are some things that you can get from ChatGPT that gives you a limit. I think with a free account, you get limited to
20:05:45 How many requests per day. Once you run up against that barrier, it doesn't work anymore.
20:05:51 Oh, okay. Gotcha. Thank you.
20:05:52 You have to wait until the next day.
20:05:57 So I just wanted to mention the fact that, yes, you can You can talk to chat GPT if you want to, but I have that turned off because I don't want to.
20:06:10 Yes.
20:06:09 Glorious. I read in several places this week that the next iteration of iOS and sequoia should be available next week.
20:06:19 And it will turn on Apple intelligence by default. Instead of having it turned off.
20:06:27 I haven't read that.
20:06:34 Okay, I hope there's a way to turn it off because a lot of people don't want it for a variety of reasons. Like for example.
20:06:40 In schools, you don't want schools students using that if they're using in a writing class and you want them to write complete sentences and paragraphs teacher padded.
20:06:49 Probably there will be a way to turn it off. I'm just saying it'll be And you won't have to turn it on. It'll be on by default.
20:06:58 I haven't read that. I'm not sure what I think of that.
20:07:04 I personally probably would have liked it. I don't know. Maybe they've done enough testing and they think that uh the training wheels can come off. But I do… caution people to be very careful with artificial intelligence.
20:07:18 Because artificial means it's really not real. And it can make mistakes. So for example.
20:07:26 Artificial intelligence and spreadsheet. Not sure what i want it to do.
20:07:30 If I type in two and I wanted to add it to two of that and come up with a four.
20:07:35 I don't want it to be creative. I really want a four.
20:07:40 So just something to just something to wonder about. Also keep in mind that If people are basing their predictions upon beta software.
20:07:51 When it goes out to the beta testers, Apple wants them to beta test them, so it might be turned on by default.
20:07:56 Doesn't mean it's going to be turned on by default for users.
20:08:00 Just they said it's the golden master which was released
20:08:06 I'll believe it when I see it.
20:08:09 I guess we only have to wait a week if that's a week Accurate.
20:08:13 Yeah, well, a lot of things aren't.
20:08:17 Yeah. Adam, thanks.
20:08:18 Lawrence, it's getting kind of late in the session, I know, and this is kind of new stuff.
20:08:25 But maybe next time or sometime in the future, you might share with us what you think might become of the AI that the $500 billion heirs are announcing Sometime over the weekend.
20:08:41 They're going to put into it. I'm just real curious what that buys.
20:08:49 It buys more billionaires. More people will make money from it.
20:08:55 I don't know that that's necessarily a good thing.
20:09:00 I don't think it's going to make you and I think it's any red room.
20:09:04 Well, the only thing that I saw was one of the people in there was talking about cancer research and how it might find cures for cancer, which sounds like a wonderful thing, but I don't I can't for the life of me figure out how this stuff happens.
20:09:20 The answer is they've been saying that for 20 years. The biggest steps in cancer research were done with just old-fashioned computing.
20:09:29 And that was when they mapped the human genome that project. That was a giant step forward. But you see, you have to do the basic science. Artificial intelligence can't really get you through to the basic science.
20:09:44 And they haven't seen anything now with AI that can't be done with traditional computing. For example.
20:09:53 The uh the uh the word tools that I was showing you.
20:09:58 Grammarly has been doing things like that for a decade, Microsoft has been flagging things. I used to tell people when I was teaching.
20:10:07 That if they sent me a paper that looked like a Christmas tree and everything was underlined in red and green.
20:10:12 They couldn't send it to me until they got rid of all the red and green. And that's because Microsoft.
20:10:20 15 years ago was flagging things that were misspelled and red and it was flagging repeated words like saying the the and things like that. It's been doing that for a long time.
20:10:31 That's not artificial intelligence. That's just good programming. What Apple is doing, the part that they've added to it is the security part in terms of the tools themselves.
20:10:44 That's not necessarily new technology. The security part is definitely an Apple innovation.
20:10:53 So finding how cure for cancer, I don't see how that's going to That's a good sales technique.
20:11:01 To tell you that it's important, I don't see that it's going to make a difference.
20:11:07 There's a Adam angst has tidbits this week.
20:11:14 Short article about how to use chat gpt With spreadsheets to get information that he would have had to spend an awful lot of time manually to get and also some of the pitfalls some of when it doesn't, it goes wrong.
20:11:32 Bruce Schneer also has an article on his site about some of the dangers of AI making up stuff.
20:11:40 Ah, yes. That's been a problem for quite some time. When they did the… The current AI models, the large language models, large language, it's called large language models.
20:11:52 Because they fed it billions and billions of words. The large language models that we have today does not know the difference between to whom the bell tolls in Grey's Anatomy.
20:12:08 It doesn't know that one's fiction. It doesn't know what fiction is.
20:12:13 So if in for whom the bell tolls, if the hero manages to patch himself up using a old bandana and it allows them to run 40 miles through the desert and you try to do that, you'll probably die.
20:12:29 Because it's fiction. But the large language models cannot tell the difference between a lie the truth, fiction, and reality.
20:12:41 And those are different things. I don't know the difference.
20:12:43 But doesn't AI, if you ask it, tell you the source of its information or no?
20:12:49 Oh, it doesn't?
20:12:49 No, because no because it's compiled. It's compiled out of billions upon billions of things. And it might tell you the source of something But what it's telling you may not be the part that you focus on. For example, if you want to know
20:13:04 Write me a… a resume to get a job as a programmer.
20:13:09 Okay, write you up a perfectly good resume. And you go in and you turn it in and they laugh at you because they gave you a resume for a cobalt programmer.
20:13:18 And if you don't know that a cobalt was a language from the 1950s.
20:13:21 Obsolete.
20:13:23 You're in sad shape there. It usually doesn't tell you anything at all.
20:13:33 Wow. That's dangerous. That's dangerous.
20:13:35 Yes, it is. And that's why when people say they want to use AI for a doctor's diagnosis, I think No, no.
20:13:47 If he wants to do a doctor's diagnosis on a robot, that's fine.
20:13:45 I don't think so.
20:13:51 Diagnosis on me. No, I. I'd rather have humans do that.
20:13:59 Good luck finding one.
20:14:00 Keep in mind that the movie 2001 were already a couple decades late in making that happen.
20:14:08 So what they could do in 2001, the movie we still can't do in 2024.
20:14:14 True intelligence is hard. And if you don't believe me, if you're the least bit skeptical.
20:14:22 Go into a high school class on any subject And tell me how difficult or how easy it is to teach them anything at all.
20:14:36 There's a reason why, by the way. I was a double major in my undergraduate.
20:14:42 History and education. I did not even bother to apply for the education degree, even though I qualified.
20:14:49 Because after going and teaching and student teaching, I decided, no, I want to teach college.
20:14:56 I wanted people to pay to listen to me. Rather than listen to me just because the bus took them there and they had no choice.
20:15:07 There's a difference of motivation.
20:15:12 Probably right.
20:15:16 Any other questions before we go?
20:15:20 Oh, I need a new computer. And do you know of anything coming down the pike? Should I wait a while? Is there something that I don't know what's out there right now.
20:15:35 Apple's definitely going to come up with something in 2025. I have no idea what.
20:15:39 I will tell you that I will tell you that If you want a laptop.
20:15:44 All of the Apple laptops right now, the only thing I would suggest that you pay attention to is the hard drive size.
20:15:53 If you buy any Apple laptop, any Apple desktop, they've doubled the amount of memory.
20:15:58 So now you get A minimum of 16 gigs and that's because they needed more memory for the AI stuff. But that means that every single model of everything they have has enough memory.
20:16:12 What people tend to try and save money on our disk drive space.
20:16:18 You will use more disk drive space than you know what you're doing.
20:16:22 I'll give you an example. If you have an iPhone and you use messages as an iPhone.
20:16:29 You should go into your settings and see how much room messages is using. It's probably using in the gigabytes Because nobody ever bothers to delete old messages, which means that every time somebody sent you a photograph or sent you a PDF or sent you a movie, it's still in messages.
20:16:47 And the same thing happens with your computer. Get at least a terabyte of disk drive space And any of the apples out there will be sufficient for your needs.
20:17:02 Everything Apple is producing right now this very second has more power than you can use.
20:17:11 I recently bought a new machine. I'm sorry?
20:17:12 I don't use a lot of space anyway. I don't use a lot of space anyway.
20:17:18 You might not think so, but once you start taking photographs and people, they tend to be very careful when they photograph things.
20:17:27 Go and photograph everything. I would go to the grocery store and Kathleen would send me a photograph Saying, I want this brand of this brand of oil. And I want this brand of soy sauce And so on and so forth. There are lots of things that people use cameras for that you don't think about.
20:17:45 I was talking to my daughter, she was here in late December.
20:17:51 And I was talking to her and I said. I have a list on my phone. I'll send it to you. And she came over and used her phone to take a picture of my screen.
20:18:00 And I said, what did you just do? And she says, it's faster.
20:18:06 So now she has a picture of the screen showing my list of things that I wanted to show her. People use photographs for everything and they just, they take up space.
20:18:17 So don't shy away from having a terabyte of this space. You'll end up using it for something.
20:18:25 Even if…
20:18:25 I don't use, let's see, I'm going there right now Let's see, what do you find that under? Go to the bottom.
20:18:34 Just click on the image of your disk drive If you don't see the image of your disk drive.
20:18:41 If you don't see an image of the disk drive, it's actually hard to find out.
20:18:46 Well, isn't that under the black apple? How much spice you're using?
20:18:52 No, it's buried. It's there, but it's buried.
20:18:59 And everybody's
20:18:59 But anyway. Everything that Apple produces today, I would recommend.
20:19:05 Just make sure you have enough disk space. The question that Mr. Lockwood asked me earlier, and I sent it back, the response was.
20:19:13 He has a friend who wants to move from a uh from a PC to a Mac and he's already got a screen, he's already got a mouse, and he's already got a keyboard.
20:19:23 Does he need a new one to work with a Mac Mini? And the answer is no.
20:19:29 It doesn't come with any of those things. And you can plug a… PC, keyboard, mouse and screen into it. The question is if you that you really need to think about is Is the keyboard any good? Is the mouse any good? And is the screen any good? A lot of PCs come with really
20:19:51 Terrible screens. And Apple makes a point of having really good strains.
20:19:56 You can get not the one from the manufacturer, but you can go into Costco and you can get a really nice LG monitor for not much money.
20:20:05 That's better than the screen that comes with any PC that I'm aware of out there right now.
20:20:13 So, uh. But yeah, you can go out and get a Mac Mini and reuse the PC screen and mouse and keyboard.
20:20:23 Cheap.
20:20:28 It says… 40.84 gigabytes.
20:20:20 But you might end up buying a new one later on anyway, simply because you don't like the the quality
20:20:32 Of 256 GB 25.
20:20:36 Okay, that's not much. Which means, among other things, that you're not saving any movies or or photographs to your hard drive.
20:20:47 And you really should.
20:20:50 Yeah. Well, and I… I guess that was in the newsletter about what the other gentleman just talked about uh I learned because I just learned about the messages and call it attachments or whatever with it it doesn't delete.
20:21:10 And… Why don't they fix a delete that means delete? Anyway.
20:21:17 So how do you… go in and get rid of those.
20:21:21 Like you just said.
20:21:28 Yeah. Right.
20:21:23 If you click on a message, you can delete the message You can do that on the Mac. You can do that on your your iPhone. That'll get rid of the message. But if it's a long string of messages, it gets rid of the whole thing.
20:21:38 It gets rid of like if you have a string of 200 messages If you delete it, it gets rid of all of them.
20:21:44 There is a way to delete the individual photographs and movies and so on and so forth but I'd probably have to show you how to do that.
20:21:55 At some meetings.
20:21:55 Well, I don't save messages. I don't have reason to. Or if it's saved, it's just till the appointment comes or whatever.
20:22:03 But I thought it said something about if in those messages there were pictures sent or something like that.
20:22:12 That the pictures don't get deleted.
20:22:17 Until you delete the message, the pictures don't get deleted. There is a way to delete individual attachments in a message string, but I'd have to show you, I can do that at some meeting sometime it's
20:22:31 If you if you delete the message
20:22:35 Then it deletes all the attachments.
20:22:38 Okay. Well… Okay. How is it stacking up for those people that are having a problem then?
20:22:45 Most people don't delete messages. No.
20:22:48 They don't delete them.
20:22:51 None of us work on it.
20:22:54 You can set your machine to delete them automatically after 30 days.
20:22:54 That's…
20:22:55 Oh, excuse me.
20:22:58 Yeah, you can also set it up so they'll delete it automatically after 30 days.
20:23:02 But here's an example of why you might need more space.
20:23:07 My niece lost her phone.
20:23:12 And it wasn't an iPhone. It was an Android phone. She lost her phone.
20:23:16 And with it, she lost the baby pictures for her eldest son.
20:23:20 Her eldest son was 12. She had never backed up any of the photographs.
20:23:28 So when she lost her phone. She lost 12 years of photographs.
20:23:34 Uh-huh.
20:23:39 Yeah.
20:23:34 All of them permanently. So that's why you should, among other things save photographs and such.
20:23:45 To your computer because it's got the room for it.
20:23:48 Thank you, Scott. In photos, I think we got five or six thousand photos in there all europe all over the world And… Does that take up a lot of space?
20:24:04 Yeah, it should be more than your 40 gigs. 5,000 or 6,000 photographs should be a fair amount of space.
20:24:12 No movies.
20:24:15 It should still be a fair amount of space, but… I have probably 300,000 photos so i'm a special case.
20:24:22 I'm looking at the 24-inch iMac desktop And… I know you said you recommend a terabyte and everybody's ever looked at my computer as always says.
20:24:46 You bet you could.
20:24:38 Good grief. You're not using anything you know And… So… And I thought, do I need to pay that extra money just for something I don't use?
20:24:56 I consider disk drive space sort of be like closet space. Most people don't have any extra room in their closet.
20:25:03 So if you use the closet like most people do. You'll fill it.
20:25:03 Yeah.
20:25:08 Unless you have a really big closet. So get a big closet.
20:25:12 I've been… using a long time but okay I must speak.
20:25:17 We can also just get an extra external hard drive.
20:25:21 You can get an external hard drive, but a lot of people don't know how to save things other than to the internal drive.
20:25:29 Apple, if you install a new piece of software, it puts it on the internal drive.
20:25:33 If you save a document, it puts it by default on the internal drive.
20:25:37 So the external drive for most people doesn't really help them that much.
20:25:43 It's um it's it's easier if there's just more space there to begin with.
20:25:48 I will also tell you that Since moving to Squim I've helped half a dozen people who had their Macs stop working in all half dozen cases because it filled up the hard drive.
20:26:01 If you'll fill up the hard drive, your Mac stops working.
20:26:06 Well, how do I tell how full it is? Just look up there. It tells you.
20:26:12 Click on the red apple. Tell you. The red black apple. Black apple.
20:26:18 Like this right here.
20:26:18 Anyway, I don't know of anything about that apple that will tell you how much space you're using.
20:26:26 Because it doesn't.
20:26:26 No. Lawrence, this has been really interesting, but I need to leave.
20:26:30 Sure.
20:26:33 Yes, and I do too.
20:26:34 Um can Can I, I haven't signed in and I never figured out how to do that.
20:26:42 That's all right. I forgot to make the sign-in sheet so uh What can I say? I… I am. I am.
20:26:49 Messed up, but… If you have ideas on what we should do in February, please send me an email.
20:27:00 Message my message. Addresses on the website or just send it to Straight MAC period vice president Straight Mac.
20:27:13 Is that right?
20:27:15 Well, again, thank you so much. I mean… Okay.
20:27:24 Oh, like, okay. Okay.
20:27:18 Send it to my email address. Just go look in your received emails and just reply with what we should do next month okay
20:27:27 Hey, Lawrence. Lawrence, this is Darcy. Real quick, are we paying dues this year?
20:27:32 Yes, we decided we'd pay them once a year in January.
20:27:39 In January.
20:27:39 And do we send them to the president
20:27:45 No, there's an address on our website. It's under the join menu. It's got the address.
20:27:53 I have the address. It says… Would you like me to read the address?
20:27:50 To send it to. It's a post office box downtown.
20:27:55 Okay. No, I can look it up. Thanks.
20:27:55 Okay, great.
20:28:00 Okay.
20:28:02 One other thing about memory that he was asking about and If you go up to the Apple icon in the corner, it does tell you about it. Go to About This Mac and then there's a selection of storage and it'll tell you exactly how much you've used.
20:28:17 Oh, it's gone. No.
20:28:19 Right. Thank you. I'm signing off.
20:28:19 That's easy.
20:28:23 Good night. Thank you, Lawrence.
20:28:24 Oh, that's, it's been forever since I used that. I forgot about it then.
20:28:31 Yeah, Indy. Hey, thank you, Lawrence.
20:28:33 Okay. See you next month. Bye-bye.

Artificial Intelligence – A.I. – April 2024

Artificial Intelligence – A.I. – April 2024

By request, we talked about Artificial Intelligence (AI) at the April 2024 meeting. Rather than talk about all the different AI wannabees, we limited the scope of discussion to some general areas, such as: what is the difference between artificial intelligence and clever programming; are there dangers to AI and what are they; why should I, a run-of-the-mill home user, care about AI? While artificial intelligence research encompasses computer science, linguistics, cognitive science, mathematics, neuroscience, ethics, engineering, robotics, physics, and writing scary headlines as clickbait, we didn’t cover any of that.

This image was created, for example, with Adobe’s Firefly AI for illustrations. Using it requires little more than an Adobe paid account and some idea of what you want as a result:

Mona Lisa painting a portrait of Leonardo da Vinci, created with the help of Adobe’s Firefly AI.
Mona Lisa painting a portrait of Leonardo da Vinci, created with the help of Adobe’s Firefly AI.

Two pieces of homework were assigned as a pre-briefing for the April meeting.

First, is this video created with Artificial Intelligence?

The Japanese Zodiac done in Apple Memoji

Second, a brief overview of Artificial Intelligence:

Some basics on AI — Artificial Intelligence

Artificial intelligence is allegedly coming to the Mac, iPhone, and iPad this fall, and possibly to Apple TV and the Apple Watch.

Slides presented at meeting

The meeting video shows a few live demonstrations of AI, plus much discussion on possible uses and problems.

Video recording of the April 23, 2024 meeting

Transcript of the April 2024 meeting

18:32:21 Did you make those videos that are homework videos?
18:32:25 Yes.
18:32:26 So that was you behind the
18:32:29 Yes, that was me behind the emoji.
18:32:33 Pretty clever.
18:33:44 For those joining, I have turned on recording. And also close captioning. If anyone objects to that, please tell me.
18:33:56 And, we usually start the meeting with a question to answer. So does anyone have any questions?
18:34:06 Well, I'm looking at the settings on the iPad for Zoom and I don't see anything about it.
18:34:13 Anything other than a microphone, there's nothing to adjust for sound. On the, at least not on my iPad.
18:34:19 Okay. Okay.
18:34:26 Cool.
18:34:27 I, you're muted.
18:34:32 Yes.
18:34:29 Okay, I have a question. How do you, fuzz or I don't know the proper term the background.
18:34:40 Everyone seems to.
18:34:40 On Zoom.
18:34:45 I'll put volume.
18:34:49 Let me try that. What was the question again?
18:34:52 I don't know if it's if you say fuzz the background. Or make the background so it's not like you can see all your background.
18:35:05 Okay.
18:35:05 But somebody said that you can kind of make it so it isn't all all the background.
18:35:10 Yes. If you're on a desktop or laptop, go up to it says Zoom workplace or Zoom if you have an older version settings.
18:35:20 And then there's background and effects. And the second effect over is blur.
18:35:27 Okay, so where do I go? You'll see showers and can expect a high of 53°F and a lower 44 degrees.
18:35:30 Go to the zoom go down to settings in the zoom menu. Go to background and effects, which is about halfway down.
18:35:45 And the second setting over is blur. You click that and it blurs the background.
18:35:50 I, I just have smug on here. So I don't I'm probably not hitting the right thing
18:35:58 Are you in Zoom? Are you using just a browser?
18:36:02 No, I hit. I hit the top. And it says mute, you know, that with video blah blah.
18:36:12 And then there's a zoom and a check.
18:36:21 Nice.
18:36:16 And then when I do that, it says smug, 1,900. The number, the pass code.
18:36:24 The perip participants encrypted.
18:36:30 Okay.
18:36:30 Then I hit the people that are on there and then we get more people.
18:36:35 Yeah, well above that in in the main menu for the computer There should be something, there should be a zoom or a zoom workplace.
18:36:45 Menu way up at the top next to the Apple menu. And under that is settings. And settings has something there for backgrounds and you can pick various backgrounds.
18:36:57 I used to.
18:37:00 I used to use the blurred.
18:37:06 Okay.
18:36:57 Okay, I'll check it. Oh, I'll go on my computer and do it. I'm on my tablet.
18:37:08 Oh, on the tablet. I, I don't know how to do this on the tablet.
18:37:12 Okay.
18:37:12 It's on the bottom if it's a tablets on if it's an iPad it's along the bottom You have to tap up above the black area.
18:37:20 To get all of the icons to pop up. And then way over at the right before the leave red X.
18:37:27 There are 3 dots. It says more. That pops up something that says apps meeting settings.
18:37:34 Backgrounds and effects, which is what you want. Backgrounds in effect. So you Yeah, now you're blur.
18:37:36 Yes. And it says blur. Blush your heart.
18:37:45 Okay.
18:37:40 Yes. And you just. Yes, you just blurred your background. I will tell you a disadvantage of a blurred background.
18:37:50 Okay.
18:37:52 I'll show you right the second. I'm holding up this orange. Hard drive.
18:37:59 If I go and I blur my background and I go into settings. And pick, background.
18:38:05 Blur and I Hold my, I need to find my mouse again. My mouse disappeared and I hold this up.
18:38:14 It kind of fades in and out of reality because it's focused on my face and it doesn't really see this if it's someplace that if it's not my face.
18:38:30 Oh.
18:38:24 So these things tend to disappear. And so it makes me, it makes it difficult for me to demonstrate things because If I have the background, it blurs that stuff.
18:38:35 So. My background now is this canvas. Print of the Pocosi print, very famous Hokusai.
18:38:46 Print.
18:38:49 I'm very fond of Hokusai, but then again, I'm a Japanese historian, so that's.
18:38:54 You know, hard for the course.
18:38:59 Any other questions?
18:39:10 Well, I will tell you a couple things while we're waiting for other people to come on and possibly have a questions.
18:39:16 First, st Apple is having their worldwide developer conference. On June 10th through the 14.th you, you can participate virtually online.
18:39:29 It's aimed at hardware and software developers, but they always have interesting things that you don't have to be a specialist to understand.
18:39:36 And then, the most important thing is that on the very 1st day, at 10 am they have a keynote and the keynote talks about their plans their software plans for the most part for the rest of the year and Sometimes they cover hardware as well.
18:39:55 But it's well worth seeing and it's it's free. And they just announced today.
18:40:03 A special event that they're going to have. And a ridiculous time it's it's going to be at 7 a.
18:40:10 M. On the 7th of May. They're having a special event and the graphic for it suggests that it's going to be, have something to do with the iPad.
18:40:20 But, these things are free and you can just log in to the Apple site and watch them.
18:40:30 If you have an Apple TV, the, you can use your Apple TV to watch them, which is what we do.
18:40:36 At home.
18:40:40 And. There are also been some updates to various Apple. Operating systems for iPads, laptops.
18:40:51 Desktops iPhones, whatnot, since our last meeting. Mostly security. Updates, but one thing that everybody could use is they've added some more emoji.
18:41:07 Which I always find a fun thing to play with. I like to send my daughter.
18:41:14 Strictic messages written entirely in emoji. She lives in England, so sometimes it's a mixture of US and British humor and she sits and puzzles them out and then says, Oh, Dad.
18:41:27 Which is appropriate.
18:41:30 Any questions anyone has?
18:41:40 Do you have any experience with back blaze on line backup service?
18:41:45 I use it. I've used it since, before we moved out here. When we moved out here and.
18:41:54 2,018. I have a huge amount of data, photographs and whatnot and While I shipped my computer, I wasn't.
18:42:05 Confident that they would drive in one in a in in good shape. So before I shipped it, I, synced everything I had up to back place.
18:42:15 Backplays is an online cloud service. And I don't remember how much it costs.
18:42:21 The, advantage that it has is that when you're off late, if you upload things to back place, it's done automated.
18:42:29 There's just a process it runs a new machine and it constantly updates. As you create new things, and they get updated, to back place.
18:42:39 And happens in the background and The price covers whether you have a lot of data or a little data. In my case, I currently have a 24 TB.
18:42:53 Of information stored on back place. And if I only had, you know, like. 50 gb would have been the same price.
18:43:02 They don't charge you for that. The good news bad news is it happens in the background.
18:43:07 I never noticed that it's happening. It doesn't slow me down at all. But given the kind of internet, we have around here.
18:43:15 It would probably take a while if you had like a terabyte of data you wanted to. Upload, it would take a while for it to get uploaded simply because it can't go any faster than your internet.
18:43:27 Connection. But, it's It's invisible to me. And doesn't cost that much money.
18:43:37 And it's a it's a good backup service. It's not a replacement for.
18:43:44 Time machine, time machine backs up a local copy. And if you lose something, it's much easier to pull it off with time machine.
18:43:52 Than it is off and back base. It's not difficult off of back place, but, among other things that it requires that you have.
18:43:59 Your machine setup with backlays that you go and search for the stuff and it's it's just.
18:44:06 It's slower and less convenient than time machine. Back blaze is, My, I, thoroughly endorse the.
18:44:15 Service. I've used it now for what?
18:44:20 7, 8 years and, never had any trouble. If you have a lot of data, they even have a restore.
18:44:29 By disk service so that if someone comes and steals your your computer and you have to start from scratch.
18:44:37 You buy a new computer and they'll ship you a drive and then you can copy it off of that drive.
18:44:44 You have to ship the drive back, but, it's, it's, I've never had to do that.
18:44:48 I'm just saying that they think about things like this. Because you have terabytes of of data.
18:44:59 Thank you.
18:44:54 It, it does take a while to transfer it back and forth. backlays because of the service that they have also has, they have these drive, reliability reports that I use when I'm purchasing.
18:45:12 Storage. Because they buy tens of thousands of drives and they're in constant use. And so they can tell you whether or not.
18:45:21 Drives are prone to dine or if they're more robust. I've last several years, every, any time I bought them.
18:45:31 Hard drive. I've gone to their site and checked out their. Stats for it. They've got some, geeks who were quite passionate about doing very strange statistics on hard drive.
18:45:47 So. It's always entertaining to see what they have to say.
18:45:52 Any other questions?
18:46:01 Paul, you're muted. Oh, you're not muted anymore.
18:46:03 I just unmuted. Okay, I have a question. I got scam the other day. I was reading a, an article.
18:46:14 On the PDM, they have I have their app. So you can read the newspaper. Now is reading it.
18:46:20 They have an app. They have an app? I didn't know. Oh.
18:46:22 What? Yeah. Yeah, yeah, can you, if, if you subscribe to the PDN.
18:46:31 You get the app and you, you can get the You can get articles and then it actually just looks like newspaper.
18:46:38 You can do whatever either way. But anyway, I was I was in the. Newspaper mode the editions mode and I was reading the article and I finished the article and this this window came up with a sort of a flashing pulsing.
18:46:55 Thing it was it was pink or red or something and it said take our survey. Okay, this is the PD and I put this I clicked on that and it had a little simple survey and I Complete that.
18:47:10 That is said, for taking the survey, you have a chance to enterprise. So, and it was late at night, so I wasn't thinking real clearly.
18:47:17 And so I clicked on that and this little machine came out and drew something out of a box and there wasn't anything. And I said, try again.
18:47:27 You have 2 more chances. I did another one and I drew up. A prize. It was a
18:47:34 IA iPhone 15 I think. Anyway, it said you've won this prize And, you just have to.
18:47:43 Hey, $9 50 for shipping and handling. Of sounds reasonable. And again, I keep thinking, well, this is a This is a.
18:47:53 Most of the news things so it. Should be fairly safe. So anyway, I clicked on that and put in my credit card knowing that if it was a scan light.
18:48:01 Oh no.
18:48:02 I'd, Go ahead and check my credit card and cancel. A cancel the transaction, which is what happens.
18:48:13 I clicked on the thing and it put up an error message and said can't complete there's an error.
18:48:18 And so I thought, oh, oh, so I, I mean, and they call the credit card and sure enough.
18:48:24 Somebody had. But a thing, a, transaction for a hundred $30 worth of, cosmetics and somewhere in eastern Canada.
18:48:38 Okay.
18:48:37 So they cancel and I cancel my card and had to wait for a week to get a new card. Now my question is, Was that something that was on?
18:48:46 There website or is that something that's invaded my phone?
18:48:50 Or how would we tell?
18:48:50 The answer is The answer is it's probably from the. Peninsula Daily News site.
18:49:04 Yeah.
18:48:59 One of the problems that I'll tell you my own story. Kind of his background. I was, I was on.
18:49:10 A site. I remember I've been a member since I was 17 at the US Naval Institute, which is a scholarly organization that, talks about the Navy and maritime law and so on so forth.
18:49:23 And I was on their website and this. Company was selling a model. Of of aircraft and there's 1 particular aircraft that the Navy used to have called it and a 5 vigilante that I think is one of the most beautiful planes ever made Doesn't make anything any difference about any of that, but it's just they had this model of this airplane.
18:50:00 Yeah.
18:49:52 So I clicked on that and it went to the model makers. Site and I saw that it was a hundred $40 and I lost interest but it was, it was a beautiful model, but it was also 140 bucks.
18:50:06 The next day when I went on to the Washington Post site I was kept on getting ads from. Lockheed and Macdonald Douglas for fighter planes.
18:50:18 Ha ha!
18:50:27 Okay. Yeah.
18:50:18 No, I personally just I'm just not I was a civil servant in the United States and they don't pay us enough for us to buy our own private fighter plane, but That is how that is how the advertising industry works.
18:50:35 Google in particular will sell people search histories. Advertisers plus they use it for their own advertising.
18:50:41 And when you go on to the Washington Post, the Washington Post sells the advertising space to a vendor to put up ads, but the Washington Post has no idea what they're going to be advertising.
18:50:56 Yeah.
18:50:56 They do the in in the in the wild West days that they started off they would they had no constraints at all.
18:51:04 So for example, the Washington Post for a couple of weeks was putting up ads for call girls.
18:51:13 Yeah.
18:51:11 They didn't realize that they were doing that. But, but, they started putting limitations on what you could have on sites.
18:51:19 And so things like, Scholastic, which is a, publishing company that targets children.
18:51:27 They, ads have to be things that children can do and not require credit cards and so on and so forth.
18:51:36 Whereas for adults, if you go into the Washington Post, they'll still try and tell you, sell you a fighter plane, but, No, more call, girls.
18:51:42 Yep.
18:51:45 So they do put restrictions on it. But the fact is that when Washington Post sells that space or, Peninsula, Daily News sells that space.
18:51:56 The vendor selling the advertising can put up there whatever they want. There are constraints in terms of the size and how much text it is and so on and so forth, but if somebody wants to establish a shell company and put up fake advertising in order to collect people's credit cards.
18:52:14 There's not much that peninsula daily dues can do about it. But having said that, I would tell Peninsula Daily News.
18:52:23 Because they essentially are selling that service. And they should know that the service that whoever is running the service probably is doing a bad job.
18:52:41 Yeah.
18:52:36 I was surprised recently to find out the potential the daily news is actually owned by a Canadian company. I didn't realize that until recently, which
18:52:44 Well, I did. I, I let them know. I told him and, Person I talked to passed it on pass the message on to their tech person so I assume that the least they have the information that I was not right.
18:53:00 Yeah, but. The the the simple fact is that probably Peninsula Daily News had nothing to do with this other than they sold the space.
18:53:10 Yeah, yeah.
18:53:10 In terms of how you can protect yourself.
18:53:16 I will tell you, I will tell you things that I do to protect myself. I do not ever ever ever spend money based upon and I, text message.
18:53:29 So if I get a text message on my phone. You like, I recently bought some shoes and the company that I bought the shoes from, text messages me, Hey, we got sales on this, that and the other thing.
18:53:41 If I decide that I really want those shoes, I will go on to their website from my desktop.
18:53:46 Explicitly go to their website and do a transaction there. I don't do it via text message and the same is true for things like ads like the.
18:54:00 I wouldn't have bought it within that box. I would have, quit out of the Naval Institute.
18:54:07 It would have gone to their website and done it that way. In terms of those contests, the contests are actually fairly They're fairly common.
18:54:18 There are vendors that go out there and actually manage contests for publishers because the publishers of newspapers and so on so forth like to sell ads and the more they know about you the better for selling you ads.
18:54:33 And so the other companies have set up these setup operations where they have contests. As an example, I recently bought some hard drives and at the end of my transaction, they had a survey.
18:54:47 And if you fill out the survey, then you can get a prize. And the price from this company is always a free magazine subscription.
18:54:53 Okay.
18:54:53 And there were things like house and garden and, home beautiful and so on and so forth. There's not a chance that I would ever read any of those, so I ignore that.
18:55:04 But I'm aware that they do that and that is a legitimate thing for them to do. But what they really this company that's selling you that's giving away these free subscriptions.
18:55:15 What they want is your name, your address. Where you live, so on so forth, so they can sell.
18:55:21 Things to you, then make you a better customer. So it's not really free because you're actually giving up some of your privacy.
18:55:29 Yeah.
18:55:29 But again, if I wanted to magazine, I'd go to the magazine. And I subscribe to it.
18:55:34 I don't respond to text messages. I don't respond to sale boxes within an app unless it's for that same company like for example if it's Washington Post wanting to sell me a book okay I'll go with that.
18:55:48 If I'll use the Washington Post app for that. But, you do have to be.
18:55:55 You do have to be. Wary and to give you an example specifically for this year this is an election year.
18:56:04 Roughly 2 thirds of the Messages that are sent out saying, please support our our candidate. The candidate doesn't actually get the money.
18:56:17 As in they have an example of the, a guy who ran for, and one in in Florida, a guy ran for and he won and congressional seat.
18:56:30 100% of the money that was collected by this one group in his name went to the guy who was running the collect money collecting operation.
18:56:40 His claim was that the operation cost so much money there wasn't anything left over to give to the candidate.
18:56:47 Ha!
18:56:51 Yeah.
18:56:47 So you want to be really careful about. How you give money and who you get money to. Like, another thing that people commonly do, I recently had one saying that my, My, Netflix account had expired and I thought, oh really?
18:57:07 So I looked at the email that it came from and the visible part of the. Email said it was netflix.com.
18:57:17 Okay, that's fine. But then it was dot. Gmail. So in other words, they created the domain that went to Gmail saying that my next, account, had expired.
18:57:28 Google doesn't track Netflix accounts. They, and, Netflix would never use Google to to.
18:57:39 To get you to resubscribe. So no, it was just, it was a scam.
18:57:43 But they came up with a, with an email address that looked. If you didn't look too closely like it might have come from Netflix.
18:57:49 You have to be, you have to be paranoid.
18:57:55 Yeah, I've since received a couple of request to fill out surveys and they look legit but I don't know they can do without my information.
18:58:06 Well, because it is an election year that you're gonna see a lot of people went to survey you.
18:58:13 Yeah.
18:58:13 Do you believe that toddler should be allowed to arm themselves to protect themselves in preschool?
18:58:19 Yes or no? Okay, I'm not gonna answer that. Survey. Yeah.
18:58:26 No, there's a lot of good stuff, yeah.
18:58:27 Yeah. Any other question? Yes.
18:58:29 Hi, I got one of those Netflix membership is expired. And we pay ours automatically. Every month and it comes out of my bank account.
18:58:43 So then.
18:58:43 Well, I I pay mine with my credit card so what I do is if I get something like that and it is from Netflix I do pay attention because it might be a credit card that's going to be expiring before the renewal.
18:58:59 So I'll check that way. But that's something I can do in my own home. I don't need to.
18:59:05 I, I don't need to do anything else.
18:59:08 Yes.
18:59:05 Yeah, well this says has expired. And the one my bank hasn't expired.
18:59:12 And also if if that was in danger of happening, Netflix would tell you they wouldn't tell you.
18:59:17 Right.
18:59:19 So be paranoid.
18:59:23 It's kind of a shame because Computers when they were originally, when I started using computers, computers were designed for computing.
18:59:30 They They add, subtract, and multiply, divided, they can do complex equations, so on and so forth.
18:59:36 Now we used computers chiefly as a communications tool. And because we use them chiefly as a communications tool.
18:59:40 Yeah.
18:59:43 They can be abused because they're a lot more powerful than the old telephone. This my iPhone here is more powerful than all the computers in the world combined in 1,970.
18:59:59 Just by itself. So this is an incredibly powerful Unix based computer and it happens to be in my pocket and I use it to play games when I'm in a waiting room at the doctor's office.
19:00:11 But you know.
19:00:11 Yeah.
19:00:14 Yeah.
19:00:15 It's a pity we have to be paranoid, but we do. And it is 7 o'clock and I should think about talking to our president.
19:00:25 Hello, President.
19:00:26 Hello Lawrence, how are you?
19:00:28 I'm fine.
19:00:29 Speaking of doctors offices, how is Kathleen?
19:00:33 I mean, that's a complicated question. She one sequence of therapy and we didn't get the result we wanted or that they wanted either and we're waiting for a bunch of referrals to come up with plan B.
19:00:49 Yeah.
19:00:49 So. She spends a lot of time snoozing. Right now.
19:00:57 But she's still at home. Okay.
19:01:00 And
19:00:58 Yes. In fact, he's watching the. The, the, meeting on our TV.
19:01:09 Yeah.
19:01:07 I'm using the Apple TV team. Rebarcast, the Zoom session.
19:01:13 Okay. Hi Kathleen. We miss you.
19:01:17 Okay.
19:01:18 I don't know if you could hurt here, but she said hi.
19:01:20 Okay.
19:01:20 Okay, I really don't have anything besides well just welcome everybody and
19:01:30 One second.
19:01:30 You're, it's going to tell us that I haven't sent in the invoices.
19:01:36 I know. I'm a bad boy.
19:01:38 Yeah.
19:01:37 Okay. And can you put in the sign in sheet on the.
19:01:46 I did put it in there, but I can copy it and. Hey, paste it again.
19:01:52 Okay.
19:01:52 I don't think I know how to do that well.
19:01:57 In the, meeting chat window is the link to the sign in sheet. And I use that for among other things, telling people that we have meetings.
19:02:09 Meeting chat.
19:02:06 So please, fill it out. And it would be immensely useful.
19:02:15 Okay, and now we have the Treasury report. Sound a free to look forward. That's we have thank you to the one member will send in the Do so we got $24 more than last month so we are at $2,442 and 93 cents
19:02:39 Until I send in invoice and then we'll have somewhat less better.
19:02:44 Yeah, there's a little bit less. Yeah, send it in when you have a chance.
19:02:51 Anything else before I do the presentation?
19:02:54 Are we gonna have any in person meetings anytime soon?
19:02:59 The answer to that is, with spring and it being warmer and more light outside, the answer is yes.
19:03:08 I would like suggestions in terms of what the what the. Topic would be I like in person meetings because among other things I'm assured it reminds me that there are really people out there who aren't small little boxes on my screen.
19:03:25 So, I like those. Plus.
19:03:27 You already have some ideas that you wanted to do that had to be done in person because of bandwidth.
19:03:35 Yes, there's some things that I want to do a in person because If I'm, we might run into of an issue today when I'm talking about artificial intelligence.
19:03:46 When there are certain things that I would like to demonstrate that. There's a good chance it'll interrupt the Zoom stream.
19:03:56 So. There are some things that are just a little bit difficult to do unless we do them.
19:04:00 Live, but, yes, there are some things I would like to. Like to pursue, but in terms of an in person meeting, yes, it would be nice if we had something in the May, June, July type, timeframe.
19:04:16 We can't meet at the library. Kathleen and I are planning tomorrow. To go to a groundbreaking ceremony where they break ground for the new library.
19:04:28 Yeah.
19:04:25 The library invited us because we're special people. So, we're going to go to that and the after they get done with the expansion, they're going to have a lot more.
19:04:37 Computer resources. So it will be curious to see if it's of, If it's something we can, take advantage of.
19:04:45 I don't exactly know what they're doing because they talk about it in general terms. I might find out tomorrow.
19:04:56 Yeah.
19:04:56 Yeah.
19:04:52 Lawrence, when you do AI tonight, can you really dumb it down? I don't know how many needed dumbed down.
19:05:00 But I even know, I'll see something in my daughter's like, that's AI.
19:05:04 That's that that picture is totally AI and I'm like. Or what's the other one?
19:05:10 It's not just AI. It's
19:05:11 Chat, chat, GPT.
19:05:13 Chat G is a considered an AI, agent. I am going to, I'm not gonna dumb it down, but I am going to address.
19:05:22 My particular bias is when it comes to AI. I don't know how many of you.
19:05:27 How do you, how do you?
19:05:29 How many of you looked at the movies that I put up?
19:05:33 Yeah.
19:05:33 The homework movies. The, If you haven't, you should take a look at the movies.
19:05:41 They're not terribly long. The,
19:05:47 What I use to create those, some people would consider AI. But I don't and I'll explain why.
19:05:55 But, anyway, I'm going to share my screen now so I can. Show off some stuff.
19:06:07 And the 1st thing I want to do is I actually have a. Slide show, which I know is not particularly Exciting, but.
19:06:21 Such is lie. And I'm going to post these so you don't have to sit here and read it.
19:06:28 And we're not going to start with that slide. We're going to start with this one.
19:06:37 The 1st I want thing I went to mention is there are many things you can do with computer. There are many different kinds of computers.
19:06:43 Yeah.
19:06:45 There are many different kinds of programming language, different kinds of programming styles, different kinds of programs.
19:06:50 And I mentioned that because a lot of what we do with people are calling AI is just programming. So I want to talk about what is programming 1st and then explain the difference.
19:07:03 This is the extended ASCII character set ASCII, American standard code for information interchange.
19:07:10 Is the standardized way in which computers. Store things internally and talk to one another. And as you can tell from the name, it's very North American centric.
19:07:22 It was developed during the 19, it was the standard was created during the 1950 s and pretty much every computer on the planet even ones that have never had anything to do with English use ASCII.
19:07:34 So when you see things that are written in Chinese characters, The computer itself is still using ASCII internally and it's using a much more extended character set to show the kind Chinese characters.
19:07:48 I'm going to show you, these, that's the extended character stat. It starts off, at 32, whereas 32. 32 is a space.
19:08:02 So starting from 32 to 255. Those are the characters in the ASCII.
19:08:06 Extended ask a character set this is a Fortran program which will print to the screen those characters from 32 to 2 55.
19:08:16 You don't have to understand it at all. Just that's what a Fortran program would look like to do that.
19:08:20 This is a cobalt program. To do the same thing print out those characters. Here's a p 0 1 program to do that.
19:08:30 PL one is not used anymore, but at 1 point IBM said this was going to be the programming language that everybody used.
19:08:38 That's why it's called PL one, programming language one. Here is an 80 80 assembler language program to print out those same characters.
19:08:47 Assembler is kind of like If you wanted to knit and you started off with the sheep and you actually, shared the sheep and carted the wool and made the strands and so on and so forth.
19:08:58 That's essentially what 88 is assembler is. You have to talk. It directly into computer speech, you can't use some English like language.
19:09:08 Here is a program written in snowball. You'll notice that this is the all the ones I'm going to show it.
19:09:14 Okay.
19:09:13 This is the shortest one. Snowball is my favorite language. When I was in grad school because it was designed to work with strings to a computer, anything that's not a number is a string.
19:09:26 And because I was working in the humanities, the strings were great. I was looking at this huge trial transcript and I wrote programs in in Snowball to do a analysis of it back in the days before people had come up with.
19:09:40 Tools for doing this kind of stuff. Here's a program written in basic to print those characters. Here's a program written in Ada, as a language done by the department, created by for the Department of Defense to create very rigid rules for things like weapons systems.
19:09:58 Here's a program done in Swift. Swift is the language used to make the Mac operating system make the.
19:10:08 Apps that you see on the app store, almost all of those were written in Swift.
19:10:14 Differences between AI and a traditional programming. And again, I'm going to post these slides. You don't have to read them.
19:10:21 Human programming relies on explicit sets of instructions. You, the programmer, write a set of instructions.
19:10:29 You try to anticipate how people will respond to those. To respond to the program and. Come to a desired result and the programs have a specific purpose.
19:10:43 Okay.
19:10:43 So when you write a program. The program does X does Y does Z. Microsoft Word, for example, it's a word processor.
19:10:53 It's never going to paint the side of your house. It can't trim your lawn.
19:10:57 Can't vacuum the floor. All it's going to do is be a word processor.
19:11:00 And even for the word processor requires a human to actually type. It's not going to do that on this own.
19:11:05 And if you have a game of chess. All this gonna do is play chess.
19:11:11 In machine language or artificial intelligence when it's done with machine language, you create programs that Allow the, program to teach itself.
19:11:24 So an artificial intelligence program has routines in it that allow it to ingest information and use that to change its own logic.
19:11:35 So instead of a person writing a program that does something very specific, The program itself is taught has taught itself how to do things.
19:11:47 That it may not have been originally designed to do. So that's a big difference between traditional programs and AI.
19:11:55 And it's also one reason why I think that a lot of things we call AI aren't really AI, but I'll explain that in a second.
19:12:03 Differences between AI and traditional programming, human programming relies on defined rules, you have a, you have a specific purpose with machine learning, it's designed to be flexible and to evolve over time.
19:12:20 The human programs are designed so that somebody can actually read the program and figure out what it's doing.
19:12:27 Machine learning models on the other hand tend to be very, very opaque. It's very difficult to figure out exactly how it came up with that result.
19:12:38 Scalability with human programming somebody has to actually do it somebody has to be fluent in not only the programming language but also in in communications some of the best programmers are actually writers and musicians and not computer scientists.
19:12:57 And if you want to have a big project, you need a lot of human programmers with machine learning.
19:13:04 The theory is that just by throwing additional computational resources, you can create. You can do more complicated things.
19:13:13 And then there's domain knowledge, the. A classic example is that if you have a very good chess program, it took programming by humans who were very good at chess in order to create that.
19:13:26 It's very difficult to have a chess program that's better than the programmers who created it.
19:13:32 Whereas with machine learning, because it's sucking in huge amounts of information that technically could be from multiple people, it might be better than anything that a, human could do.
19:13:45 And where am I?
19:13:50 I am here. There's also definitions. Sentient versus sapient. A sentient thing is something that's able to perceive or feel things around it.
19:14:03 Your cat if you rub it between the eyes is going to like that. Cause it can feel that and it responds to that.
19:14:11 If you have a deer that gets lost in your neighborhood, it's going to be frightened and because it's not next to its mother.
19:14:20 These are sentient creatures. They can are able to perceive things, they are able to feel things.
19:14:28 Artificial intelligence isn't at that level yet. And that's the lowest rank where it comes to.
19:14:36 Intelligence they really cannot perceive themselves and feel things sapien is even harder. Sapient things are considered wise there.
19:14:50 They're capable of problem solving. They're even capable of inventing problems to solve.
19:14:58 If you think about it, one of the most popular games ever invented was Solitaire, which is a sorting exercise.
19:15:06 And why do people do that? People like to play solitaire simply because our minds like to solve problems.
19:15:14 So that's something that. That, again, Artificial intelligence isn't there yet.
19:15:22 Artificial intelligence research requires computer science requires mathematics, requires cognitive science, cognitive science has to do with the part about being self-aware and making decisions and and how to learn.
19:15:36 Requires neuroscience, which is the study of how our brains function and get, insights on to how to program things.
19:15:49 But it also requires linguistics, the ability to communicate how communications theory works, philosophy to address moral questions and what is the nature of intelligence and things like that?
19:16:00 It requires electrical engineering, depending upon what you're doing might require robotics, which is applying. Intelligence to things that move.
19:16:10 Requires an understanding of physics because we're actually bumping up against the limits of physics with a lot of the stuff that we're doing now and requires the social sciences in terms of to give us insight into how these things are going to affect us culturally.
19:16:27 Dangers of artificial intelligence the big one is job displacement in the little video I put up the most common thing that a lot of companies want to do with artificial intelligence. They want to get rid of call centers.
19:16:44 They want to get rid of customer service. They want to. They went basically to have some machine tell you why you can't get a refund.
19:16:51 They're trying to cut costs. And so that's 1 possible problem with artificial intelligence. IS in terms of what the machine thinks is right and wrong.
19:17:03 A common tool used by a lot of loan companies and insurance companies and so on and so forth. Does demographic studies of places around the country and they say that if you own property or you have property in a particular area, you are a high risk and have to pay higher.
19:17:21 Premiums. Well, these tend to have economic biases so that if you're in a poor neighborhood you're a higher risk even though you might be perfectly capable you're going to pay more simply because of the biases in terms of the socioeconomics around you.
19:17:40 And in computer intelligence. Artificial intelligence. There's no way to overcome that bias because it's strictly data driven.
19:17:50 And if you say that that's a bad area, it'll say, okay, that's a bad area.
19:17:55 Privacy concerns.
19:17:58 Most of the artificial intelligence platforms that are out there right now now including things like Chat GPT, we're built using the database of millions of books.
19:18:11 That they did not ask the authors for permission and the books are a mixture of science books and mathematics books and philosophy books but also novels and one of the problems they run into is that they also looked at public databases.
19:18:28 So this data, but the most commonly used database has a whole bunch of information on, individuals up till about 2,019.
19:18:35 And so real problems with privacy there that should they have been scarfing up this data and should that be used to create the artificial intelligence.
19:18:46 You also have problems with things like autonomous weapons systems. If you have an autonomous weapon means the weapon can go out on its own and fire at somebody on its own doesn't need a human to say, that's a target.
19:18:59 It goes out and picks its own targets and fires. Probably not a terribly good idea. And there's also the fear that a lot of people have that the artificial intelligence may surpass our intelligence and they might decide that maybe we're a threat.
19:19:16 That's a common theme and a lot of science fiction movies. And even though We're not near that that that point it's still.
19:19:24 It's still something we should pay attention to. There are also security vulnerabilities. We have trouble.
19:19:31 Right now, securing systems that are designed to be secure. How difficult is it going to be to make something secure that we did not design?
19:19:40 That it was designed that the thing that we made is designed to learn and it could learn bad stuff. There's also social manipulation.
19:19:51 There was a There was a senator from. Pennsylvania who did something that one group did not like so they created a definition of his last name that was a vulgar act.
19:20:04 And now if you go search on a lot of search engines, you're going to see that the definition of his name is a vulgar act.
19:20:12 How did that happen? Thousands of people started writing that such and such equals such and such and so Google and Bing and everything learned that the definition of this word was this vulgar act.
19:20:25 And that's that kind of that kind of. Bias is very difficult for a computer to understand because a computer among other things doesn't really understand what it is to be a human doesn't really understand what it is to be a US Senator.
19:20:40 There are ethical, considerations on if these things really are intelligent, are you allowed to turn them off?
19:20:50 Yeah.
19:20:47 Or would that be murder? There are economic problems. Right now, most of the economic most of the AI systems are owned by people who are have at least hundreds of billions of millions of dollars if not billions.
19:21:05 So they right now control this type of research. And there's also the question of human autonomy.
19:21:12 Many of you might remember that when they 1st came out with electronic calculators, they were afraid that everybody would.
19:21:20 Would, stop. Learning how to do basic math. And there is. Some reason to think that that's something that we might be something we should pay attention to.
19:21:38 I'm going to show you a whole bunch of pictures that I created using an AI program called Firefly.
19:21:47 Firefly is owned by Adobe and in order to use it you have to have own some Adobe software and set up an account so and so forth.
19:21:56 I was fascinated when I saw some of the pictures of the total equillips of people. Looking at their phones instead of at the eclipse.
19:22:05 And so I said, okay, draw a picture of people looking at their phones during this eclipse.
19:22:10 And this is the 1st one that it came up with. What I did is I typed in the text and said, Eclipse of the Sun with a crowd looking at at their iPhones and it came up with this.
19:22:21 Well, most of the crowds not looking at their iPhone, both of them looking at the eclipse.
19:22:25 So that wasn't a good one. So I tried it again and I actually like this one slightly better but It's still not quite what I had in mind.
19:22:33 And this is based just upon a text description. This 1st one is an actual drawing. I wanted it to be a kind of a Art and it did pretty good in terms of the style there.
19:22:46 It's kind of art novelle. The second one I wanted more for So it came up with this.
19:22:52 Second drawing. The next thing I want to do, I asked for I said I wanted a frantic woman IT manager.
19:23:04 Frantic woman IT manager surrounded by many laptops and many raccoons eating computer tables.
19:23:12 So here's this frantic woman she doesn't look very frantic to me surrounded by laptops it's got that surrounded by raccoons but the Arab raccoons are not eating the cables and I That wasn't what I wanted.
19:23:27 This by the way is my joke that I tell people who are on the East Coast where they have high speed internet.
19:23:32 I say around here the the computer signals are actually taken back and forth by raccoon. So it's part of my joke about the raccoons.
19:23:41 So while I tried again and I got this one, she looks kind of harried. And there are raccoons, but she's eating the cables and not the raccoon.
19:23:50 So. Still didn't quite get what I wanted. But this is just a text prompt. What I typed into Firefly was Frantic woman IT manager surrounded by many laptops and many raccoons eating computer cables.
19:24:04 That's what I typed in to Firefly in order to get this photograph. This one worked out a little bit better.
19:24:11 I typed in, giant blue dragon looking at tiny bug and that's a giant blue dragon looking at a tiny bug.
19:24:20 And there's another bug like creature over here trying to run away. And I asked for a kind of a second one that's basically the same thing, but.
19:24:30 This one's kind of a close up of the giant. Dragon and the bug. So that's pretty good.
19:24:39 I, for other reasons that I'm not going to explain. Scones are Scottish and the Scots like T.
19:24:49 And I decided to combine the 2 and I said I wanted to Japanese samurai princess and armor having a cup of tea and a scone.
19:24:59 So here's the scone, here's the T, and that's sort of a Japanese princess, and it's, and it's done in this, a Japanese wooden block print style.
19:25:08 So that's when that one's not too bad.
19:25:15 There was an issue with. A new painting that was thought to be by Leonardo da Vinci and there was big to do about it and somebody asked for my thoughts on the subject.
19:25:27 And I decided what I wanted to send them was a for it was a picture of the Mona Lisa painting Leonardo da Vinci instead of Leonardo da Vinci painting Mona Lisa.
19:25:41 So I told Firefly One, Lisa as a painter created a painting of Leonardo da Vinci.
19:25:47 And that's what it came up with. Not quite sure understanding the mountains because there aren't mountains around there.
19:25:53 And I tried it again. Mona Lisa as a painter creating a painting of Leonardo da Vinci.
19:25:59 This one I Kind of like because it's a. It's not a bad, painting.
19:26:05 You can't see what she's doing. This one it got a little bit too creative and made Mimona Lisa look sort of like a Madonna, which is not quite what Mona Lisa was supposed to be.
19:26:16 Looking like. And I tried once more and this one's not bad at all because at least there's a picture of a man here.
19:26:23 And in this one, it shows that Mona Lisa is not necessarily a great painter, but It's getting to what I want to which was Mona Lisa painting Leonardo da Vinci.
19:26:33 And another try gave me this one. Which is a lovely, lovely painting, but. It doesn't really seem to have anything to do with Leonardo da Vinci, but it is a It is a nice painting.
19:26:49 My granddaughter lives in England and she was drawing a map. She said it was a map. And so I thought, okay, I want a child drawing a map of London and it gave me this.
19:27:00 And here's a child and I guess that's sort of like London and there's a of coffee, which is kind of weird because really probably not this child.
19:27:09 Favorite drink, but that's not bad. And. Then we were talking. My my background is Japanese history which means that it's also Asian history and somebody was talking about, they won a good Chinese restaurant that had fortune cookies and I said, fortunate cookies are not Chinese.
19:27:33 And I, and he said, what are they? And my response was, well, they were actually invented in San Francisco by a Japanese man.
19:27:39 But he wanted to know where's what's my source so I said here the ancient Chinese philosopher Confucius contemplating a fortune cookie.
19:27:50 Well, Fortune cookies were actually developed in the 20th century in San Francisco. Confucius knew nothing about it.
19:28:00 And this guy looks a little bit too contemporary to be Confucius and and I'm not quite sure.
19:28:03 Why a Chinese philosopher would be in front of, Mount Fuji.
19:28:09 Then I asked, I said, I had been reading the story in the, Japan Times, Japan has only one time zone.
19:28:20 The entire country is one time zone. So it's really Cool, cause you can be all over the country and listen to the same TV programs and the same radio programs and you never have to reset your clock.
19:28:31 It's it's it's great. But there was an argument about maybe they should have some a time zone for Hokkaido, which is the farthest to the east and the farthest north, it should be different from Okinawa, which is like, 1,800 miles away.
19:28:48 So I said I wanted 2 Japanese politicians arguing about daylight savings time outside of Japan's imperial palace.
19:28:56 And it gave me this. That doesn't look like Japan's imperial palace, but it's got a kind of a Japanese feel to it.
19:29:04 So that's not too bad. And then I just said that I wanted to have a photograph type and so it gives me a more photo realistic one.
19:29:10 These 2 guys are kind of weird. And there is a Japanese flag and there is a palace, but that particular palace is actually in Osaka, but you know.
19:29:22 Okay, that's it was trying And then I said I wanted a warrior princess and armor having a cup of tea and a stone.
19:29:32 So this is a. Different warrior currencies. She's not a Japanese princess, she's just a warrior princess having a cup of tea in Scone.
19:29:39 That's not bad. And this is another warrior princess having a cup of tea in the scone.
19:29:44 That's not bad.
19:29:46 We were talking about fairy, I was talking about furious with somebody on the East Coast and I said, well, we have ferries here in Washington State and they say, oh, but the fairies are kind of boring. Nothing ever happens.
19:29:57 Also, no, I said we also have water dragons and they said, what's a water dragon?
19:30:02 So I sent them this picture, which is a Why Washington State Ferry. Boat being chased by Water Dragon.
19:30:10 Okay.
19:30:13 Can't really argue with that. And here I said that a woman. Is fighting evil spirits, pouring out of a computer.
19:30:24 Looks to me more like electrical sparks than, an evil spirit, but, it's not bad.
19:30:29 I can tell by the keyboard, this is more like a Dell than a Mac, but you know, details.
19:30:34 And finally, I wanted a wood block print of London as painted by Hokusai. I'm kind of obsessed with Oak Hokusai.
19:30:43 This is kind of a good poker sized wood block print. It sort of looks like London except that there are no volcanoes in London.
19:30:53 Unless they've added one that I'm unaware of. But this is an example of what they call a what is being, promoted as AI.
19:31:03 And it's being promoted as AI because it uses machine learning to learn how art is created. And then it knows how to mimic various styles.
19:31:13 And I can't really show it to you because if I did it, would definitely kill the Zoom connection.
19:31:20 But I type in a text string and then I can specify, do I want it black and white to color?
19:31:24 Do I want it photorealistic? Do I want it to be? A particular style like this is a woodblock painting style, but it also has watercolor and oil, painting, different kinds of styles.
19:31:37 Is this really a I? I would say that this is machine learning because it's learned a lot about art, but it's not really artificial intelligence because it's designed to do a specific thing.
19:31:51 It's designed to take a string of descriptive string of text and create an image from that.
19:31:58 It's not really.
19:32:01 You might tell it in expert system. We created a system that's has a pretty good knowledge of art, except that sometimes it does really weird things like if you look at these 2 guys, they're They're physically distorted and if we come to One I had earlier of the Eclipse.
19:32:23 This woman's nose in particular. Is, it's got issues. So It's not it's not perfect, but as an expert system to.
19:32:37 Create artwork. For people who really aren't artists, it's not, it's not a bad setup.
19:32:44 Will it put graphic artists out of business? No. This is. It's not gonna put a graphic artist out of business.
19:32:54 It's not gonna put a photographer out of business, but it is a good demonstration of what they are calling AI, but I would call this an expert system rather than AI.
19:33:06 It's It's not, sentient and it's it's It's not there.
19:33:18 I went to show you another example.
19:33:34 And this shouldn't be too. Difficult for me to deal with. Somebody give me a subject.
19:33:44 Any else subject can be a person's name or color or autumn or something.
19:33:50 Milton's Paradise Lost.
19:33:52 I'm Milton's paradise. Okay.
19:33:53 Okay.
19:33:58 Right a news story. About the election in this. Dial. Of Milton's.
19:34:14 Paradise. That's the That was my prompt and what it's doing is writing this.
19:34:24 Oh my god.
19:34:24 Much longer poem than I was expecting. And let's see if I can blow it up.
19:35:01 No.
19:34:57 That's true. Yes, this is chat GPT. Is that artificial intelligence?
19:35:12 Well, if it isn't, what is it?
19:35:12 I will tell you something. It's it's better at writing blank verse than I am. I, I will give it credit for that, but this is really not artificial intelligence.
19:35:25 This is a tool. That's designed to parse language and feed it back to you. An example of the misuses of chat GBT.
19:35:35 Hey, certain. Famous lawyer until he got debarred. Submitted a brief and one of the lawsuits against him And he did it in chat GPT and chat, GPT made up.
19:35:52 Legal precedents and cited them and he turned it in. Not knowing that they were made up so they were completely imaginary.
19:36:00 The problem with the good news is that chat GPT can do this, which I think is impressive.
19:36:06 The bad thing is that chat D GPT does not know the difference between reality and fiction. And so among other things, they can read a whole bunch of Perry Mason novels and a whole bunch of other things.
19:36:20 Without the permission of the authors, ingested just millions of books. Including novels and in these novels they talk about cases.
19:36:28 So chat GPT when it's sitting there and things, okay, how does a legal brief work?
19:36:33 It knows the style of a legal brief and it has precedence, but it doesn't know that a precedent a case that Perry Mason is citing.
19:36:42 Is make believe. So this. Politician who is also a lawyer. One of his appeals was he submitted a brief that was done by Czech GPT.
19:36:54 A trademark case done in New Jersey. Oh, somebody use chat GPT to for his legal brief and it got thrown out because again, it was made up.
19:37:05 Chat GPT is an interesting toy. But it doesn't really know the difference between what's real and what's fake.
19:37:17 There is a, I mentioned it in a little clip that I had. There is a.
19:37:24 Novel out and I think the title is Abraham Lincoln Vampire Slayer. And it's a novel because Lincoln did not go out and slave vampires.
19:37:34 But it's the supposition of the, I haven't read the novel, but, the, the, the, the, the, the novel is that the Confederates were using vampires to try and, overtake the union during the Civil War.
19:37:49 And so, Abe Lincoln turned out to be a really good vampire. And that's the plot of the novel.
19:37:54 That is not real, but if you fed that to chat GPT, it would give it the same weight as a
19:38:04 As the Kerns biography of Abraham Lincoln because as far as chat GPD knows.
19:38:10 It's says this is about Lincoln and Lincoln did that's true. It doesn't have the ability to tell the difference between fact and fiction.
19:38:20 But in terms of just, you know, a short little thing done in the Style of Paradise Lost, fact and fiction.
19:38:30 But in terms of just, you know, a short little thing done in the style of Par
19:38:30 Well, it's not, it isn't. It's not blank bursts.
19:38:34 Well, I don't exactly know what to call it, but it's done in the style of Paradise Law.
19:38:40 So.
19:38:40 It's rhyming couplets as more like pope.
19:38:44 Okay, I'll go with that.
19:38:48 Anyway, anything, give me, give me another prompt that I can try out. One of the nice things about chat GPT is because it's all tech space doesn't use up that much.
19:38:58 Bandwidth so I can sit here and play with it.
19:39:09 Nothing? Okay, well I'm gonna ask it something.
19:39:10 Okay.
19:39:14 Make me a recipe. For very Chuck, Chuck, go that. Chip.
19:39:26 Okay, That's why prompt.
19:39:33 Oh my gosh.
19:39:39 Okay, now this actually looks like a fairly decent One cap. 2 sticks, unsalted butter, softened one cup, graduated sugar, one cup.
19:39:50 One packet brown sugar, 2 large eggs, 2 teaspoons, pure, vanilla extract, 2 cups all purpose flower, one cup, unsweetened cocoa powder, one teaspoon baking soda, one a half teaspoon salt, 2 cups, semi suite, chocolate chips, additional semi suite chocolate chips for topping optional.
19:40:08 Pre eat the oven to 350 degrees. Now this will cause this grief right here. I try making I'm not a cook.
19:40:16 I tried making something in our oven set at 350 and it didn't work at all.
19:40:21 And then Kathleen told me that our Stove is seriously out of calibration and it needs to be 75 degrees warmer in order to work so Oh well, this would not have worked for me, but it looks to my.
19:40:34 I is a pretty good. Chocolate chip cookie recipe.
19:40:41 And unlike Abraham Lincoln Vampire Slayer, this doesn't seem to have any fictional elements.
19:40:52 Anybody else have an idea for that I can try?
19:40:56 What is the best way to get rid of moles in my yard?
19:41:14 What is the best way to get rid of moles in my yard? It says starts off.
19:41:20 I have to show this to you.
19:41:23 Because the opening. Sentence cracks me up.
19:41:27 Yeah.
19:41:30 The Elussi Moles, those subterranean wanderers whose presence can wreak havoc upon the verdant tapestry of your yard.
19:41:38 Fear not, for there are strategies to bid farewell to these burrowing bandits. I think it's still stuck on.
19:41:44 Melton but
19:41:45 Yeah.
19:41:46 Yeah.
19:41:48 Physical barriers, repellents, traps, flooding, natural predators, grub control.
19:41:53 Maintain a tardy yard professional assistance. I will tell you something that I am fond of. Moles don't like vibrations.
19:42:03 And if you get these, you can go to almost any garden shop around here and get these metal.
19:42:09 Pinwheels that the wind blows. Stick those and moles don't like those at all.
19:42:16 You, I 1st noticed this when I was a child, we had, 1st several years of my life were on a farm that among other things did not have indoor plumbing.
19:42:29 And had dirt floors inside. We had a windmill and there were no more moles within 100 5,200 feet of the windmill because it was constantly creating vibrations.
19:42:41 Oh, this is a full size windmill that also pumped water, but it just these PIN whales, metal PIN whales that you can buy.
19:42:49 We have wind constantly around here and the vibrations, the moles don't like it.
19:42:52 So it may not help your entire yard, but it might at least. Discourage them and it doesn't put any poisons around or anything like that so I recommend.
19:43:06 Yes.
19:43:05 Lawrence, when you're typing this in, how is this different than just asking Google a question?
19:43:12 If you ask Google a question, it'll send you to a page that has things like that. But for example, I could ask for this, my chocolate chip cookie, or if I asked for it in Latin, let's see if it'll do that right a
19:43:42 Told it to write a chocolate chip cookie recipe in Latin. And. I have no idea what it says so I'm going to go with the fact that it must be in Latin.
19:44:00 Yeah.
19:43:56 I'll ask my resident Latin, expert, Kath. Kathleen is this Latin?
19:44:04 Looks like it.
19:44:10 Not really.
19:44:13 She's, somewhat skeptical. Although it did translate Fahrenheit into centigrade.
19:44:19 So, you know, that's a step in the right direction.
19:44:27 Okay.
19:44:31 It, it's different from Google in as much as it tries to solve problems and it will create things that did not exist.
19:44:37 For example, the political process. That didn't exist. I asked it to create something and it created that.
19:44:48 It's a different process than going and finding it. I actually posted on the, on the, the, straight max site.
19:44:59 A troubleshooting process that it came up with. That it it wrote as if it was I'm an evil scribe and told you.
19:45:13 How to troubleshoot your Windows machine. And chat that because I couldn't. I actually didn't I did not try to go look for one thing like that but what chat GPT does is it can create things but it's strictly a text-based is it can create things but it's strictly a text-based engine.
19:45:32 You give it, you give it a task and if it does it'll go out there and create it.
19:45:36 A couple things that it is limited by is the database that it uses for the language. There was 3 million books and such that it's based upon it kind of ends around 2,018 2,019.
19:45:50 So it's not aware of anything that happened since then. Originally it would do things like come up with slanders of current politicians and so on.
19:46:01 So, and it's they've stopped doing that. So if you try and And, same thing with, Adobe's Firefly.
19:46:08 If you ask it to have, a a photograph of Donald Trump writing a unicorn, it will say that that it'll say it can't do that.
19:46:19 If you say. I want a picture of a clown writing a Yukon. It would do that.
19:46:25 But if you Try and give up. A politicians name or some current person it say it can't do that.
19:46:33 Those rules didn't exist when they 1st came out. And you probably read in the paper about.
19:46:43 People using different search, different search and different AI projects to to put. Teenage girls faces on.
19:46:54 The, port actresses. Bodies and the controls aren't Not too many of the of these search engines have developed controls to prevent abuse yet.
19:47:13 That's 1 of the dangers of these tools. But none of these right now are really artificial intelligence.
19:47:19 They're machine assisted tools and they can create things that did not exist before. Such as those images that I, was showing you earlier.
19:47:31 But it's not really intelligence. Things to be aware of. A lot of companies are trying to work on putting, artificial intelligence into things like chatbots.
19:47:45 So you have a blender and the blender is not working and you you go to West Bend or whoever made it and you try and get them to, you know, fix your blender and you end up in this conversation with something you think you're talking with human being and exactly a chat bot.
19:48:01 And the chat bot is probably programmed in such a way that it's going to reject. Anything that you want that cost them company money.
19:48:10 You should be aware that things like this are actually happening. And. It's the uses that people put this technology to is not necessarily good.
19:48:22 But as a tool for writing chocolate chip cookie recipes in Latin It's great.
19:48:33 I don't know if it could do that in Greek.
19:48:49 Yes, it's writing something I assume is in Greek because I can't read any of it.
19:48:55 Yeah.
19:48:58 If you asked it to show you the Correct HTML and and cast digging style sheet language for to frame a put a picture or photograph.
19:49:11 With a drop shadow. And a border, would it do that?
19:49:17 Yeah, well. Let me finish. Okay, It's I think it's done with the great care.
19:49:24 I'll try something simpler.
19:49:45 Okay, I told it to write a basic language program to calculate the 1st 50 prime numbers. Why am I doing this?
19:49:53 It's because why not? It's gives it something specific to do.
19:50:01 And that actually would work. It just wrote a program to calculate the 1st 50. Prime numbers.
19:50:09 I'm familiar enough with basic that I know that that would work. So yes, it can do things like that.
19:50:15 This is one reason why people are afraid that people are going to use AI. To replace programmers.
19:50:22 One of the problems that you have is that people are really good at finding edge cases, which as an example is an edge case is people using.
19:50:30 AI to generate port. That's an edge case. The computers don't know that those are edge cases.
19:50:39 So if somebody comes up with a way to phrase that, the computer will probably do it. Whereas a human being could, they, it's called trapping, error trapping.
19:50:47 You put in conditions that it must meet in order before it does something. And when you're a programmer, you do that all the time.
19:50:54 I'll give you an example. When you type in a search query, and you press enter.
19:51:05 Google looks it up and if finds a page that matches that, Google sends your browser to that page, but on the receiving end the the server also gets to log what the search party was.
19:51:19 Well, when I was working for NOAA, a very common question we, I would get.
19:51:24 The website would get was I work for National Ocean Service. So it was questions about the ocean. How much sperm does a sperm whale hold?
19:51:35 If I looked at these queries, which we got a lot of, you could tell that they were coming from junior high and high school kids and and people probably drunk in bars and so on and so forth.
19:51:47 So I created a query string that looked for sperm whale and did not contain the word weight.
19:51:57 Because if somebody wanted to know how much a sperm whale weighed, I have an answer for that.
19:52:01 But if they ask how much sperm was in a sperm whale, I sent them to a page that said, and this is almost a direct quote.
19:52:09 As much as you will find in the average American high school.
19:52:14 Now that actually says nothing at all because most people don't know what an average American high school is.
19:52:22 They it's implied that maybe I'm talking about the the. Kids in high school, but it doesn't actually say anything.
19:52:29 And I did that to stop people from asking questions like this. We just give them that page all the time.
19:52:36 And that's a way in which I could error trap for people trying to do things that I really didn't want them to do.
19:52:44 AI program has no such constraints. You tell them to solve a problem. It will take what it knows and combine it to solve a problem.
19:52:53 Many of you have probably seen YouTube videos of cats writing around on a Roomba. And there are also you can get little robots now, a Roomba vacuums up your floor, but they're also robots that trim hedges.
19:53:21 Yeah.
19:53:06 Well, if you told an AI program Make the cat stop. The robot might think that the the program might think, okay, I'm going to get the cat on top of the Room but gonna go outside and then I'm gonna use the hedge tremor to silence the cat.
19:53:27 To the AI program. It has solved the problem. To you, that's pretty horrific, but it took 2 data sets on how to solve problems.
19:53:36 Mashed them together and came up with an unacceptable solution. Humans can guard against this in the way we program.
19:53:44 We don't know that AI has that ability.
19:53:49 I probably didn't answer your question, but. You can get it to to write programs.
19:54:17 I told it to write a CSS segment for displaying a picture with the drop shadow and it gave me a block of code.
19:54:29 Which looks like it would that actually work?
19:54:37 And it list down below it the explanation of how the. Code work. So yes, it will do it's pretty good at writing code.
19:54:46 Sometimes the code I've noticed is very generic. I and Hmm, it does make any miss.
19:54:56 I can criticize the code, but I'm in human. So that's my, prerogative.
19:55:03 Anything else you want to try and torment it with?
19:55:07 Yeah.
19:55:06 Yeah.
19:55:14 Yes.
19:55:12 Lawrence? I see. Carol. And Marsha each.
19:55:22 Oh.
19:55:20 Have their hands up. And I'm unable, I'm unable to find. Anything that will let me put my hand up today.
19:55:29 But it looks like they have questions. But they're both.
19:55:36 Yes. Marshall, you're on mute.
19:55:41 Do you have a question?
19:55:50 Marsha, do you have a question?
19:55:56 Hmm. Anybody else have a question?
19:55:59 No.
19:56:00 Yes, Chris, go ahead.
19:55:59 I have a story. I have a story. I'm, I'm very interested to hear the term job displacement.
19:56:09 And also expert systems. Because in 1985 I and for other librarians gathered to form.
19:56:21 The artificial intelligence slash expert systems interest group. Of what was then. The Information Technology Division.
19:56:34 The American Library Association. And artificial intelligence didn't really.
19:56:44 F too much it was the expert systems that had lots of librarians scared they were going to be put out of jobs.
19:56:51 So 3 years in a row. We filled a hotel ballroom, the 1st one in Chicago, I think it was in 1986.
19:57:03 At the annual convention. We had standing room only. They were well over 300 people. To hear a panel.
19:57:14 Yeah.
19:57:11 And we called it Deus X Makinov. And then being struck with. Total.
19:57:21 Imagination paralysis. The second year we called it Dais X Machina, Roman numeral 2.
19:57:30 And then the 3rd year, Roman numeral 3. And after that, we either ran out of people who were willing to be on a 5 person panel talking about expert systems and AI.
19:57:43 Or interest dropped off or the bureaucracy of the institution decided we'd had our run.
19:57:51 Or we ran out of. People to form the interest group. There. In any case, that was 1985 and that's almost 40 years ago.
19:58:03 Yes, the I happen to I happen to be interested in this because I put myself through grad school working for Washington State University Library and I was one of the programmers for the Washington State Library Network, which was the first.st
19:58:22 Yeah. Yeah.
19:58:19 Statewide library network. In the country. And what I did was the catalog, I worked on the cataloging part.
19:58:28 And one of the things that, that you have problems with with with expert systems or with artificial intelligence is humans and how we see things.
19:58:41 For example, There are rules for how you catalog things, the most, famous of which are the ones we developed in the United States called the Anglo-american cataloging rules.
19:58:53 Right.
19:58:53 And they still exist and they're still in use but pretty much everybody else copied them. It's, yeah, I thought it was really interesting.
19:59:01 I was in the National Library of Finland. Oh, 5 or 6 years ago. And they use the Library of Congress.
19:59:10 Classification system in their national library. But one of the things that you do is that in order to sort things properly in different languages, you have to have special rules.
19:59:24 For example, Under the Anglo-american cataloging rules, the any Scottish name that ends in MC or MAC is alphabetized as if it's spelled MAC in full.
19:59:37 So you'll have McDonald and Macaroon will be listed together, whether it's spelled with MC or MAC.
19:59:44 That's something that you have to teach the computer. That we do things this way because otherwise all the MCs are going to be, separated quite a ways from the ones that are MAC.
19:59:56 So that's 1.
19:59:56 Yeah, but that's a, but that's a sorting function.
19:59:59 That's a sorting function, but it's also something where a human has to intervene and tell the machine that just because the machine can do it one way that's not the way we want it.
20:00:10 I had a fellow Asian historian his last name was Tenbrook and I can't remember what the nationality is but 10 Brook is spelled T and BR or okay so brook seems fine but in the front there's 10 and 10 is in lower case so 10 brook That doesn't follow the way that computers do things when they have names they want to capitalize it and the computers would capitalize the T
20:00:37 in tenbra and it really irritated him so I had to create a special rule for whatever. I don't remember that what nationality uses that prefix.
20:00:47 And we did the same thing for Van and Von and so on and so forth. These are all things that require human intervention to do them correctly.
20:00:54 And AI systems have real trouble doing things like this because to the AI system, that American standard code for information exchange.
20:01:04 A lowercase a is sorted after an upper case A all the time. Doesn't make any exceptions.
20:01:11 So to teach it to sort of the way we want. Takes human intervention and if you tell it to just go and Sort books, you're going to not necessarily have what you want.
20:01:22 You can do that just with Apple, books. In Apple's books. It really irritates me that sometimes Isaac Asimov is under I instead of under A.
20:01:33 And I have no real control over it because. Whoever made the book that's the metadata they used and so that's why we're it sorts it there are some There are some real fears that there will be job displacement with artificial intelligence, but it's also going to create a whole new category of people who will set about fixing AI systems to do what we really want them to do rather than what
20:02:03 they want to do on their own.
20:02:10 Kathleen was talking about what the, what about the use of AI for slander.
20:02:15 This is something that we've actually seen some examples of this year where people are using, they want to say something nasty about somebody else and they can't think of anything on their own.
20:02:22 So they, they pose a hypothetical to one of these expert systems that comes back with suggestions on things that can be done.
20:02:31 And I don't really consider that. Problem in and of itself because it's it's it's still slander by a human being.
20:02:42 What I do worry about though is that you you end up doing things like that center from Pennsylvania where associating his name with a vulgarity.
20:02:52 Becomes the norms of when you search for his name, that's 1 of the things you'll find is the And that's.
20:02:59 That is definitely a problem. Any other questions?
20:03:05 What if you ask chat GP something like this? What did Jesus mean in the Bible when he said, I am the way, the truth of the life?
20:03:15 Yeah.
20:03:14 Okay. I'm not sure my pastor will go along with this.
20:03:21 Yeah.
20:03:36 It's light light not LIFE
20:03:42 I'm sorry?
20:03:44 And it should be LIFE, not white.
20:03:48 And that manner.
20:03:47 Oh, I'm sorry. Paul, you had a question?
20:03:56 Yes.
20:03:53 Oh yeah, you gave us some homework to do. And, I dutifully watched it and and I noticed in your the Japanese Soviet Well, you had 12 little printers.
20:04:11 Now did you create that from AI or one of your apps or? Cause and I was wondering what was the purpose of the of the exercise.
20:04:23 Okay.
20:04:22 Because I notice that Who are the creatures? Weren't quite what they said they were.
20:04:32 Pardon?
20:04:29 Yes, well actually 3 of them were. 3 of them weren't. The unicorn is not really a horse.
20:04:37 Right.
20:04:37 The is not really a snake and aquala bear is not really a sheath but
20:04:42 Right, I didn't I didn't catch the snake one. Yeah.
20:04:45 The, They originally started as the I was having a discussion with someone about he was born in the year the snake and he wanted a snake, oji so that when you talk to me I'd be talking to snake he's Japanese and he was born in the earth.
20:05:01 Kathleen? Are you? Yeah, Kathleen was born in the US Snake as well.
20:05:06 I was born in the year of the Dragon. And our daughter was born in the year of the Ox.
20:05:10 But anyway. Memoji, we're created, emoji, we're originally created by a Japanese artist.
20:05:17 And they started using them on telephones for instant messaging in Japan. And gradually they became this huge thing so that now I think the iPhone can create something like 300 different emojis.
20:05:29 With, skin, different skin tones and it's got, all the flags of all the countries in the world and all kinds of stuff.
20:05:39 But memoji, which are these animated ones I created on my phone And what I did is I went into my phone.
20:05:49 And I said to send myself a message. And then I selected the option for a emoji.
20:05:55 And I picked those various animals and then I spoke them. And I did this. I made that video originally for my friend who was complaining about the fact that there was no a snake.
20:06:08 But it was also an example that I wanted to show you because I wanted to ask you the question.
20:06:15 Did I do that with artificial intelligence?
20:06:21 How many of you actually looked at the video?
20:06:25 Did I do it with artificial intelligence is the question.
20:06:29 No.
20:06:29 No.
20:06:31 Why not?
20:06:35 It was probably canned. I mean.
20:06:39 Well, the,
20:06:44 Let's go here, Great to send myself something. I'm going to pick, emoji.
20:06:54 And I gotta pick this one. Okay. This is Lawrence talking as if he's a tiger.
20:07:04 This is Lawrence talking as if he's a tiger. Okay, now I'm going to hold this up to my
20:07:15 To the camera and there is me. And the tiger, Momoji. And if I click it.
20:07:21 Yeah.
20:07:23 If I, well. Trust my word if I click on it, it will. This is Lawrence talking as if he's a tiger.
20:07:31 I did that with my iPhone.
20:07:40 I did that just on my phone. I wrote out a script because I wanted to know what I was going to say because among other things I sometimes would get ahead of myself and say a word that I wasn't in tending to but wrote out a script.
20:07:52 Picked out the emojis that I wanted for the zodiac and then had them say their name, say what they were in Japanese.
20:08:03 Is that artificial intelligence? I'd say no because Apple designed it to do that. Maybe not exactly what I was doing, but the Apple designed the iPhone to do that.
20:08:13 However, it takes a huge amount of machine learning to do this. The iPhone has a whole bunch of neural, what's called neural processing units, which are specialized CPUs that that are used to, I gotta turn offs.
20:08:31 Sharing so I can actually see. It has a whole bunch of neural processors on the iPhone that are designed to deal with things that are not.
20:08:41 That you can't add, subtract, multiply, divide such as pictures. And when, when you log into your phone, if you have a phone that's got, facial recognition, there's this bar up at the top.
20:08:56 That you can't really see cause I got a dark background but There's a bar up at the top that's a black bar.
20:09:04 That has thousands of little infrared emitters in there that when you use facial recognition, it bounces infrared light off your face and it can tell, it can tell, for example, my nose as part is closer to the phone than my cheekbones are.
20:09:20 Because and it can make a 3D map of your face. And when you do facial recognition, you have to move the phone around and move your head around so that it can get a picture of your phone.
20:09:29 And it concentrates particularly on the eyes. That's why they came up with a special feature. If you have facial recognition, you can put a mask on it and the facial recognition still works because it concentrates particularly the area around the eyes.
20:09:42 Apple designed that for face ID. Some programmers at Apple were playing around with and they say, if we text your map, you know, a clown face on it, we can talk as if we're a clown.
20:09:57 And instead of having a clown, which has, it can scare people. They used animals and they use cute little cartoon animals.
20:10:05 They didn't use scary little animals and you can make, And so that's what I used for the 2 videos that I did.
20:10:12 Is it artificial intelligence? No, does it use machine learning? Absolutely. Lots and lots and lots of machine learning.
20:10:20 The neural processing units on this iPhone can process billions of things a second. Not millions or thousands, but billions of things a second.
20:10:32 And when it's dealing with something that You cannot add, subtract, multiply, divide, which is a picture.
20:10:38 Or song or things like that. It does pattern matching to match the shape of my face to put that tiger face over the top so it knows where my lips are and makes my lips move.
20:10:49 Okay.
20:10:52 And if I blink the eyes blink and depending upon what I do, sometimes you can even make the little ears slicker with some of the, All of that's done with a staggering amount of machine learning.
20:11:04 That people think is artificial intelligence, but it's not really. It's not It's not the machine picking out a problem and figuring a way to solve it.
20:11:14 It's the machine doing what it was designed to do, but in a general way. It went from the general thing was facial recognition.
20:11:22 The more specific thing that I was doing, I was using it to be basically a puppet. And I was using a A staggering amount of technology to do that.
20:11:33 Yes.
20:11:32 Lawrence. Someone said that if I, that it's possible to use AI in writing a resume.
20:11:41 Yes.
20:11:42 If I was to do that, how how do I go about doing it or what program or? Yeah, I'm lost.
20:11:52 The what do you, what you, the easy thing to do and you could just do this on Google, you could go into Google and say, give me a form for writing.
20:12:05 And it'll give you a form. But with chat GPT, you would say something like, I have, 6 years experience at underwater demolitions and I know how to cook pasta and I've climbed Mount Everest.
20:12:25 And I have a cat named Fred. Please write a resume to be a bellhop at this hotel using this is my experience.
20:12:34 It'll come up with a resume. Probably a pretty terrible resume, but at least you'll see the outline of what that kind of resume would be.
20:12:41 What order it puts things in, how it emphasizes things. That's, the true value of that chat GPT can have.
20:12:53 If you've never done a resume, it'll give you a nice form to follow and you've never done a resume, it'll give you a nice form to follow and you change the content too.
20:12:57 To fit you. And that's the people who've done useful things with chat GPT.
20:13:03 That's, the starting point where they are trying to do something different and they want to know what what the proper form for that is.
20:13:10 I know somebody who made a will that way. Give me the outline of a will that's valid in the state of Washington and they gave them, the outline of a will.
20:13:21 So you just go through the change the specifics.
20:13:21 So. In a resume the way I've seen it when. Years ago. So it's been over 20 years since I've ever written a resume.
20:13:33 Do, how do you add all that fluff? People make them so fluffy and they're so full.
20:13:39 I hate to say it, it's so full of words that doesn't necessarily Like just not the nitty gritty's.
20:13:47 The you will see that A lot of people right now, they use professional programs to sit and evaluate resumes.
20:13:56 And the professional programs are basically the expert systems that one that Chris was, saying that would replace librarians that there's no chance of that happening, but.
20:14:07 These things, these resumes look for things that can be classified as skills. So for example, if you know how to type, if you know how to speak Spanish, if you know how to do whatever.
20:14:21 You list those skills and these programs that they're looking for somebody who can speak Spanish knows how to use a telephone and can type 50 words a minute if that meets their criteria you'll pop out.
20:14:33 But they're looking for skills more than fluff. You say I'm really interested in making the world better and bringing peace to mankind.
20:14:42 That sentence does not mention any kind of skill, does not say anything about any qualifications. That's that's an aspiration, but it's not a qualification.
20:14:54 So you went to you want to emphasize skills. And. And chat GPT can't read resume for you, but it can show you the format for resume and the order in which you put things.
20:15:08 And that's actually fairly standardized.
20:15:12 I have.
20:15:12 Okay.
20:15:15 I've written a lot of curriculum vetas. I haven't really written that many. Resumes.
20:15:23 But again, the resumes were focused upon skills. And I knew I was going to get the job anyway, they just wanted to resume for their file.
20:15:29 So.
20:15:32 But focus on skills and abilities and not. Not aspirations and They really could care less about your pet frog and things like that.
20:15:43 They do kind of like, dehumanize things. If you like course back writing, That's where the engineering or you are an amateur astronomer.
20:15:54 That's the kind of thing that. That humanizes things and sometimes sets you apart from somebody else but they're really looking for skills and today larger companies about 80 to 90% of them use, resume programs they just feed the resumes in electronically and it spits out a list of things that, you know, well, take a look these and ignore the rest.
20:16:17 I hate to say it, but that's the way it is.
20:16:23 Thank you.
20:16:26 Other questions?
20:16:31 Did anywhere, everyone sign in?
20:16:33 Oh, no. How do I do that?
20:16:35 Yeah. Okay.
20:16:36 Okay. I shall paste the link into the chat again.
20:16:43 Hmm.
20:16:44 So if you could sign and that'd be nice. And. 2 things.
20:16:50 One is. I think about what you would like to have in an in person session. I have ideas on myself my own.
20:16:56 And the second thing is what do you want to do next month?
20:17:02 Okay, while everybody's thinking of those questions, I'm interested in the photography book that you talked about in your earlier email.
20:17:12 So how do I go about? Getting one.
20:17:19 Yeah.
20:17:16 The, take control photography book on with iPhone photography. If you just go to that link, you'll go to a website.
20:17:24 And you pay the money and it downloads it to your computer, you double click on it and then opens up in ibooks.
20:17:32 And once it's in your ibooks library, you can look at it on your phone as well as on your.
20:17:38 Desktop machine or tablet or however you went to look at it.
20:17:43 So, and payment is some sort of a credit card.
20:17:46 Credit card yes.
20:17:49 And I got an Apple credit card. Thank you very much. For suggesting that.
20:17:54 I'm very fond of my Apple credit card. If you give somebody an Apple credit card, it has your name on it.
20:18:00 There's no number. There's nothing else on the card. So there's nothing that anyone can steal.
20:18:07 It does them no good at all. But it's it's and also they made a titanium so you can use it as a very small bulletproof vest.
20:18:17 Oh
20:18:17 Yeah.
20:18:23 Suggestions for next month.
20:18:27 Are we meeting in person or zooming?
20:18:32 Kathleen and I have to do a few things that might interrupt our schedule. So I'm kind of.
20:18:39 Hesitant to do it in person when until we have a very specific plan. so that probably is not gonna be something we do in May, but might be something we do in June.
20:18:57 So next month was probably gonna be via zoom.
20:19:02 Okay.
20:19:04 You mentioned before showing us about how to create a web page. Hello. Maybe you could explain the advantages of doing it yourself from scratch versus
20:19:18 Contracting with software like WordPress.
20:19:22 Well, WordPress is how our site is set up. WordPress is the software that I use to do it.
20:19:29 If you wanted a WordPress site, you either make one yourself or you contract somebody to use WordPress to make it for you.
20:19:35 But, I've probably made. At this point, I probably made 7, 800 websites and over the past.
20:19:46 Oh, 6, 8 years. I probably made. 50 of those in WordPress. The ones I made before were done by hand, where I actually wrote the code.
20:19:57 And. I made lots and lots and lots of those because I was being paid to do that.
20:20:04 But now that I'm not being paid to do that, I tend to use WordPress.
20:20:08 So this word plus does it have like templates and you just You know, with Laura MIPS, some text that you replace and So on our
20:20:16 Yeah, well WordPress calls them themes, but yes, they have themes for bookshop themes for a photography studio themes for all kinds of things.
20:20:26 And there are free themes and they are paid themes. What I would do if I did a presentation nights I just start from scratch going to WordPress pick a theme and start showing you how you add stuff to it.
20:20:39 It's not really that difficult. Most people with a website, the problem that they, the average website in the world, the average website in the world has one page.
20:20:52 Just one page and that's because some restaurant says they want a website with their menu so they contract with somebody for a hundred 5,200 bucks and they create a 1 page site that's got their menu and that's it.
20:21:07 Or the same thing for barbershops and so on and so forth. So they can be very, very simple.
20:21:14 Or they can be, I have, I have websites in my own that have thousands of pages.
20:21:19 That are just mine. So, it depends upon whether or not you're willing to actually put the content up there.
20:21:26 So part of it is a writing process and part of it is a technical process. But with WordPress, it's the technical barriers are much less than with almost any other way to do it.
20:21:42 I think that would be interesting.
20:21:46 Just keep an eye.
20:21:45 Okay, well. That is something that I am more than willing to do because I have lots of experience at that.
20:21:59 Okay.
20:21:55 And probably along the way I could also tell you how not to build a website. I have seen some just horrific websites.
20:22:05 Kathleen, who's, has 5 degrees and is members of various professional organizations.
20:22:18 Okay.
20:22:13 She was asked to register for this one conference. Year last year, year before. Every time she would put her information in there when she could print submit, nothing would happen.
20:22:23 And that's because when they built the website, they had this submission process for submitting your curriculum, and all that sort of stuff.
20:22:31 But they didn't have a database behind it. So the button for submit didn't work. It couldn't do anything with that data.
20:22:37 Okay.
20:22:38 And she, she got very frustrated and had me come and play with it. We broke out our Windows machine to make sure that it wasn't just discriminating against Max and no they hadn't actually.
20:22:51 Oh
20:22:49 Tested it. It didn't work.
20:22:51 Yeah. Yeah.
20:22:55 So would this be for in person?
20:22:59 No, this is something we can do remotely.
20:23:02 But that right there is the kind of thing that. People can run into which it would be helpful for you to cover.
20:23:12 For example, I ordered some iris from up. Place called Schriner's Iris Garden and in Oregon one of the famous Iris growers in the United States.
20:23:24 Very good place to buy stuff. Anyway. I use, my iPad and. They wanted me to set up an account so I did that using the, hide my email business.
20:23:38 But then I, there was no. There was no log out, but he says, well, there is on my screen.
20:23:55 Yeah.
20:23:45 So. So I wound up going to my desktop computer, my Mac. And looking at sure enough there it showed me a log out button but on the iPad it didn't So this is they somebody hadn't tested something.
20:24:01 Well, I had a manager who wanted people to he thought the only people would use their website where people in his own organization and he wanted to be logged in all day so he didn't want them to be able to log out.
20:24:14 Yeah.
20:24:14 So I created a lot out button anyway and when you went to try and push it, it would move it.
20:24:24 Yes.
20:24:19 Oh, you stole that idea from early Macintosh. Remember the bomb? That's exactly what I would do.
20:24:29 I'd run away.
20:24:29 Yeah, so he couldn't log out because the button would run away. But, He didn't realize that you could just quit the browser and that would also log you up, but you know, details.
20:24:39 He wasn't. I asked that he be replaced as the head of this project because he was impossible to deal with, but Be that as it may.
20:24:51 I'll, show you how to build a website next month. How's that?
20:24:54 That's great.
20:24:55 Okay. Have fun. See you next month.
20:24:59 Thank you.