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Ships don't swim, like fish! Car wheels don't run like hinds! , and Aircraft don't flap their wings!

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Edited by Darren Menachem Drapkin, Thursday 23 October 2025 at 01:17

If we knew just what thinking is, there would be less nonsensical debate about AI, and less nonsense produced by the latest kind of AI.However, with the production of publicly available LLM AI's working as what is, essentially for most people, random oracles; we have less and less chance of finding out what thinking is. We have more and more chance of computers doing less and less useful work,  consuming ever greater quantities of energy and, making thinking about thinking harder then ever.

This is because all an LLM does is auto-complete and elicit more input. For some reason, this makes some people think that, they are the most transformational of all technologies. I disagree, so does anyone who hits an auto-complete "sweet spot" when they are typing an essay on a modern word processor, one that is designed to hint as to the spelling of new input. At one stage I had the experience of myself deciding what words to use  and the word processor  deciding the spelling, as I typed. It did not last long, about a minute or so. I did not think that it would change the world. 

What has this to do with my title and my rabid opening paragraph? Until the 20th cent. and the discovery of  a unified aerodynamics and hydrodynamics; people were in the position of , not just ignorance about, but impossibility of explaining, why the phenomena of my title were just examples of the, then known, physics of traction and displacement. 

In the 20th century what was then a harmless eccentricity, grew up around computers.They were brains. They were thinking when they solved problems. They had wills of  their own. Most people of the 21st century, who have lost a phone down the sewer, and who have  spent some time learning how to programme a computer and, have seen just how crude an AI is ,internally, would not agree. As we get closer and closer to the facts behind this factotum; I believe it is called "the Pathetic Fallacy" in works on the philosophy of science, now impedes us, in understanding what thought really is, when "what brains do" is now no longer good enough.

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A man with a beard

The Latest in Wallpaper Patterns

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Edited by Darren Menachem Drapkin, Tuesday 2 September 2025 at 06:25

There are some people who have never gained essential web searching skills. This is because they never had the social skill of, consulting an expert, on which these are based. Such unfortunates sometimes see a moderately proficient web searcher looking for something, suddenly, the good searcher finds something directly from a search engine.  The poor searcher then assumes that, they must consult that particular search engine, and then, only its direct output, not following links.

Am I talking about anyone in specific? NO! Poor searchers, and fair-to-middling searchers on a bad day, are the majority of web users. What do we have now to improve things ? The latest AI rubbish that I expect real AI programmers have discarded years ago.

You type in your plea, a search is run, the results reduced to a partially factual summary, something that you hope is factual in the important parts, YOU HAVE NO WAY OF KNOWING, THOUGH. All because of something we no longer value, how to consult an expert or, how to berate an official.

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A man with a beard

You Go, I Go, We All Go to Ramigo!

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Edited by Darren Menachem Drapkin, Sunday 3 December 2023 at 20:33
If you know someone who has Osteoarthritis or you have it your self, take a look at The Ramigo programme that is looking into a new way of treating the condition. 
The details are avalable in the attachments to this post.
It is funded by the Nuffield Foundation and  Versus Arthritis.
--
Yours &c.
Darren Drapkin

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A man with a beard

Picture The Scene.....

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Edited by Darren Menachem Drapkin, Monday 30 January 2023 at 18:37

.. it is the early 1970's, you and a few friends are discussing something new you have all seen on the telly - a lecture on thermodyamics and cosmology from the Open University. Some of your friends do not trust people who use words that take several goes to spell correctly, such as thermodynamics. Some, like you, have had academic yearnings re-awakened by broardcasters who do not talk down to you. You contact the address at the end of the broardcast and sign up.

Now it is the 21st century, rich people are taking space flights for fun, and computers, if you are patient with them, can give you a sensible reply to a spoken request. You are rich, because study and the organised thinking it engenders, make you more financially effcient. There is something you miss from all those years ago. Not cosmology, not thermodynamics, but the opportunity to present what interests you to ordinary people. 

This is one of the reasons that academics need sabbaticals. One year in every 7 years an academic has to stop whatever they are doing, do without their university, and find something else usefull to do. It is not a 12-month long holiday, or should not be.

Why am I writing this, especialy why am I writing this on an Open University blog ? I am comming to the end of a BSc in computing and I am determined that it will not be my last degree.  Also, I am slowing down in my studies at the moment and I find that when I need to write about one thing writing about another helps me.

Finally, if you are new to the OU and are puzzled by freshers week, don't forget to enjoy your life.

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