Monday, February 2, 2026

The AI Business Model is Very Stupid

The AI business model was this: a few companies buy up all the GPUs from NVIDIA, pop them in data centers, then every other company pays them lots of money to use GPUs to run AI models. That's one of the reasons the power constraints don't really matter much. In the mind of the corporate scum at Oracle, Microsoft, OpenAI, etc... since they'd have all the GPUs, and AI is so super necessary, it might even work out better if data center construction was halted or limited because they could just charge more for a thing that makes PDFs about women's history month or whatever.

The hype machine was supposed to get a bunch of corporate dummies to start thinking "AI" was a necessary ingredient to doing the useless stuff people do at work all day. It didn't really work for coding tasks. It seems that it is mainly for HR department emails.

I think the theory that "tech" is utterly saturated and in negative ROI mode is a good one. These mega projects seem pretty doomed. I can see the feds bailing these trash companies out--that will be even more evidence of a failed system.

The future of tech is probably niche, real value added applications. The concept of moving all "compute" into "data centers" is fucktarded drivel. It's the dream of these monopolist psychos. That niche, real value added business is going to be harder and harder to find, especially for giant corporations. Small companies of engineers can do it.

Waymo Car Hits Child in School Zone

 https://nypost.com/2026/01/29/us-news/child-hit-by-waymo-near-elementary-school-in-santa-monica/


The tech industry is a vast pile of garbage. Good news this morning is Oracle is crashing so maybe the AI bubble is popping. I will make my exit from tech pretty soon. Yay!

Sunday, February 1, 2026

Bill Gates and Epstein

More of the "Epstein Files" were released a couple of days ago, I guess. There are some emails between Bill Gates and Epstein that are pretty weird and gross. Supposedly Bill Gates contracted an STD from a Russian girl prostitute then slipped his wife some antibiotics. There's no way to really now if it's true or is just a fabrication.

To me it seemed plausible. Gates and Epstein had some strange relationship over years.

I think there's basically a bunch of cults/mafias that control governments and big institutions. The made men in the cult are all compromised. A great example of that was Denny Hastert, who was speaker of the house in the 90s. He was a child molester, then was promoted to be in congress the the speaker of the house. That implies a large contingent of the republican congress people at the time were similarly controlled.

I think some members of these cults are reluctant and some are enthusiastic participants in it. The weird reports of activities at the "Bohemian Grove" reported over the years are some more info that's spilled out into public over the years.

How to Do Things

Over the past 25-30 years, I've been working "in tech" on various projects at different companies. Several of the companies failed. I could tell, within a matter of weeks of working at these places, that the companies were doomed. My assessments were 100% right over time. I am not really sure off the top  of my head what characteristics of the doomed companies tipped me off.

An individual who knows what he is doing acts a certain way. An individual who doesn't have a clue acts a different way. In the corporate or political context, it involves lying and telling stories and gaslighting people that they aren't working hard enough or whatever. The crux of the problem at the failed companies was they tried to do "too much", that is, they embarked on a big project without really knowing the problems involved. It's like building a house from the roof down.

When people don't know what they're doing that approach seems plausible, because they know certain aspects of the structure of the problem and imagine they can fill in the gaps later because they can hire an expert, or whatever. That doesn't work for fairly obvious reasons.

I briefly worked as a contractor at a company that made radioactive source screening equipment for scrap smelters. That company went from a back of the envelope concept to a full scale system--that didn't work. I got hired "to help out". I started to delve into the code to try to understand it, and started putting together some models of systems that might work but I was let go, because the people running the project thought it only had cosmetic problems and didn't want a mere contractor to work on their "design". A few months later they shut the project down and the company is gone.

Another company I worked at outsourced their core intellectual property and then stupidly agreed to onerous licensing terms. That decision was inexplicable and obvious. Rather than bring the core technology in-house, they hired another contractor to implement the motion controller. At the time, in the late 1990s, there was actually published open-source software for a motion controller system from NIST. The task to make that work was straightforward. A few people, including me, argued to do that. The company declined, then went out of business a few years later.

When I do my own tech projects, I find it's fairly common to run into a gap in my expertise and have to pause. For example, I implemented some drone mapping software a few years ago. It relied on a photographic pattern matching technique that works in open areas, but fails when there are trees. I worked on several algorithms that attempted to work around that issue, but they all failed. In recent years, people came up with brute force algorithms that might potentially work, plus people developed some alternative sensors that work, but they're too expensive for me to try.

Anyway, as an individual, I can keep iterating on projects, or trying things that might have a niche application. Tech companies could do that too, but when they rely on investor money, ironically, they get pushed onto a nonsensical path more often than not. That is, they have to make unrealistic promises and follow that roof-down model. The investors know even less about what they're doing than the managers of these companies. For them it's just a bet that will pay off or not. They rely on a theory that a 1/10 success rate will make up for losses. All that waste chewed up the purchasing power of the dollar.
 
It's pretty fatiguing to be involved with projects that have no chance of success because there's no organic way for engineers to decide what to do. When there's key missing parts, all the work is arbitrary lists of nonsense made by dumb asses.

Anyway, the way to do things is obvious and natural. Get the basics working, delve into the aspects of a project that aren't understood to determine if something is really feasible. All that effort might take a year with key people prototyping the difficult aspects of a problem. At that point, the potential expenses to develop some new tech gizmo or system would actually be known reasonably well.

Saturday, January 31, 2026

Child Mutilator Doctor and Psychologist Sued

I'm not sure why, or exactly when the psycho lefty people started pushing the pronoun and gender "transition" insanity. Maybe it was 5 years ago or so. Anyway, when it was going on, I wondered how long it would take for a mangled child to sue their "doctors" and win. A case just happened where a mutilated child sued her psychologist and the doctor that chopped her tits off.

Here's a link

It's really bizarre they ever got this nonsense to get any kind of momentum. The ruling class lefty people in the US are trash.

Failure is Better

When I was a little kid, I wasn't really interested in sports like baseball or football, but I ended up playing a few years of T-ball and little league, because that's what boys did. The first time, and the first pitch I was at bat in little league, where there was actually a pitcher, I smashed the ball into the outfield. It was total blind luck though. After that, I barely ever got on base. I had no idea how to hit a baseball. Since I was a little kid with no experience in anything, maybe 7 years old, I just blindly hacked at the ball. I didn't try to break down the steps or learn any hand-eye coordination. Apparently none of the coaches were great at instructing kids, etc... Anyway, I eventually dropped out of baseball and other team sports.

Maybe by the time I was 13 or 14 I realized I could learn things myself, so to get good at something, all it took was interest. One of my middle school teachers explained the basic steps of juggling for example, and importantly said practice was the main ingredient. I spent a few evenings on it. I still remember the moment when I went from not being able to juggle to juggling 3 balls. Then I realized I could learn and was actually pretty smart, and went on from there.

It is very bad to "succeed" by luck, at least from the point of view of gaining skill and knowledge. There's less than zero information in luck. Luck turns into a self-aggrandizing fantasy for many people. The stock market repeatedly does that to millions of people. The mechanism for it is quite clear. Luck happens. A person has an archetypal model of a "successful investor" like Warren Buffet. They believe they're Warren Buffet. They boldly gamble in the stonk market casino, then lose all their money. They don't understand what "financiers" actually do--they're basically criminals.

The one time lucky Joe Schmoe stonk gambler just replays fantasy movies in their mind's eye about being rich. Maybe some of them seize on "charts" or some similar nonsense and manage to stretch the gambling out for many years instead of losing everything in mere weeks or months.

A lot of the tech industry is built around the concept of "being the next google", so investors will throw millions or billions at some company in the hopes they can buy a whole new market. If some company can grow, even if it's really an implausible business and has no chance of making a profit, at some point it can go public and with some creative accounting and PR, can unload shares on the public and the ground floor investors can chalk up a win. That model is really stupid and is flailing around and failing right now. It was the model of the money printing era of 2000 through a couple of years ago.

Anyway, the lesson I personally learned from doing projects for companies and myself for years and years is "don't do". Almost every endeavor is pretty stupid and a waste of time and effort. When there's an obvious problem to solve that many people need, sure, go ahead and give it a shot. Then if you have a good, efficacious solution, you might "win". If you're trying to do something that's unclear and very complicated, or is a hodgepodge of ideas, no chance. You're wasting your life energy on trash.

There's a much more practical and pragmatic model for the would be engineer or inventor or problem solver. Build your thing--it's pretty cheap to do it these days. Put it on youtube. See what happens. You might even end up collaborating with people on it. You can basically cut out all the corporate overhead people and middlemen people and finance people that way. If you build a better mousetrap, people will actually buy it.

I think "the system" and all its overhead and expenses that will potentially lead to personal riches, just really isn't worth it. We all basically expend our whole lives hoping we can "get rich". The whole system exists to protect a handful of randos who actually do. It's self-defeating dumb-fuck behavior.

Friday, January 30, 2026

Tech Company Collusion?

 Apparently the "AI" bubble soaked up every available hardware component, including GPUs, memory, FPGAs. The company I work for probably won't be able to build new hardware this year. To me it seems likely that the big tech companies, like Microsoft and Amazon just bought all the hardware inventory to force people to use their trash cloud services. They apparently want a "hardware as a service" model---that can't work.

Will the government intervene and launch a RICO case against them? Very unlikely.

It seems like a case of terminal malinvestment.

In prior eras, the tech companies colluded against their workforce to keep wages low.