AI Al

Dec. 1st, 2025 04:17 pm
calimac: (Default)
[personal profile] calimac
The Guardian has a long story about the development of artificial intelligence - and since much of it is going on in Silicon Valley and that's where the author did his research, it's full of Silicon Valley local color, focusing on the CalTrain line that many take to commute to work - I've commuted on it myself in time past.

But don't take it too much on trust: it's not "a short walk" to the Stanford campus from the Palo Alto station. Try to walk to the center of Stanford, where the work is going on, from the train station and you're in for a big surprise as you tromp for over a mile along the path paralleling a road running straight along a line of palm trees through a grove of oak and eucalyptus, the garish front of Stanford's Memorial Church growing faintly larger in the distance as you walk. You're on the Stanford campus, yes, but you're not there yet. This is why the university operates a shuttle bus line from the train station.

One thing the article doesn't mention is that the 101 freeway between Silicon Valley and San Francisco, another major commuter route, if one less drawing to a reporter from the UK where people are more likely to take the train, is littered with billboards with cryptic messages from AI companies. And almost every single one of those billboards is printed in sans-serif type. As a result of which, the initials "AI" look as if they say "Al" as in Al Gore or Al Haig.

This is annoying. I've started pronouncing it that way in protest. Whenever I see it without periods ("A.I.", which nobody uses) and without serifs, I'm saying "Al," the personal name.

2. Oh ghu, is this ever true.

3. Bruce Schneier, computer security expert, reports on a movement to ban VPNs. He doesn't tell you what a VPN is. If you Google VPN, the first entries and the Al responses don't tell you what a VPN is either. Eventually there are articles that do say what it stands for, but the explanations are aimed at people who already know what it means.

Date: 2025-12-02 08:19 pm (UTC)
wild_patience: (Default)
From: [personal profile] wild_patience
Yikes! If they ban VPNs, they'd better have a secure replacement in place. A VPN was how I was able to log in to my work and fab computers from home in 2020. It's basically a secure third-party network that lets you log in elsewhere with the proper passwords. You need a second device (usually a smartphone - I used my iPad) to initiate it each session. No VPNs and no replacement means no remote access with a secure connection - that's cutting off your nose to spite your face as many people travel for work.

Date: 2025-12-04 09:33 am (UTC)
andrewducker: (Default)
From: [personal profile] andrewducker
A VPN is a way of routing your network connection through a remote server somewhere.

So, for instance, I can connect to my office one, and then as far as my computer is concerned it's on the office network.

Or, alternatively, you can connect to one based in Denmark, and then have access to Danish streaming TV, and whatever websites you can only get to from Denmark.

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