A Dialog on Physical Bodies for Large Language Models (LLM)

Giving a physical body to Large Language Models (LLM) for physical interaction, experience, learning


KEN FOREMAN

Re: Does AI need a “body” to become truly intelligent? Meta thinks so I completely agree with this.

I’ve seen several respected luminaries argue that LLM is not “true AI” or “Strong AI” since it’s based on large learning sets and predictive behavior. They argue that humans and animals are not taught on such large language models or data sets.

What are education and experience, if not Large Learning Models based on the teaching of schools, universities, and books?

It’s been argued by multiple sociologists and psychologists that Language defines Learning. If your language does not define a word, concept, color, skill, or experience, you have no way to understand or communicate it. This is the very basis of movies like “Arrival” (Ted Chiang’s Story of Your Life) and novellas like Ted Chiang’s Lifecycle of Software Objects.

Likewise, it is our physical experiences that teach and reinforce our learning. Touching a hot stove teaches us or reinforces us not to touch a hot object again.
Bodies and physical interaction will drastically accelerate AI, much as the original textual GPT and LLM did.

TIM KELLOG
Really? definitions always come after understanding. You absolutely have to understand a word before you can define it. Like “yeet”, there’s no way on earth someone sat down and made a definition for it before using it. It seems like language is more of a linguistic representation of experience (which, imo, is kinda what LLMs are doing too, in a way). Also, not sure what any of that has to do with “true” or “strong” AI

“You’re going to have to yeet me!”

KEN FOREMAN
How would you communicate “yeet”?

To a non-English speaker, how would you communicate “yeet” without shared language and concepts?

Without a framework of language, you can have all the experiences you want and completely unable to share them with others.

Newton was the first to “understand” and define the law of universal gravitation, but F = G(m1m2)/R2 doesn’t need to be understood to be shared and communicated.

FERALROBOTS
what they are if not that is much, much more than that.

“I am a stochastic parrot and so are you” [to quote Sam Altman] is a RADICALLY insufficient way of understanding not just human intellect, but also the intellect of any animal we routinely interact with, too.

KEN FOREMAN
How would you communicate “yeet”?

To a non-English speaker, how would you communicate “yeet” without shared language and concepts?

TIM KELLOG
with motions

KEN FOREMAN
Also a good answer, but an equal justification for why we should give AI/ML a physical body for physical expression, interaction, and communication?

TIM KELLOG
tbh i’ve never thought about it, but my intuition says yes. if language is all that’s needed, then you could teach a child to ride a bike just by telling them how. but that’s not how it works — a lot of our knowledge isn’t represented in language.

How do you communicate and learn to ride a Bike?

KEN FOREMAN
If human muscles or locomotion had an instruction set, then it might be possible. However, we can’t communicate while riding a bike because we have no language for locomotion control.

Mathematics works as a shared language but also as an instruction set.

The same might also be true of LLMs as applied to physical motion and interaction?Not sure we’ll know until we try.

Industrial Robots are have learned motions and instruction sets to communicate motion control.

TIM KELLOG
oh! there was a paper a couple weeks ago that i forgot to save that talked about how LLMs, when asked to translate french to chinese, will first translate to “english”. not actually English, but a “instruction set” heavily based on english. so, LLMs actually do derive an “instruction set” before learning more complex concepts, and it’s something you can observe

The Company You Keep… And Your Priorities

Jo Walton, Lent

It’s been an odd and rough couple of weeks. To be honest, it hasn’t been the best start to 2024. A lot of little different issues are weighing me down and stressing me in ways I need to figure out.

I thought this Lent would be an abstinence from Social Media and a time for self-reflection. A litany of professional, personal, and health issues all saw otherwise to that.

Jo Walton wrote a wonderful novel called Lent about a Dominican Friar’s past and struggles with his demons. It’s a wonderful story and allegory about the demons we keep, the demons that define us, and how we either deal with or overcome our demons. It wasn’t the theological fantasy I expected, but in some respects, it was far better.

At 51 years old, I’m still wrestling with my demons. I either ignore them, entertain them, or try to live with them and overcome them.
This last week taught me about the “company that I keep” and my priorities. I need to acknowledge, cherish, and attend both.

My priorities, in order of importance are now:

  1. Family, first and foremost. Family is paramount.
  2. My ongoing education and self-betterment.
  3. Gaming. Role Playing Games, Open World, and various fast-paced action games all allow me to decompress, enjoy my time, and to reflect on things different.
  4. Reading. I need to watch TV less, stream less and choose what it is a stream, and read more.
  5. Streaming. Anime, Science Fiction, and Fantasy/Horror are my favorite genres in streamed entertainment.

So I will be mindful and cognizant of my time, my company, and my priorities. I hope this brings me some measure of peace and self-improvement?

Ken, Sachiko, Toshiro
Sachko and Toshiro
Sachko and Toshiro

Refocusing on Matters

Trying to refocus on what should matter…

Leon,

Thank you for meeting with the team yesterday and for your thorough explanation of many issues facing both our team and Teaching Strategies. I also wanted to thank you for extending the offer to continue the conversation as a 1:1.

Now 51 years old with a career in IT spanning back to working as an Electrical Engineering Intern (who oddly focused on AutoCAD 10 and VAX/VMS) in 1990, I’ve worked in all sectors from military service, cleared government contracting, large corporations, consulting, government agencies, and now the rise of an Early Childhood Education company from a small business to mid-sized corporation.
Having previously worked as a Senior and later Principal Engineer at government agencies, Comcast and NOAA, I am familiar with longer hours and higher-stress environments. I honestly don’t believe Teaching Strategies to be as grueling or high-stress as a Secure Compartmentalized Information Facility (SCIF) or a large corporation.

Due to my cancer diagnosis in 2018, three years of treatment, and the lingering effects of chemo suppression and radiation, I stepped back from working with the caliber and temperament of a Principal Engineer. In joining Teaching Strategies, I worked for over two years in a reduced capacity at 32 hours/week (with a commensurate drop in salary to reflect 80% rather than 100% of the offered salary). I am sure you recall our previous ADA agreement between you, May, Jonathan, Peter, and Bill. I am grateful to you and Teaching Strategies for allowing me to work while also focusing on my health and continued recovery from Stage 4 Mantle Cell Lymphoma.

With my improving health and personal desire to “do more, be better” in my career, I ended my ADA request over a year ago and returned to full-time employment. I was hoping over the past year, through demonstrable improvement in the quantity and quality of my work, that I would be an asset and of service to Teaching Strategies. I also wanted to continue in my career with the goal of working at the caliber and title of Principal Engineer or Technical Team Lead.

In light of yesterday’s conversations, I’m not sure what external benchmarks exist for me to measure myself against or what self-improvement opportunities exist to allow me to continue and advance in my career. I gave it a large amount of thought and discussed it with my wife.

  • I will return to the University of Maryland this semester to complete my Master of Science Degree in either Computer Science or Information Systems.
  • I will take full advantage of Teaching Strategies’ generous offers of learning opportunities and training, such as LinkedIn Learning.
  • I will earnestly and diligently strive to become the best possible Site Reliability Engineer I can be, either with the resources provided or actively seeking out resources with which to better myself.
  • I will attempt to prove the quality and quantity of my work to Teaching Strategies.

As always, my thanks, Leon. Today’s skip-level is no longer necessary. I will focus solely on my education and my continued betterment as a Site Reliability Engineer.

Thanks,

Ken Foreman

Onwards, Ever Onwards, Iceberg Be Damned

Coping with Frustration, Depression, and Self-Loathing

If I am perceived as negative, it is because I care.

What you perceive as negativity is the result of my thorough analysis, rational self-discourse and research, and frustration that I have the awareness and intellect to see something coming but not the ability to correct or resolve it within my ability to change it.

If I were truly negative, I wouldn’t care. I wouldn’t give a shit about your opinion, your problems, your issues, your pain, your suffering, or concern myself with your well-being.

If I am negative, it is because I care. If I didn’t care, I wouldn’t say anything, wouldn’t do anything, and I would willingly watch as people walked into their own self-harm or self-issues. I am passionate because I DO care. I am negative because we keep making the same mistakes, learning from none of them, and having a near-infinite churn of the same self-harming mistakes.

It hurts me.

It pains me.

I am just now learning what took a lifetime for Benjamin Balogh and Brad Lafferty to understand and try to communicate to both me and others in their lives. Having the intellect and foresight to see a disaster coming but not the ability to self-correct or avoid it results in negativity, depression, self-loathing, or the loathing of others.

I don’t want to loathe others for being too friggin’ stupid to avoid driving their ship into an effing iceberg. At least let me get off the ship before you crash it with me in it?

Negotiating Parity

Japanese Students in a Classroom (anime)

KAIA:

they should invent cute girls that don’t make your brain go «I should talk to her»

KEN:

equally nice would be social parity where girls and boys don’t feel pressured or offended if it the other likes you, or if they don’t.

The hardest part for me is learning that not everyone likes coffee, so I cannot pressure them into being coffee if they’re not.

Some people like tea, some people like coffee, and some will never compromise for the other if they’re content in their preference.

We need to be OK with knowing that we’re not everyone’s cup of tea (or coffee).

No Absolute Answers: The Ebb and Flow of Dynamic Change

The Ebb and Flow of a Changing Ocean

When I was younger, I used to think personalities and philosophies were immutable. That when I learned or stumbled upon the answer, that I would find happiness and that it was “one true philosophy” to provide meaning to my life.

The older I get, I think our personalities and philosophies are answers to our situations as much as they are causes.

It’s a yin-and-yang, an ebb and flow between how we behave that causes our social changes and how we are treated that cause our personality changes.

When I learned HyperText and later HyperText Markup Language (HTML), it was like learning math (the language of the universe). I thought HyperText was the answer to social communications and shared knowledge. I thought that the World Wide Web (WWW) would unite us in ways unimaginable to our forebears and usher in a new era of knowledge and enlightenment.

And maybe that is true. It accelerated our shared knowledge, access to information, and the creation of Large Language Models (LLM) that form the basis of our current Generational Artificial Intelligence.

It also accelerated our ignorance, our radicalization to adopt and accept completely inane ideas espoused by others. It gave geniuses and village idiots alike a megaphone with which to shout their ideas.

So, my current desire to withdraw from the news, from social media, and from the clamor of angry and divisive people who insist that political violence is the answer if they don’t like the outcomes is my “ebb response” to the “social flow” of their behavior.

Sufis in Conclaves and Hermits on Mountains might not be universal answer to the human condition, but they are a sane response to irrational or excitable human behavior.

Immersive Language Learning

Learning Japanese in Kindergarten

Immersive Language Learning would certainly be the fastest and best way to learn a new language and culture.

As much as I want to enroll in Immersive Language Learning to fully learn spoken and written Japanese from native Japanese speakers using daily lessons, conversations, writing, and reading, it’s $600 USD after 60% off.

If it were Amazon Web Services (AWS) or Google Compute Platform (GCP), my employer would readily agree and approve it. Given that I’d like to achieve Japanese fluency just for my own interesting, I’d likely have to do this out-of-pocket.

On Life, Struggles, and Faith

On Faith: Belief in Christ

On Faith: Finding Christ

On Faith: Prayers and Petitions

I’ve always been spiritual, and arguably, faithful.

Raised as Hungarian Reformed Protestant, Lutheran (ELCA), and later converted to Catholicism, I’ve been exposed to Christianity throughout my life.

I have never been Evangelical or Charismatic. I’d make for an extremely poor and unenthusiastic Missionary.

Over the decades, I’ve attended Jewish services in Synagogues, Sunday Services with Devout Pentecostals, Sundays with the Southern Baptist Conference, drum circles with modern pagans, and weekends with “Charismatic Catholics”.

While I appreciate the devotion of others, I honestly believe that it is our actions that define us as a Christians. Try as I might, I have severe difficulty understanding when some call themselves “Christian” and yet hate half our nation because they’re Democrat, or they’re Republican, or they’re immigrants, or they’re homeless, or they’re… whatever“they’re not you.”

I paid attention during Matthew 25:34-37 where Jesus spoke about the poor, the homeless, the imprisoned, the sick. I must wonder if many of my fellow Christians conveniently forgot that part. For all our Nativity scenes, we forget that Christ himself was a refugee, an immigrant, and without a home at his birth.

My faith keeps me and sustains me through my life. I lost family and friends. I served in the military. I had a decent career between corporations and government contracting. I survived cancer, chemo, radiation, and being immunocompromised. I don’t shout it from the rooftops, but I quietly carry it in my heart as I hope to serve others by word and deed rather than charismatic and performative evangelism.

And so it goes. As I wait for the latest word and chapter in my life, I have faith. It sustains me. It is a quiet candle burning in my heart and shared together with my family.

Quality Assurance and Human Failure

Quality Assurance Failure, Ash was “just doing his job.”

ASH : You still don’t understand what you’re dealing with, do you? QA. QA is the perfect organism. Their structural perfection is matched only by their hostility.
LAMBERT : You admire them.
ASH : I admire their purity. Survivors… unclouded by conscience, remorse, or delusions of morality.
PARKER : Look, I am… I’ve heard enough of this, and I’m asking you to pull the plug.

[Ripley goes to disconnect Ash, who interrupts]

ASH : Last word.
RIPLEY : What?
ASH : I can’t lie to you about your chances, but… you have my sympathies.

Dearest Victoria, on our Anniversary…

Victoria and Ken on our 23rd Anniversary (16-Sep-2023)

Victoria,

Thank you and God bless you for 23 wonderful years together.

I cannot thank you enough for your presence, comfort, compassion, patience, endurance, and determination in our marriage together. Together, we’ve been though nearly every Happiness and Hurt, every Joy and Sorrow, and we’ve been there by each other’s side through it all.

I thank God for you and for our family we’ve raised together.

with love,
forever yours,

Ken

23 Years Ago Today…

Victoria and Ken

❝ I’ve been searching
I’ve been searching for so long
Now I’m chasing the shadows away
I’ve been trying
Yes, I tried to find my way
No more crying in the make-or-break decade.

There were times when I was down
There were times I felt so low
My whole life just seemed to be
A senseless quest for energy
But I carry your flame
All through my life, I’m a believer.

Peace deep in our hearts
All things must pass
But we’ll be together again.

I’ve been walking
I’ve been walking in the rain
When the angel of my intuition
Whispered, “Hello”
Well, I was quite surprised
To face that kind of incarnation.

Love comes always unexpected
Love strikes blind and undirected
Love is the answer
Love is all we need, my friend
Now you came and changed the weather
Now I want to live forever.

I carry your flame
All through my life, I’m your believer
Peace deep in our hearts
All things must pass
But we’ll be together again.

I carry your flame
All through my life, I’m your believer
Peace deep in our hearts
All things must pass
But we’ll be together again. ❞

—Alphaville, Flame (1997)

23 Years Later — Saturday, September 16th, 2000

Our Wedding Day – Saturday, September 16tj 2000

23 YEARS LATER
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16TH, 2000

❝ WHAT is the value of a single mortal’s life? ❞

[ Give an answer, any answer, your answer is no more or less valid that any other answer that someone else would give. ]

❝ I am sure that thou dost believes that. ❞
❝ Very well. I am satisfied. ❞
— Withers, Baldur’s Gate III (2023)

My answer changes yearly. Sometime, my answer changes daily or even hourly. Ultimately, I think my personal value of a human life is measured by how well we live our lives and the impression we leave on others.

I am grateful for having met Victoria Foreman and for her loving presence in my life. Together we have learned from each other, grown with each other, and we still do.

Thank you for twenty-three wonderful years.

A Most Glorious “Walkies”

Ken, Toshiro, and Sachiko during our morning walkies.

Sachiko talking to Ken as Toshiro listens

Sachiko and Toshiro as the leaves begin to fall after a mild summer and start of autumn

Sachiko and Toshiro as the leaves begin to fall after a mild summer and start of autumn

I was ecstatic to see 57.5°F on the outdoor thermometer this morning as we left before sunrise on our morning walkies.

As we walked along the woods of Sugarland Run, both Toshirō and Sachiko stopped abruptly and stared intently at the edge of the woods. It was so sudden and so intent that it scared me a little, so I stopped to see what they were staring at.

There was a majestic red fox standing underneath the trees just watching us. He was probably only four or five feet away from us, but showed no fear whatsoever of our two Shelties. He just stood, and then sat, and he watched us.

It made my heart leap in my chest. I’ve never seen so majestic or so sedate a red fox. I wish I could have stayed in that one moment forever.

Sachiko seemed completely smitten with the red fox. Toshiro largely ignored him, just watching.

Leaving for our walks before sunrise or just after sunset really is the best time to watch the wildlife around Loudoun County, Virginia. We’ve been able to see foxes, raccoons, skunks, deer, coyote, and bats during our daily walks.

I seriously need to clip a GoPro to my chest and just let it continuously record our walks, taking the best clips or pictures from each walk? No one would ever believe the red fox we saw today, but it brought tears to my eyes to see it.

Thoughts on my Health and the Year 2023

Morning Walkies with Toshiro and Sachiko

Morning Walkies with Toshiro and Sachiko

Morning Walkies with Toshiro and Sachiko

After a week-long stay at the hospital with a few days of septic delirium, a week of IV antibiotics, and a month of Cipro, this is a loud-and-pronounced call that I need to focus on my health and getting control over my leg lymphedema as best I can.

Despite my best efforts for walking 60-90mi each month with the pups, doing frequent showers and moisturizing, I still seem to be getting cellulitis and sepsis several times each year. My last echocardiogram shows that it’s taking a toll on my heart health as I repeatedly get pumped full of IV fluids and antibiotics.

So, my goal now is to be thorough and persistent with my physical therapy at Kaiser and Virginia Hospital Center, to do more frequent/longer walks and cycling, and to hopefully get my leg into a healthier long-term state.

Or, at the very least, to be able to enjoy long walks, hikes, and cycling again?


Today was an exhaustive visit, but one of the best visits I’ve had with Kaiser about my short-term health, long-term health, and long-term treatment:

  • Yes, I do have a slightly enlarged heart and decreased ejection fraction, but it’s due to pseudomonas and sepsis as a blood infection. Seeing increased heart size and changes to ejection fraction are common. They’re scheduling me for a transesophageal echocardiogram in 2-3 weeks to verify my recovery once the Cipro is over. They’ll also schedule me for a full panel of bloodwork to verify my bloodwork, recovery, and level of immunity/immunocompromised.
  • Yes, I do have Stage 3 Lymphedema of my left leg. It’s pronounced. They want to photograph it monthly, document it, and do more aggressive physical therapy to see if we can’t see some recovery, improvement in mobility, decreased neuropathy. I’m being referred to Virginia Hospital Center (VHC) for my lymphedema care.
  • They’re documenting that I have a severe reaction to a flea bite, not uncommon for my lymphoma, lymphedema, decreased immune response. Pseudomonas itself was likely acquired during frequent clinical visits. MRSA and Pseudomonas are concerns given my health and history.
  • They recommended a Bifenthrin Insecticide fogger for front yard and back to reduce mosquitoes and insects, fog yard every 2-3 weeks. Safe for both me and our dogs. They recommended spraying my pants and shirts with Permethrin and/or DEET, to wear long pants and shirts for all walks outdoor exposure due to severe reaction to flea bite.

First Week with the Rokid Max AR Glasses

NOTES ON ROKID MAX AR GLASSES:

1. While the glasses appear to be darkly tinted, your external vision is still quite clear and just fine when wearing the glasses. The transparency is so great that it’s actually distracting to see both the environment and the display if you don’t have the brightness higher than the ambient/environmental lighting.

2. The USB cable that connects the AR glasses to your device appears to be proprietary. None of my USB 3.1, 3.2, or 4.0 cables will work with it, but it might be due to cable length. Rokid tells us that the power consumption of the glasses means the cable cannot have too much resistance. I would think USB 4.0 (240W) cables ought to work with it, but they don’t. I’m awaiting an update and a couple more cables from Rokid this week or next.

3. The audio is very decent, supports Dolby Atmos, but still doesn’t compare to dedicated earbuds or earphones. I recommend a good pair of ear buds if you want high-fidelity sound with Dolby Atmos or THX certification.

4. The brightness is superb. At 600 nits, full brightness is enough to overpower bright ambient lighting. Keep it set between 3-4 to match ambient brightness or turn it up to 6 to have a bright display that stands out against the environment.

5. You’ll quickly learn to look “past the display” when looking through the glasses to talk to others or interact with your environment, refocuses your eyes on the display when watching, reading, or gaming. Sometimes the environment can be distracting, but you can correct for that by turning the brightness up or putting the dark shades over the translucent lenses.

6. 120Hz display, color gamut, brightness, dynamic range, and performance are all outstanding. Gaming, watching movies, surfing the web, reading, and coding has been so much fun these past few days.

 


COMMENTS

Mike Bargeron
I have monocular vision (little to no vision in my left eye), I wonder if they’d work on me.

Ken Foreman
Mike – With my prescription and fairly large difference in prescription strength between my eyes, I was able to use the diopter dials above each lens to adjust it, so it matches my prescription.
I’m not sure how much you can adjust it by, whether you can adjust the diopter on the left eye to such an extent that you’d get some good use from it or whether you’d need to primarily rely upon your right eye.
For reading and coding, I found I really needed to adjust the diopters for my vision so that it didn’t look blurry, out-of-focus, or double-vision. While wearing it, I slowly adjusted each dial, periodically closing one eye and then the other, and then seeing how the image looked through the eye alone, and then both eyes together. Once finely tuned, it was quite nice and very useable.

Getting Off the Carousel

Freedom — The Carousel, by Anne Wipf
© 2011 – 2023 annewipf

Ken & Pop-Pop on the Altair 8800 Terminal (LSA ADM-3A)

43 Years Ago — 1980

I was 8 years old in 1980.  My grandfather was Benjamin Balogh, Jr.  I lovingly called him “Pop-Pop.”

When I was younger, I used to sit on his lap and access the MITS Altair 8800 from his kitchen.  The MITS Altair 8800 was in his basement, and he ran twisted pair up from the basement and into the kitchen corner.  He put a LSI ADM-3A terminal on his kitchen counter.  It was a beautiful and masterful work of engineering.  The cabling was clean and routed through the wall with the terminal block for the twisted pair mounted into the woodwork of the kitchen counter.

The LSI ADM-3A terminal connected to power and communications cleanly.  You’d enter the kitchen and think that the computer was part of the kitchen and wasn’t some untidy mess or an afterthought.

Of course, it took me years to realize this.  Decades before Wireless Fidelity (Wi-Fi) and the modern ethernet we take for granted, my grandfather had cleanly and elegantly networked his house.  In 2023, while some home builders do offer built-in ethernet ports running through the same conduits as your power and phone, it still isn’t common.  Most people settle for either ethernet cables strewn about their house from their fiber ONT or cable modem to their routers to the computers, or one fewer strand of cable and Wi-Fi.  I can’t even say I put this same amount of thought or effort into networking my own house.  But my grandfather did.

In 1980, I was 8 years old.  By Christmas of 1980, he upgraded from the MITS Altair 8800 with LSI ADM-3A terminal to a beautiful TRS-80 Model III under the Christmas tree.  Again, he networked his house, but this time he ran the network to a corner of the living room behind the fireplace and sitting area.  The sitting area was still the focal point of the living room.  Conversations, rest, and time together with family still came first.  But there was a computer tucked away on a small desk with a TRS-80 Model III, a phone, and an acoustic coupling modem to rest the phone receiver on the modem!

In December of 1980, using dialup on CompuServe cost $10 an hour.  While playing tic-tac-toe and a textual grid-based version of Star Trek was so much fun on the TRS-80, it was talking to others on CompuServe that really interested me.  There was a world of others to talk to, also on their computers, whom you could talk with, leave messages for, or play games with!  It was magical!

Irene, Ken, Jim, and Mike (Foreman Family)

I don’t know about about your childhood.  I guess mine was “average” for the son of two working parents in the 1980s.  My mom had remarried.  I had two younger stepbrothers from her second marriage.  Since I was already six years old when she remarried, there was an age difference between my brothers and I.  Not only an age difference, but a “parent difference”, since my stepfather felt my brothers were his, but I was the kid from the previous marriage.

I guess he loved me?  Honestly, to this day, I cannot honestly tell.  I think he did.  Since I was a “weird kid”, he sometimes rudely or unpleasantly asked me “are you on drugs or something?” because I was quiet and taciturn.  It’s not because I was being rude, but because by that age I already had something of an idea that I was alone and different from others.  My mom had remarried, I never really felt like I was his son in the same way as my grandfather treated me.  Parents, when they love their children, actually bond with them and dote on them.

Thomas Foreman never really bonded with me.

You might argue he did dote.  At times.  I still thank Dad to this day for helping me out when my first relationship flared out terribly and I needed his help escaping what was becoming a terrible and an abusive relationship.  Tom understood me while my Mom questioned my loyalty and ethics.  I understood both their perspectives.  I also understood my ex- and my betrayal of her in leaving our relationship.  From each of our perspectives, we are never wrong, and it is other people who are the issue.  It’s always others who are mistaken or need correction.  I’ll be honest, I was wrong.  So was my ex-.  I loved her, but we were wrong for each other.

So long story short, I learned to be alone.

I sought solace, comradery, and relationships from the other side of the computer screen.  Behind the glow of a cathode ray tube lay a world of other people with similar interests as me who wanted to talk with me!  We could talk about Star Wars, Star Trek, Battlestar Galactica, the best cartoons to watch on a Saturday morning, whether Transformers have sex and what copulation between two robots would look like, and where do baby Transformers come from?

Oh!  Remember earlier how I told you that my Dad would ask me “are you on drugs or something?” 

In a supreme bit of universal irony, it was not me he had to worry about, but his own children whom he sired and raised that he needed to worry about.  My worst vice was for financial idiocy which would come to haunt me several times over my lifetime, but my two younger stepbrothers did learn about the wonders of alcohol, marijuana, and heroin before they graduated high school.

In the giant scope of things, it’s often that which we accuse others of that we are most guilty ourselves? Tom was a lifelong alcoholic who raised three boys, all of whom had troubles themselves.  It’s true; the vicious cycle repeats, the sins of the father do become the sins of the son.  All three of his children would struggle with financial lessons while his wife (my mother) would ravage and deplete her finances by doting on her two youngest sons.

33 Years Ago — 1990

So, by the time I graduated high school, completed two years of college, and joined the United States Air Force, I learned that there was a magical world online that understood me even if my own family did not.  I turned to that world for comfort and solace, to seek understanding and to be understood.  Using Bulletin Board Systems (BBSes) and Internet Relay Chat (IRC), I met many wonderful friends over the years.  The years became a decade, and some of them I still stay in touch with and we’re still friends today.

23 years Ago — 2000

By the year 2000, the world got turned on its head.  With the attack on the twin towers, the nationalism and flag-waving that ensued, and rapidly advancing technology in smartphones and social media, the next ten years radically changed how American society works and interacts.  I was no longer the lone wolf for spending vast amounts of time online, I was now just one among millions and soon to be billions entranced and enthralled by the glow of a computer screen.

The glow of a cathode ray tube (CRT) had been replaced by the glow of a liquid crystal display (LCD) and later light emitting diodes (LED) as our monitors became better, higher resolution, first much bigger (giant HDTV screens!) and then much smaller (portable smartphones!).  Now everyone was online, and no one was truly aware of the people physically around them sharing the same physical space as them.  We were becoming oblivious to each other as we “found our own tribes” online.

13 Years Ago — 2010

Work it harder, make it betterDo it faster, makes us stronger

More than ever, hour after hourWork is never over

Work it harder, make it betterDo it faster, makes us strongerMore than ever, hour after hourWork is never over

— Daft Punk, Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger (2001)

…and here our story picks up pace.  Nothing truly changes, but the pulse quickens and the heart accelerates!  Can you feel it?  Are you not entertained?!  The carousel began before I was born, but it’s spinning faster now.  CompuServe yielded to America Online (AOL).  Everyone was on AOL and AOL disks (and later compact discs) were everywhere.  AOL fell and yielded to MySpace, Friendster, Tumbler, Twitter, Facebook, and dozens of other social media outlets that promised to connect people in ways we never had before.

3 Years Ago — 2020

The pandemic changed life as radically as the twin towers did, but while September 11th was solely an American event, the COVID pandemic changed life on a global scale.  Everybody became shut-ins.  Everyone who could work from home did work from home, while those poor “essential employees” continued to work in the same places we abandoned while withstanding the worst of social labor.  It was nurses, educators, garbage collection, restaurant workers, retail, Uber drivers, Amazon warehouse employees, and Amazon delivery drivers that kept the economy running and society humming while people stayed glued to their computers at home.

Now — The Parasite that Feeds

In 1990, my high school physics class had to do a presentation on someone who influenced us and radically changed the world.  Many of my fellow students chose people like Albert Einstein, Isaac Newton, Carl Sagan, but I chose Jaron Lanier.

Jaron Lanier was the brilliant mind at Atari Research and VPL Research who along with Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Media Lab, Xerox/PARC, and William Gibson (“Neuromancer”) , we can thank for our current understanding and expectations of Virtual Reality.  I was amazed and enthralled with Jaron’s vision of Virtual Reality, and I wrote my paper and presentation on Jaron’s vision of the future.

My class loved it!

My physics teacher HATED it!

When I asked why my physics teacher detested my paper and presentation so much, he answered me “People are not ready for virtual reality.  People cannot even handle actual reality.”

Once again, it seems I caught a glimpse of the future that later came to pass.  Jaron Lanier became a musician and outspoken critic of Facebook, Twitter, and the Social Media engine that divides us as the algorithms of “getting the most views! getting the most likes! spending the most time!” becomes increasingly predatory.  Human beings are social creatures, but the online culture we created that is financed by time spent on a single site and most number of “likes” has idolized celebrity culture and “influencers”.  An influencer has no tangible product or service advancing society or the common good, and yet children would rather be a YouTube star or Twitch streamer than an engineer, a pilot, or an astronaut?!

“But the carousel never stops turning. You can’t get off.”

In our headfirst race into celebrity culture, adoration, tribalism, and desire for acceptance by others while reviling anyone not of our tribe, we created monsters.

Politicians learned to play us against each other.  People learned to use our tribalism to raise themselves, deify themselves, and denigrate others.  Both the 24/7 news cycle on television and media, and the incessant need to be wanted on social media rewarded the most garish displays, the most violent acts, the most ostentatious statements… whatever it takes! …to garner views and attract people to following them.

We learned from each other that to be accepted, we need to remain true to our tribe.  We need to shout our virtues and decry anyone who does not agree.  We stopped listening to each other.  We stopped compromising.  We ceased to be civil.

But it doesn’t need to be this way.

How many “friends” do you have on Facebook?

How many “followers” do you have on Twitter?

If you delete your social media accounts, out of the hundreds or thousands of people you can friends or followers, who will truly notice your departure?  Who will lament your absence in a week from now?  In our ceaseless race for entertainment, adulation, and acceptance, we have the attention span of Mayflies.

And so, I got off the carousel.

Jaron Lanier and Jason Allison Fogleman were correct.  People are not ready for virtual reality, we can hardly accept actual reality.  Once we learn to be kind and civil and compromise with each other in real life, maybe we’ll learn to be humane online?

The Persistence of Memory (Loved Ones Lost)

Margaret and Benjamin Balogh (my grandparents)


VICKY
: Ken, did you know you typed ‘Kiyomi and Toshiro’ on your text messages to me several times today?

KEN: No. I didn’t. Really? Maybe.

[ Ken checks text message history. ]

KEN: No kidding. I guess I was thinking of her repeatedly today even when playing with Sachiko at lunch.

VICKY: Yeah, I figured. I didn’t want to say anything.

KEN: I guess I shouldn’t feel so bad. I don’t remember when my grandmother passed. I think it was the mid-1970s, but my memory is hazy. My grandfather and I were close. I knew the password for his computer and several of his financial accounts. Do you know what his password was in 1987?

VICKY: No, what?

KEN: “margeben“, short for Marge & Ben. My grandmother was Marge, short for Margaret. More than 15 years later, he still used her name as a password for his computer and his security.

VICKY: I can see that. We never truly forget the ones we love. Their names and memories live on.

Thoughts and Ramblings of Ken Foreman

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