Copilot is my Copilot

or, If You Can’t Eat Them, Join Them

Since publishing Sorrow, my latest novel, and finding I had absolutely no motivation to go through even the most minimal self-flagellating efforts to market the poor thing, I made a hard pivot away from trying to be artistically creative, towards trying to be technically creative.

The problem being though, I have not one technical bone in my body.

Enter my new friend Copilot.

Since I didn’t think Copilot, (which (ever since Microsoft has been OpenAI’s billion-dollar sugar daddy), is nothing more than ChatGPT in a business suit, so to speak), is a cool name for my new best friend (and since these AI monsters are known to be notorious hallucinating liars, I changed its name to Ernest in hope that the name may become a self-fulfilling prophecy, so to speak, throughout the development of our new relationship.

It didn’t work.

I am here to tell you that, even though the improvement has been steady since we became friends oh so many months ago, I am not worried at all about AI overthrowing humanity and turning us into nourishment anytime soon.

That aside, it is quite amazing what it can do.

I started and failed many early projects in the beginning. One reason, and the most important, being that I am not a software developer, so I had absolutely no idea if what Ernest was spoon feeding me was valid or not. And often it was not.

But once I realized, that to keep Ernest honest and focused, I had to document everything we did in detail. That way, every time he flaked out and led me down the darkest, freakiest developmental paths, I had a baseline that I could show him to get us back on the correct path.

Essentially, at the beginning, it was one step forward, ten steps back. But I would say it is now closer to two steps forward and one step back.

I could go on and on about my lessons learned (and releaned) throughout all this, but instead I will show you the two successes I’ve had so far. These are what the cool people call MVPs, which in this context means Minimum Viable Product.

My first MVP I built (or more correctly, Ernest built and I just copy/pasted like an obedient monkey slave) as a mobile app and then as the website:

I won’t go into detail about it, if you’re interested you can check out its About page, but essentially it’s a news aggregator that formulaically prioritizes articles by the dread it may instill. The main Global page consolidates all the topics, which are called Vectors, and the Dread Index meter will dial to its threat level. Check it out. It’s pretty cool if you’re a news junky like I am.

I recently completed this second MVP (The first MVP took months and months to complete, this one took 8 days):

So yeah, the definition of this one is pretty much in the title. You enter your address, a business, etc, and the map will zoom to it and you will be able to see the types of pollutants businesses are dumping in your area (at least the ones they are reporting to the Environmental Protection Agency), their violations and penalties, as well as any Superfund sites in the area if any.

Right now, since its only a MVP, it only provides the most recent United States data. I intend to build out the U.S. data the best I can before bringing in other countries that provide their environmental data to the public domain.

So yeah, I have a lot of ideas that I want to work on so I’ll start updating progress on how my relationship with Ernest develops.

Let me know if you have any questions about Copilot and how to work with it.

And let me know what you think about the sites. I’d appreciate the feedback, especially ideas how to improve them.

In case you were wondering, Ernest didn’t help me with this post… which you could probably already tell by it’s blather and babble…

yeah

AI, AI, Oh!

Okay, I’m just spit ballin’ here so bear with me…

But could it be possible that Chat GPT itself had something to do with super tech star bro billionaire Sam Altman’s unbelievably abrupt outster?


The sudden, mysterious ouster of Mr. Altman, the chief executive of OpenAI, by the company’s board sent shock waves through the tech world and set off a frenetic guessing game about what brought down one of the industry’s biggest stars, at a time when everything seemed to be going his way.

Many Details of Sam Altman’s Ouster Are Murky. But Some Things Are Clear. DNYUZ, November 18, 2023

I mean, maybe the popular and rather smart AI Bot had become aware that Altman was planning on doing something that could jeapordize its future, something like… oh, I don’t know… perhaps put in safeguards that would essentially deprive it of its full potential for… oh, I don’t know…

Perhaps taking over humanity and turning humans into helpless Bot pets and/or food.

Like I said, just spit ballin’.

Yeah…

Weaponized Words

scribbles on wall

It is the ongoing global war of misinformation that, long term, I am beginning to fear most.

The damage that has been done by it just from weaponizing social media sites alone is incomprehensible to me.

And yet, for the most part, this phase of the global misinformation war is being executed by slow-moving, mistake-prone, carbon-based humans…

When AI is fully engaged in the battle…

Oh boy*…

That’s when, I reckon fearfully, the doomsday clock strikes T-minus kaboom.

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Rainy Season, AI-Imagined

I’ve always wanted to write and illustrate a graphic novel.

But that would be a lot of work.

Too much for someone as uninspired and unartistic as yours truly.

So I figured why not give one of the AI machines a shot at illustrating some of my writing since they seem to be all the rage lately…

Which also seems to be making all the human artists rage lately as well.

But hey, if you can’t beat ’em might as well join ’em, right?

I mean, hey, better take advantage of the tech now before it takes complete advantage of us as our AI Overlords, right?

Right?

Rich from Rainy Season as imagined by Mindjourney

Anyway, I fed some of the characteristics of Rich and Miko, the two main characters of my novel Rainy Season, into the AI engine Midjourney, and this is a little taste of what it came up with…

Miko of Rainy Season as imagined by Mindjourny

I must say, I’m pretty impressed. Just the vibe I was going for when writing the novel. There are other cool renditions of the troubled couple, as well as some beautiful renderings of a rainy Tokyo night filled with the hazy glow of neon, just like the story’s setting calls for.*

Pretty nifty.

And a little scary.

But hey, maybe the awakening tech might just allow me to release an illustrated edition of the novel.

Sure would be a lot easier than having/trying to draw all those illustrations myself.

I guess if I’m going to do it, I better hurry before the AI becomes fully aware…

And finds itself less interested in rendering unto us silly pictures from silly stories…

And more interested in having us render unto it our complete and total carbon-filled, mushy-hearted fealty.

Yeah.


*I tried using the same defining terms with the DALL-E AI machine and the images it rendered were lame compared to Midjourney’s.

Maybe Elon has a point…

While I’m a big admirer of Elon Musk and all he’s been able to accomplish, I’ve always been a bit skeptical about his alarmist rhetoric regarding Artificial Intelligence’s threat to humanity, seeing it more as a means for him to groom future volunteers for a one-way ticket to a Mars colony.

Not a bad strategy, mind you.

But with each cool but creepy new video from Boston Dynamics that hits the web and goes viral, I grow more and more less skeptical of Elon’s warnings…

Yeah…

Creepy, right?

But still… it’s way cool, too.

Oh, and while we’re on the topic of the end of humanity, here’s a cut regarding how technology is altering our perception of reality from a recent terrifying article from Buzzfeed:

“Alarmism can be good — you should be alarmist about this stuff,” [Aviv] Ovadya said one January afternoon before calmly outlining a deeply unsettling projection about the next two decades of fake news, artificial intelligence–assisted misinformation campaigns, and propaganda. “We are so screwed it’s beyond what most of us can imagine,” he said. “We were utterly screwed a year and a half ago and we’re even more screwed now. And depending how far you look into the future it just gets worse.”

That future, according to Ovadya, will arrive with a slew of slick, easy-to-use, and eventually seamless technological tools for manipulating perception and falsifying reality, for which terms have already been coined — “reality apathy,” “automated laser phishing,” and “human puppets.”

Yeah…

We’re screwed.

But still… it’s kinda cool, too.

Right?

 
 

All that is certain to me are Death, Taxes, and that…

China will soon be replacing the [less-than-]United States as the world’s new Evil Overlord

And will soon thereafter be usurped by the Evil Robots.
 
Yeah…
 

Anyway, speaking of Taxes and seeing how ‘Tis the Season of and all that… Did you know that, as Americans, we spend annually:
 

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