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The ABQ Correspondent 

Last Two Issues

 

March 2025

 

HAVE A SEAT

Back in what must have been 1976, I received a proposal for an article in Personal Computing Magazine, of which I was Editor. (In those quaint old days of print, the protocol for offering a piece to a publication was to send a letter outlining it to see if the editor would be interested.) Yes, the idea was appealing, and I replied that I’d soon be in the author’s home territory and could meet with him.  He invited me to his home in South San Francisco, which was one of those houses not common outside California whose front is at street level, and whose back is supported on stilts over a chasm. He gave me a tour, pointing out a storage area stacked high with folded corrugated cardboard objects. They were kits of model airplane gliders, cleverly die-cut so the purchaser could pop out the pieces and assemble the aircraft following instructions printed on them. When a customer ordered a glider, my host could just slap a label on the sturdy folded object, and mail it off. Impressive.

I was offered a comfortable chair, handed a draft of the proposed article, and asked what sort of music I liked. He played a number of instruments, and planned to practice on a recorder while I read. I said I liked Bach, and he indeed played Bach while I read. I said we’d publish the piece. We chatted interestingly about the computer biz before I left. It was an unusual experience.

My host was  Jef Raskin.  

He was more than talented (he invented computer languages, was an artist, initiated the design of the Apple MacIntosh, had much to do with the Mozilla Firefox browser, which I use routinely, etc…); he was also outspoken and influential, His work is present in daily life these fifty years later. He was also highly quotable. e.g:

“Imagine if every Thursday your shoes exploded if you tied them the usual way. This happens to us all the time with computers and nobody thinks of complaining.”

Partly because of his influence, our computers now work much of the time. Unlike most of the techie creators of personal computers, who thought that computer users cared how the infernal things work, Raskin promoted the idea that computers were appliances that customers used for doing something they wanted done. Good on him.

I saw Jef last at the West Coast Computer Faire in 1977, where Faire proprietor Jim Warren roller-skated around the floor of the San Francisco Civic Auditorium, visiting his exhibitors. That show was notable for the introduction of the Apple II, which became an icon of its era. As we looked around the busy hall, Jef commented, “This is either the end of something or the beginning of something.” I think it was both.

Jef Raskin died in 2005 at only 61.

Too bad. He was really interesting and had more to do.

 

GETTING THERE              

Forty-some years ago, pre-artificial neural nets and LLMs, I published a couple of things speculating on the potential for turning “personal robots” into companions who would be helpful and comforting to old folks like me, now. I had expected such critters to be among us long ago, but it takes a while for fundamentally different ideas to come into general use. Robot companions seem to be creeping up on us at last. A WIRED article reports interestingly on experience with an “AI travel companion” in Tokyo. The author found it…um… companionable and helpful as well as error-prone. (Who of us is not error-prone?) She seems to have been glad of its company and utility. A Quartz article, 2025 could be the year AI Grows Up deals with less “personal” AI agents performing functions in business, and the probable need to set agents watching agents to be sure that they don’t do anything harmfully silly. “Who watches the watchers?” is a classic issue, just in new context. That’s what auditing firms are about.  

We haven’t found a way to predict comprehensively what “emerging technology” will be able to do what we’ll be either glad of or sorry about, just too many unknown variables. Wikipedia says that “Emerging technologies are technologies whose development, practical applications, or both are still largely unrealized.” “Unrealized” in the sense that not only have they not been put into practice, but the new applications haven’t even occurred to anybody yet.

Back in the day, there was quite a lot of debate about using a “top-down” or “bottom-up” approach to developing robots. The top-down guys sensibly argued that we can’t efficiently design these new systems unless we know what we want them to do, and can provide specifications. The bottom-up guys argued that we don’t know what many of the things we want them to do are; we have to run experiments, building machines that can do something, and seeing how they interact with one another and the world. Reckon we need both. An example of bottom-up experience: pocket telephones are fairly new in the scheme of things. We reasonably anticipated using them to make and receive phone calls. We were a bit surprised to find them equipped with cameras that displayed their recorded images instantly …and completely surprised to discover an application for the cameras that has been hugely helpful. Every now and then a support person needs the model and/or serial number of a piece of equipment that is on a shelf behind other equipment in a tangle of cables. It’s a five-minute job to extract the equipment to find the number somewhere (not always on the back…sometimes hidden elsewhere) and a half-hour job to reassemble the system. It’s usually far easier and faster to shove the smartphone in behind the equipment, and take a picture of the plate containing the information… maybe taking several shots before getting what’s needed. Given an acceptable image, we may even text the image to the service person for interpretation. Amazing! Do you think this specific application occurred to any smartphone developer ahead of time?

This seems to be largely a bottom-up world.

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NELS MUSES 

Item:

While looking at references to Jef Raskin, I found this quote from him:

"An unlimited-length file name is a file. The content of a file is its own best name."

Remarkably, while explaining to ignorant me in 1968 what a computer is and does, Woody Bledsoe used this key phrase:

“The information is the address; the address is the information.”

With the rise of LLMs these many years later, what they were saying is becoming crystal clear.

 

Item:

It has apparently occurred to Saudi Arabia that, while they have had immense…really IMMENSE revenue from oil for quite some time now, that resource is not unlimited. Maybe they should use some of that money to create other resources. One of the things they’ve come up with is The Line, a city 1600 feet tall, 656 feet wide, and 105 miles long. They’ve already started to build it…and there’s a remote chance that the mad scheme can be carried through.

Holy Smoke!

It’s in a special area of the country, called NEOM, formally dedicated to doing new stuff. The general population of Saudi Arabia is not especially noted for embracing new stuff, and one can imagine a certain reluctance to accept social changes that must inevitably accompany a project on this scale, but the country’s management does not shrink from enforcing its dictates. This should be scary as well as fascinating to watch in coming decades.

 

Item:

A report about a lady collecting slime moulds on her Tasmanian property reminds us that these are extraordinarily interesting living…er…things with capabilities that still puzzle us. For example, they can work their way through a maze to find food. This interesting short article from Discover, admiring their talents, is a bit rude about them. They deserve better.

_______________________________________________

ITEM FROM THE PAST

 

This item from March 1996 just seems appropriate

for the start of this forty-first year

COMFORT IN CLASSIFICATION

You’ll notice on the Correspo Home Page that we finally have a real ISSN...an “International Standard Serial Number”...assigned by the National Serials Data Program of the U.S. Library of Congress to the Online Edition of the ABQ Correspondent. What does it mean? Well..unh... um...who knows?. The printed edition of the ABQ Correspondent has sported an ISSN for some years. In the case of printed publications, serial numbers are potentially helpful to librarians who hope to arrange all documents in orderly fashion, so that scholars can find them again in the future. It’s less clear that an ISSN assigned to this online edition of the Correspo has value for anybody. Where the heck will anybody look to find the material? I forgot to save the first few files of this, and even the ones now preserved are just WordPerfect files copied to fragile floppy disks. A scarier idea is that the material is stored in a great Monitoring Computer in the Sky by agencies of governments unspecified, whose work is aided by the ISSN. That’s goofy, but who knows? The ISSN gives a certain cachet to the publication, and one’s ego is bolstered by the notion that some scholar in future years may be interested in these paragraphs, improbable as it may seem. The Online Correspo seems more “official” now, with a definable place in the world.

It was challenging to move the Correspo online after

ten years of publication...two sides of an 8½” x 11”

sheet of canary yellow paper…printed out, copied

at Kinko’s or some such shop, folded inside another

sheet of paper with somebody’s address on it, stamped,

and mailed. (A first class stamp must have been about

fifteen cents at the time…more like fifty cents now…

couldn’t afford it.) Without practical constraint on the

length of the online copy, we arrived at trying to limit

pieces to 400-500 words, but sometimes wander

embarrassingly beyond that. Should we automatically

show reader responses? Goodness, no. How about

frequency? Well, the print edition had been every-other-

month but monthly was practical online and not a

nuisance to readers…and so on and so on. Lots changed

. …and it has been a sort of meaningless comfort all

these years to have an International Standard Serial

Number to make the Correspo seem real.

Onward. 

 

February 2025

 

HUM A FEW BARS…

What with all the recent stir about “drones” flitting about over New Jersey and other spots of interest, one recalls a minor story from what must have been late 1963. I was working as a none-too-competent Production Coordinator for a TV commercial production studio, FilmFair, in Hollywood, and we had a batch of commercials to produce, promoting Mattel’s Chatty Cathy doll. Chatty Cathy was not equipped with as-yet-unknown solid-state technology, but with an honest-to-goodness teeny-weeny record player. If you wound up the spring and released it, Cathy would say one of several randomly selected short phrases. The thing worked...not as well as the smartphone now in my pocket, but it won the hearts of many little girls. One panel on each of the storyboards for the television spots said something like “Just pull the cord on the back of Cathy’s neck, and she’ll speak to you.” …except that “cord” was spelled “chord.” suggesting that the storyboards had been laid out by a musician. One of my tasks in preparing for the shoot was to find, somewhere in LA, a highly reflective wall, so that we could photograph an actor walking next to it along with his/her reflection. The official comment was “We can always do it at the airport, but that has become trite; we want something fresh.” Well, I must have looked at a hundred promising walls all over town, shooting pix of many with a great big old Polaroid camera that was also a wonder of technology in those days, and I couldn’t find anything suitable. Time was running out, and on a cold, rainy, nasty afternoon, I called the spot’s producer at the Carson/Roberts agency with the news. He sighed, and said he’d pick me up, and we’d run down to admire walls at the airport. He turned out to be a pleasant young guy about my age, named Bob Emenneger, a musician as well as a filmmaker. Aha! We both hated the airport on inspecting it…and I can’t remember what we did about a reflective wall. BUT the connection with recent events is this; creative Mr. Emenegger went on to be a director/producer/composer. He also authored a book UFOs: Past, Present, and Future, which he turned into a 1974 documentary film that has become a classic reference in the UFO/UAP/UAS world in the years since. The story is more intriguing than many.

I think we have an ancient Chatty Cathy

or two somewhere around the house.

We don’t have any UFO memorabilia.

 

Shhhhh, JUST KEEP IT BETWEEN US

Back in the ‘70 I published a piece or two suggesting that robots could become warm companions and helpers to old folks like me now. I was insanely optimistic about the time schedule, assuming that these critters would be among us by the ‘90s, but fortunately, nobody took me seriously. They are just now beginning to look really practical as LLM technology booms. One of the inhibitions, apart from concern about the uncanny valley, is the amount of energy and storage required by these systems. You have to know a lot to be useful to others, to anticipate needs and understand the limitations of the party you’re trying to assist. Dogs seem to be equipped by Nature with companionability, and many can learn a lot, often more than we realize. Dogs learn a different class of skills from those we expect in our robotic companions. For example, they can’t read aloud the contents printed on the label of a can of soup. (Does it really contain that much sodium?) The robots oughta be able to do that…as well as taking the can from a shelf, opening it, and warming the contents on a stove (remembering to turn off the burner afterward). The problem is not just the size of the necessary robot brain, but the need for the critter’s discretion. To be useful, the robot must learn continuously…about everything and everyone it encounters We probably don’t want it to share with the rest of the world everything it knows that’s important to us personally. Some folks are working on that, Nvidia, for example. They are reportedly building a $3K AI-powered desktop for researchers and students; system allows users to run many AI models locally instead of relying on cloud computing.” And others are developing super-efficient software that may squeeze an LLM into your smartphone. (Yes, you’ll need lots of energy to run it for more than a few minutes, but people are working on that, too.)  The part we haven’t solved yet is making the robot as caring as a dog. We shall see.

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NELS MUSES 

Item:

Long-ago associate Larry Bellinger (the only guy I knew who was pushed out of an airplane over Panama by a crazed crew member) commented about 1996 that he saw a short future for the cellular phone business. Why bother with cellular, he asked, when direct satellite communication with personal phones will shortly be feasible? Well, it took a while, but Starlink is reportedly providing service to currently-on-fire Los Angles as this is written.

 

Item:

This wireless palm-sized robot…it comes in a kit…walks and jumps using a kind of locomotion that is apparently becoming more popular becoming more popular. See this scuttling table.

 

Item:

Musical instruments are quickly becoming digitized, and sounding pretty good in the bargain. I can’t play my few chords on a guitar my guitar any more, but have hope for making satisfactory sound with this remarkable device. It may not even be necessary to develop calluses.

_______________________________________________

ITEM FROM THE PAST

 

This item from 1993 is recalled by the current

to-do about the use of computer generated

images…and sound…well, almost real people

in movies.

WOOF

Brock has reported from the wilds of Hollywood about the stresses of operat­ing a realistic dog puppet in a production whose real performing dogs were owned by a trainer who was pathologically jealous of the puppet. "My dogs can do all the action the script calls for," he said. The dogs couldn't, but the guy threatened to walk out if the inter­loping puppet was allowed to do anything. Without those dogs the produc­tion would shut down, because they couldn't match the animals exactly. Brock was less concerned about that than about having the guy come in and shoot the puppet with a gun. They got through it by photographing everything with the real hounds, and smug­gling the puppet shots in at night. Brock did not expect exactly this hazard in showbiz. He recently puppe­teered a wolf in a film called…um…Wolf. He hopes he's not canine typecast. Reminds me of a session years ago in Holly­wood when we were shooting a television commer­cial for a Minneapo­lis bank whose logo featured a small girl standing next to an immense protective dog. We simulated the logo with a real girl and a real dog...actually three or four identical Great Danes. Dogs get bored and moody in a hurry on set, so the trainer typically main­tains a fleet of inter­change­able animals, and brings several to the shooting session. At one point our director, Hank Ludwin, gestured with a stick while explaining something. The dogs instantly took note. Their ears went down, and they dropped to attack positions. The trainer and his helper flung themselves on the dogs, shouting. "Drop the stick, drop the stick!" Hank did, and the dogs relaxed. The trainer explained. "These dogs just came off Disney's Swiss Family Robinson. They've been trained to take swords away from pirates." (Swiss Family Robinson was on television this afternoon, and the sight of the dogs brought it all back.) By the way, Brock com­ment­ed that the director of Wolf was really good, smart in his use of the puppets, apprecia­tive of what the puppeteers were able to accom­plish, and fun to work with. "His name is Nichols," said Brock. "Mike Nichols?" I asked. "Yes, have you heard of him?" said my son, the Holly­wood expert. He hadn't. Gad.

The resentment of imitation dogs by the trainer

is matched currently by the resentment of special

effects critter creators who see their business

slipping away. When a director tries a special

effects shot several times, is dissatisfied, and finally

says “Never mind, we’ll CG it,” those words are

chilling. While it was hard to imagine in 1993 that

CG would become as practical as real 3D props,

the reality is upon us in 2025, and lots of people

are greatly upset. One assumes that CG “avatars”

can be trained with AI/LLM techniques so well

that they will simulate real people, living or dead,

to become such capable, cooperative, game,

inventive, interesting performers that their living

models will become less useful and will be paid or

otherwise encouraged to disappear.

Not recommending this. mind you, just pointing

out its practicality.

Coincidentally, last time I visited family in LA

(their neighborhood hasn’t yet burned down,

though many of their friends have lost their

homes) I watched Brock’s excellent brother

Garth, who manages a special effects studio,

directing creation of a puppet dog. I paid close

attention but did not spot an angry man with a

pack of real dogs coming in to shoot this puppet.

We lost good old Brock to MS in 2015. Doggone it.

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