Showing posts with label Friends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Friends. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

The Robots are Coming

The Robots are ComingI have been privileged to receive a pre-publication draft of The Robots are Coming from the author. This has nothing to do with any aptitude for literary review or interest or fear of robots on my part. Rather the author is my oldest friend. This is therefore not an unbiased review. The author will show up at my doorstep with beverages and conversation more often if this book sells well.

And since our friendship has always been built on friendly argumentative exchange, I won’t try to suggest that this book is without fault or that I fully embrace its conclusions. There were a few spots where the argument sounded too much like Glenn Beck for my taste though I didn’t mind the occasional political jab.

The robots are coming Actually, we all know that they are already here. We know about the ones that man the auto assembly lines and we know about the ones the police use to probe and destroy shopping bags left behind by careless tourists. We also know about armed and unmanned drones flying over Pakistan providing not so silent security for wedding parties and such.


And we know about endless loop, mind numbing, talking software that substitutes for customer ‘Service’. The robots are here alright. We built them to do useful or profitable things for us and we tolerate them because we like the convenience it brings (or we really are desperate to get through to customer service).

We all also know about the internet and the growing power that is Google. We know about 2001 a Space Odyssey , The Matrix and The Terminator films and we know that we are not ‘there’ yet. At least we think so. This book shows that we’re a lot closer than you think. The author provides a well-documented look at exactly where robot technology is at today, how quickly it has gotten there and how few the steps are and how quickly they might occur that will send us hurtling willingly into the matrix.

The author warns in bold type from the first page of the introduction that when the robots come for you “your neighbors will help it happen” I’m one of the unwitting neighbors; happy to turn over to iTunes and the cloud information about my complete music collection (and likely whether it was obtained legally). Happy to allow their software to pick the music I listen to in exchange for the pleasure of hearing my music in novel and interesting sequence and the convenience of not having to sort through 100’s of CDs to do it. I don’t mind giving Pandora Radio my thumbs up or down clicks as they learn my taste in music. I like the end result. Radio that reads my mind (and yes I do occasionally succumb to targeted advertising and buy new music). Without the cloud I would have never heard Lucinda Williams sing Dylan’s Positively Fourth Street.

And I can’t neglect mention of the irony of how utterly indispensible Google and the cloud were in producing a book warning of its imminent threat. Or the role that a company named after a river in South America might play if it is to be successful.


This 20 minute TED Talk video demonstrates why you should read this book.

Quoting the author of The Robots are Coming:

“In this powerful talk, the world‘s foremost robot expert shows how the widespread use of robots in war is changing the realities of combat. He shows us scenarios straight out of science fiction -- that are no longer at all fictitious.”

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Samos is Amos

but Sanon ain't Anon

to Melbourne photoset on Flickr If Samos is Amos and Amos is famous then Sanon ain't Anon no more.





The photo is of the entrance to Luna Park in Melbourne, Australia.
Clicking on it will take you there. Go ahead. I’ve already changed the subject.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Amos Anon’s Book

Are there really any dead Tibetans?

Enlarge ImageMy old friend Amos Anon has written a serious and scholarly study guide to the Tibetan Book of the Dead. Now I'm no expert, but I thought the whole purpose of that book was to ensure that Tibetans don’t stay dead. At least not for long.

So why aren't there more Tibetans among us?


Updated Feb 24th:
Turns out Amos has provided the answer in an e-mail.

“Actually, the purpose of the Tibetan Book of the Dead is to help you stay dead, or in other words, to not get reincarnated. “
Which pretty much explains it all.

Told you he was the expert. The only version of the Tibetan Book of the Dead I've read all the way through is the comic book version of The Tibetan Book of the Dead. And Timothy Leary's too; they both agree with Amos. And I bet some of those that do reincarnate come back as Chinese, just for revenge. Or maybe as spies. Karma!

The supply of Tibetans will eventually run out.


to samos-sanon.blogspot.comI'm not the expert. So you should check out what Amos has to say for yourself at his new blog

Samos Samon's Seudo Serial

Better still, go to Amazon where you can read an excerpt then buy his book. Amos tells me it really is very good.

Besides, he needs the money. He owes me a beer.


Note: Links external to Blogger open in a single new window.

Kid Ric's Last Picks

I didn't know Kid Ric well. I met him at Merlin’s Tavern a few times over beers. Ric introduced me to Blogger there. We talked about music and old friends.

to Robert Johnson Blues Foundation

Robert Johnson "...was among the most famous of Delta blues musicians. His landmark recordings from 1936–1937 display a remarkable combination of singing, guitar skills, and songwriting talent that have influenced generations of musicians.... ...Considered by some to be the "Grandfather of Rock 'n' Roll", his vocal phrasing, original songs, and guitar style have influenced a broad range of musicians, including Muddy Waters, Bob Dylan, Jimi Hendrix, Led Zeppelin, The Rolling Stones, Johnny Winter, Jeff Beck, Jack White and Eric Clapton…”

Add Kid Ric to that list.

Robert Johnson’s Graves , the final post on Kid Ric's Blog appeared on July 6th, 2007. I have reproduced it below.

A small tribute to The great Robert Johnson.
Not just another Taurus genius.

YouTube - Robert Johnson's Graves

Peace, love and light,
Ric

The YouTube video(which opens in a new window)and its background music are hauntingly prophetic yet eerily appropriate and it certainly feels like Ric was indeed saying goodbye.

But less than an hour after posting, Ric added Purple is the color by Milow to his internet radio stream at Kid Ric’s Picks and had this to say:

“This one is a mover. Drums are hot. Love the vocals and the interesting way they play off each other. Great instrumentation. Nice mix. Way to go Milow!”
The song, full of life and energy is quite different from the video. Both are fitting for the Kid Ric that I met.

Ric continued adding songs to his radio stream through early September. By the end of the month he was off to California. He never made it back.

On Nov 25th, 2007 this comment appeared on Kid Ric’s Blog:

It's with great regret that I must tell everyone that Kid Ric (Ric Grove) of Hagerstown, MD did pass away from his short battle with cancer on 11/14/07. He went to California on September 26th to try some alternative treatment, but unfortunately never returned. He was a very good friend of ours and will be missed. Ric & I knew each other for over thirty years, played music together in several projects. Ric was a very talented individual as an artist and a musician, and also a very good hearted guy. He also did web design on the side and won many awards for his web designs. Recently he designed and built my band's web site http://www.thephatkatz.com/, as well as taught me how to maintain it. I'm very sorry to give all of you the bad news, but I think Ric would've wanted you to know what happened to him. He often spoke of his good friends on the blogs.

-Tom Taylor
Fair well my friend. Good tunes! Your music lives on.

To Kid Ric's Radio Stream

Clicking on my self portrait on the left will play Kid Ric's Internet Radio Stream in a new window.




While we are reminiscing, remember also friends Alan Reischer and Nelson Carpenter.

enlargeIt was Alan who introduced me to Tom Robbin's novels while listening to The Bama on WPFW on Saturday mornings. He is missed (and so is The Bama). Shepherdstown and the Meklenburg Inn are not the same without him.

enlarge


Nelson, I hardly knew you. It looks like you were fading away even in this picture from 1972.






to Merlin's Tavern homepage


Stop by Merlin's and lift a pint to Ric, Alan or Nelson. Cheers my friends.

Friday, March 7, 2008

Floating the Potomac River

Floating from Paw Paw to Little Orleans way too many years ago.

Floating the Potomac by LostBob
This started as a first attempt to scan a 35mm color negative on my HP-3970 Scanner.

The negatives are from a 1991 canoe camping trip floating from Paw Paw down to Little Orleans. These shots are from near the put-in. Twelve miles of the Paw Paw bends lie ahead. The bends is that section of river bypassed by the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal via the Paw Paw Tunnel. After the bends there is a hiker-biker camping site where the canal rejoins the river on the downstream side of the tunnel. From the camp site it is less than two mile back the tow path and through the tunnel (very convenient if you’ve left your jacket back in the car).

Floating the Potomac by LostBob
This is probably the best overnight trip on the Potomac. Finish up with a cold one at Bill’s Place in Little Orleans.

Thursday, January 12, 2006

A Day at the Races

Porsche Carrera GT 666 by LostBob

Porsche Carrera GT 666

Taken at Dubai's Autodrome in October of 2004 on the day of the inaugural race for the newly opened track. It was a typical warm and sunny Dubai day. I was there with my friends Wageh who is Egyptian and Stephen from Scotland. Sergei was home in Kazan on paternity leave enjoying his recently born son.

Stephen honeymooned in Cuba and now lives in Mexico. Wageh is married to a Moroccan woman. We used to smoke sheesha and watch the Dhows and Abras (Dubai’s water taxis) at the creek side Lebanese restaurant in Bur Dubai.

I was told that this car is owned by Dubai's Sheik Maktoum. He drove a U.S. made Dodge Viper in the feature race on that opening day. I don't recall where he finished.

My friend Amos Anon says "The world is a very strange place" I think he is right.

You can read another post about the Sheik's cars in The Cars of the Beast Check it out.

Note: All Links in this post (except the last) open in a single new window.