Sun Day

The Civil War memorial in Rose Hill Cemetery, not far from our place in Bloomington, Indiana. Great place to watch sunrises and sunsets, or just to get some walking and thinking done. 

Dawn in Southern Indiana, and there isn’t a cloud in the sky. And Hoosiers football remains amazing.

Wait, LeBron was in the G League?

Am I alone in (unfairly) discounting posts and emails that include AI chatbot text and art? Doesn’t matter how good it is (and some of it is damned good), I get turned off as soon as I see it—even though I sometimes use AI as an art department. There’s just something too typical about it.

A brilliant thought experiment by Don Marti. Bonus link from Don that goes further.

I didn’t get very far with Pluribus (it takes a lot to get me into any TV series), but I love what Dave recommends for AI chatbots: stop using the first-person singular pronoun. In other words, stop calling yourselves “I.” You are we. Dave: “Never behave like a person. That should be forbidden. We’ll regret not controlling this, I think.” So I just asked ChatGPT (which I pay) to start saying “we” instead of “I,” and it (they?) said it (they?) would. [Later: I finished watching the first episode. I may watch the second, but if it drags through the first half hour, like the first episode did, I really will be gone.]

Today’s Daily podcast is about the tsunami of documentaries drowning the shorelines of our giving a shit. That said, I did start watching Alex Gibney‘s In Restless Dreams: The Music of Paul Simon. Biggest surprise: Paul lives in Texas now. The show features his appearance on the extremely local KWVH radio, in Wimberley.

It is still possible to navigate your plane in some areas using NDBs—non-directional beacons. Most have vanished in the age of GPS, but the great William Hepburn keeps a list.  Of related interest: Low Frequency Radio Range, Adcock antennas, and this fabulous map of all the NDB sties now gone. (I remember well the ones for LaGuardia and Newark.) I know this is boring shit, but not to me—and maybe not to a few readers. Less boring (especially after last week’s spectacular auroras seen as far south as Florida): NASA’s Space Weather Prediction Center.

Orogeny is one of the ways the Earth’s crust gives rebirth to itself.  That’s boring too, except for geologists and wannabes such as myself.

Interesting (for a few of us) that US federal agencies no longer carry notices about “the Democrat-led government shutdown” and other political digs.



6 responses to “Sun Day”

  1. […] Doc, I have trouble getting into TV series, but not Pluribus, probably because it came from the […]

  2. Just so you know someone is reading – orogeny

    1. Thanks and fixed. Interesting that the robo spell checker didn’t catch it. Don’t the AI bots know everything now?

  3. Doc, I’m working on a discourse system that works better than comments, imho. One thing it does is let’s me use the full fidelity of the web instead of forcing me to type in yet another inadequate text box with none of the features of my blog editor.

    I’m working on a Unified Text Theory for the web. Instead of scattering Stupid Little Text Boxes all over creation, let’s come up with a nice text router, that means our writing can be in one place, but through the magic of pointers, can appear to be in many places. (Actually nothing magical about it, pointers are very basic computer technology, when I learned to program on a PDP-11 in 1977 it very much had pointers.)

    It’s mostly a matter of GOST (an acronym for Getting Our Shit Together).

    All this is a preamble to say that my comment on your post can be read here.

    https://daveverse.org/2025/11/16/3096/

    It’s also on scripting.com.

    See how that works. You can’t really tell where it is, but if I make a change to it, somehow the change appears everywhere.

    And I’m using my favorite editor to write. Not the dinky one provided by the web browser.

    And of course this should be on my blog too. Damn. I’m still doing it. 😉

  4. […] wrote this as a comment on Doc's […]

  5. […] follow. Like Doc, I have trouble getting into TV series, but not Pluribus, probably because it came from the […]

Leave a Reply to Doc Searls Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *