“The best way to predict the future is to invent it”*…

Dario Amodei, the CEO of AI purveyor Anthropic, has recently published a long (nearly 20,000 word) essay on the risks of artificial intelligence that he fears: Will AI become autonomous (and if so, to what ends)? Will AI be used for destructive pursposes (e.g., war or terrorism)? Will AI allow one or a small number of “actors” (corporations or states) to seize power? Will AI cause economic disruption (mass unemployment, radically-concentrated wealth, disruption in capital flows)? Will AI indirect effects (on our societies and individual lives) be destabilizing? (Perhaps tellingly, he doesn’t explore the prospect of an economic crash on the back of an AI bubble, should one burst– but that might be considered an “indirect effect,” as AI development would likely continue, but in fewer hands [consolidation] and on the heels of destabilizing financial turbulence.)

The essay is worth reading. At the same time, as Matt Levine suggests, we might wonder why pieces like this come not from AI nay-sayers, but from those rushing to build it…

… in fact there seems to be a surprisingly strong positive correlation between noisily worrying about AI and being good at building AI. Probably the three most famous AI worriers in the world are Sam Altman, Dario Amodei, and Elon Musk, who are also the chief executive officers of three of the biggest AI labs; they take time out from their busy schedules of warning about the risks of AI to raise money to build AI faster. And they seem to hire a lot of their best researchers from, you know, worrying-about-AI forums on the internet. You could have different models here too. “Worrying about AI demonstrates the curiosity and epistemic humility and care that make a good AI researcher,” maybe. Or “performatively worrying about AI is actually a perverse form of optimism about the power and imminence of AI, and we want those sorts of optimists.” I don’t know. It’s just a strange little empirical fact about modern workplace culture that I find delightful, though I suppose I’ll regret saying this when the robots enslave us.

Anyway if you run an AI lab and are trying to recruit the best researchers, you might promise them obvious perks like “the smartest colleagues” and “the most access to chips” and “$50 million,” but if you are creative you might promise the less obvious perks like “the most opportunities to raise red flags.” They love that…

– source

In any case, precaution and prudence in the pursuit of AI advances seems wise. But perhaps even more, Tim O’Reilly and Mike Loukides suggest, we’d profit from some disciplined foresight:

The market is betting that AI is an unprecedented technology breakthrough, valuing Sam Altman and Jensen Huang like demigods already astride the world. The slow progress of enterprise AI adoption from pilot to production, however, still suggests at least the possibility of a less earthshaking future. Which is right?

At O’Reilly, we don’t believe in predicting the future. But we do believe you can see signs of the future in the present. Every day, news items land, and if you read them with a kind of soft focus, they slowly add up. Trends are vectors with both a magnitude and a direction, and by watching a series of data points light up those vectors, you can see possible futures taking shape…

For AI in 2026 and beyond, we see two fundamentally different scenarios that have been competing for attention. Nearly every debate about AI, whether about jobs, about investment, about regulation, or about the shape of the economy to come, is really an argument about which of these scenarios is correct…

[Tim and Mike explore an “AGI is an economic singularity” scenario (see also here, here, and Amodei’s essay, linked above), then an “AI is a normal technology” future (see also here); they enumerate signs and indicators to track; then consider 10 “what if” questions in order to explore the implications of the scenarios, honing in one “robust” implications for each– answers that are smart whichever way the future breaks. They conclude…]

The future isn’t something that happens to us; it’s something we create. The most robust strategy of all is to stop asking “What will happen?” and start asking “What future do we want to build?”

As Alan Kay once said, “The best way to predict the future is to invent it.” Don’t wait for the AI future to happen to you. Do what you can to shape it. Build the future you want to live in…

Read in full– the essay is filled with deep insight. Taking the long view: “What If? AI in 2026 and Beyond,” from @timoreilly.bsky.social and @mikeloukides.hachyderm.io.ap.brid.gy.

[Image above: source]

Alan Kay

###

As we pave our own paths, we might send world-changing birthday greetings to a man who personified Alan’s injunction, Doug Engelbart; he was born on this date in 1925.  An engineer and inventor who was a computing and internet pioneer, Doug is best remembered for his seminal work on human-computer interface issues, and for “the Mother of All Demos” in 1968, at which he demonstrated for the first time the computer mouse, hypertext, networked computers, and the earliest versions of graphical user interfaces… that’s to say, computing as we know it, and all that computing enables.

https://youtu.be/B6rKUf9DWRI?si=nL09hD5GQD670AQO

#AI #AIRisk #artificalIntelligence #computerMouse #culture #DarioAmodei #DougEngelbart #graphicalUserInterfaces #history #hypertext #MikeLoukides #mouse #networkedComputers #scenarioPlanning #scenarios #Singularity #Technology #TimOReilly
Is a repairable computer gaming mouse a thing? The switches and buttons on mine are getting a little ... fail-y and so I'm wondering if it's possible to repair it (which I'll look up) or, barring that, getting a new one which can be repaired easily in some fashion. Bonus points for easy to swap pieces and/or 3D printable parts.

#computer #computerMice #computerMouse #gamingMice #rightToRepair

Me: uses a M575, just trackballing around
Others: Use a MX Master series like a normal personal
Me: I don't like it, if I am using a mouse it is the magic mouse
Others: HOW CAN YOU USE THAT PIECE OF CRAP IT INJURE WRISTS
Me: HOW CAN YOU USE THAT PIECE OF MX CRAP IT HURTS MY WRISTS!!!!

For some reason the MX Series both Mice and Keyboards hurt my wrists like no other fucking product does. Stop thinking just because something works for you, it works for everyone!
#computermouse #hardware

Bilgisayar Faresini öldüremiyorlar!

Yeni beyaz bilgisayar faresi aldım ya dikkatimi çekti! ツ

#computermouse

Sürekli ve serî hâlde komut verilmesi gereken durumlarda hâlâ fıtrata uygun değil!

Öncelikle böyle bir şeyi uygulamak için ekrandan oldukça uzakta olmanız lâzım!

Ekranın dibindeyken dokunmatik çok daha fıtrata uygun bir komut yöntemi.

O yüzden de çok iyi çalışıyor.

Dokunmatik ekranlarda bir sorun yok!

Örneğin duvardan duvara bir ekranınız var ve karşısındaki koltuğa kurulmuş komut veriyorsunuz.

..devamı yanıtta..

#computermouse

Bilgisayar faresi neden ölmüyor?

Çünkü getirdikleri yenilikler İnsan fıtratına uygun değil!

Yeni yapay zekâ gelişmeleri ile artık bilekliğe, yüzüğe bile gerek kalmadı!

İşte paylaştığım video.

Yapay zekâ, hareketli kamera ile takip etmesini istediğiniz objeyi yada sizi takip ediyor ve elinizle yaptığınız işaretleri algılayıp komut olarak kabul edip uyguluyor!

Güzel işte!

Evet uygulanabilirliği var, ama kısıtlı komut gerektiren durumlarda!

..devamı yanıtta..

#computermouse #technomusic

Bilgisayar faresi öldü denileni 10 yıl oldu mu?

Önce bileklik çıkardılar.

Bileğinde takılıyken ellerinle yaptığın işareti anlayabiliyordu!

Yapmak istedikleri şey için gâyet yeterli ve uygulanabilir görünüyordu.

Sonu gelmedi!

Bir ara parmağa takılan yüzükten fare gördüm!

Bir daha da hâber almadım!

Sonu gelmedi!

Neden?

..devamı yanıtta..

#computermouse #bilgisayarfaresi #technomusic

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lpq9gvZZTno

PEZSI [DJ-SET 2024] x OBSBOT - Melodic Techno | Progressive House //// OBSBOT Tail Air Camera ////

YouTube
Bizarre new computer mouse designs aim to cut wrist injuries, scientists say
https://www.newstainmentora.online/2025/09/bizarre-new-computer-mouse-designs-aim.html
#computermouse
Bizarre new computer mouse designs aim to cut wrist injuries, scientists say

  Few technologies are as wonderful as the computer mouse, which has been a desktop mainstay since its introduction over 60 years ago. The ...

NewsTainmentOra
🚨BREAKING NEWS: CERN's groundbreaking initiative to save the world, one 'computer mouse' at a time! Who knew that homeless peripherals needed round-the-clock cuddle sessions and hay bales in Switzerland? Meanwhile, in other #news, the internet is still a dangerous place—thanks for that earth-shattering revelation, Captain Obvious. 🤦‍♂️🐭
https://computer-animal-shelter.web.cern.ch/index.shtml #CERN #ComputerMouse #HomelessPeripherals #InternetSafety #Innovation #HackerNews #ngated
CERN Animal Shelter for Computer Mice

🖱️ Computer Mouse Market 2025 | Global Insights, Demand & Future Trends

It will grow to $4.62 billion in 2029 at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 5.3%.

Read More @ https://goodprnews.com/global-mouse-market-driver/

#marketresearchreport #marketresearch #marketintelligence #marketreport #industryanalysis #TheBusinessResearchCompany #TBRC #ComputerMouse

Global Mouse Market Set to Achieve $4.62 Billion Milestone with Sustained 5.3% CAGR - Good PR News

At what pace is the mouse market growing, and what is its estimated value? The mouse market size has grown strongly in recent years. It will grow from $3.56 billion in 2024 to $3.77 billion in 2025 at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 5.7%. The growth in the historic period can be attributed

Good PR News - Global Free Press Release Submissions Site