AI Tour de France
The AI generated nightmare fuel never ends!
The AI generated nightmare fuel never ends!
Two buddies go to a truck pull to see if electric beats diesel. The diesel pulled 251 feet and the dual-motor cybertruck didn’t do too bad at 207 feet. The cybertruck definitely didn’t with as a crowd favorite though.
That’s not too bad considering the cybertruck is one of the first commercial electric vehicles and things are likely to get better.
People should pay attention though; because electric motors can potentially put out more torque than an internal combusion engine could ever hope to generate. That’s probably why the diesel engines in a locomotive don’t turn the wheels – they turn a generator that feeds the electric motors that turn the wheels. It makes me wonder if you could Frankenstein locomotive electric motors to a vehicle and see what is possible.
What if you re-told the movie “The Fifth Element” as a 1950’s sci-fi flick using a generative AI. Yes, everything you see is generated by AI – and you can learn the techniques too from Curious Refuge’s AI filmmaking classes.
Portland and Oregon continue to struggle in 2024. While some of these numbers may be normal for bigger cities, all of these mark dramatically decreased quality of life for a city that used to have very few of these problems and only population of 600,000 people in the entire metro area.
Wow – the things AI has created…
Norwood Viviano makes really interesting art. It demonstrates data using art.
Here’s one in which he 3D prints city maps that demonstrate the primary industries that created certain cities:
Or how rising water levels will flood different cities:
Or city population increases/declines over time:
Do you want to do AI work but have have a laptop, NUC, or other tiny form factor computer that cannot accept a gigantic GPU? Does your system have an Oculink port? Then maybe one of this external GPU doc is for you.
Minisforum DEG1 eGPU Dock allows you to plug in an external GPU to your small form factor PC. The only trick is that you’ll need an Oculink port. A number of small form factor PC’s now come with Oculink (like this AtomMan X7 Ti).
OCuLink is short for “Optical-Copper Link” that allows you to connect PCIe devices using an external cable rather than an internal slot. OCuLink has been around in the server world for about a decade, but starting in 2024 has becoming increasingly present on tiny form factor pc’s like the Intel’s NUCs. OCuLink is gaining popularity because it’s cheaper than complex solutions like Thunderbolt and offers almost direct PCI speeds. OCuLink is virtually an extension of your device’s PCIe slot, boasting a bandwidth of up to 16 GB/s which is much faster than Thunderbolt 4 which caps out at 5 GB/s.
You can also buy desktop PC versions of Oculink (like this one) to try things out. They’re kind of unique because they come with 2 components. A shim M.2 card to plug into your PCIe slots, and then it connects via Oculink to a small connector board that your graphics card plugs into:
Here’s a review of the setup and performance. It’s extremely impressive. You can play Cyberpunk in 4K raytracing on a connected 4090 in Ultra at a steady 70fps. Even in overdrive it maintains a steady 50+ fps. Horizon Forbidden West at 4k Very High settings plays at a stable 80-100fps – even without framegen.
While it’s still too much of a Frankenstein approach right now that isn’t consumer friendly, but I think OCuLink has really raised the bar and is going to make Thunderbolt and USB have to really up their game.
Ever want to know what it’s like to work in a game studio? Double Fine has released a 33 episode series called PsychOdyssey which shows them developing Psychonauts 2 over 7 years.
Watch it on the youtube link above, download the 4k version for free off Internet Archive,
Are you getting burned out? Is your dream job killing you? Want to run away to a tropical island or pursue your bucket list? What if I told you that you didn’t need to do that – and it may not actually help. Helen Zhao did just that: she quit her dream job, looking to heal burnout and find happiness beyond work. What she discovered was very different.
I was checking off destinations so that I could wear the number of places I’d been like a badge of honor. Then my life would be as worthwhile as the travel influencers I envied, I thought.
She found herself burning out while traveling. She eventually slash the remaining 34 countries on her 50 country bucket list in half and focused on quality over quantity. What was the point of seeing so many places if I didn’t truly enjoy them?
Prioritizing well-being meant letting go of metrics you think define your self-worth. She began to measure success through the moments she felt truly alive, at peace, and connected with others, instead of the quantifiable accomplishments that might make my resume and online bio more impressive.
Stop rushing through things that meet your metrics of being more ‘successful’. Instead of stressing through a day trip to say she had been to a specific famous place, she sat at a cafe reading things she enjoyed. She slept in after a long night with friends with a slow breakfast instead of going on an island tour. She began to enjoy everything more.
During the first part of her travels she was constantly trying to formulate pitches and story ideas from her travels. She was still multitasking work.
Instead, she pursued fun topics she didn’t have time to study while working full time: history, politics, real estate investing. She learned to develop an identity completely disconnected from work.
After she returned home, she started getting sucked back into workaholism. She made time for journaling, walks, and meditation. Instead of worrying about burnout or feeling worthless/unaccomplished while spending this time, she embraces that time to figure out what’s next.
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