Friday, August 17, 2018

Exceptional BBQ begins the day before *Complete

 If you really want an exceptional BBQ'd meal, begin the day before.

 Meats such as pork have a rather bland flavor that easily takes on the spices you prepare it with. This meal I'm preparing for my evening meal tomorrow will have a mild spicy flavor with a hint of garlic so I begin by slow boiling the meat with that flavor in mind.
 Some people like a tougher meat at the meal whereas I like almost a pull pork consistency so keep that in mind as you parboil your selected meats. The less time you prepare your meats in the parboil the longer your meat will have to stay on the grill. My meats typically stay above charcoal for 8 minutes, just long enough for the flavor and to slightly char my sauce.



 My pork is now sitting in a dry rub and will be refrigerated overnight.

 My potato cooked just long enough to be done yet firm in the middle as it will become potato salad by this evening. I allow it to cool before adding it's overnight spices so that when cubed, it will have a firm consistency.

 I may have forgotten something as I am not a good instructor but I'll update this post as the stages of preparation progress.

 One of the biggest mistakes that I see often is not allowing the flavors to mend.


 With my potato at room temperature, I cube it in slightly larger pieces than what will be in the meal. The mixing process will wear them down This is also the time to add any flavors that you wish to "deep seat" in the final product. The flavors that you want toi take a light seat in your meal should be added towards the end of the process.

 Toss it all in the fridge and we're done until tomorrow.

 I didn't forget this post and here is the most delicious BBQ simply because I began the day before.

And yes, my puppy, "Nietzsche" is patiently waiting for his LOL

Something for my foodies

Thursday, August 16, 2018

With my comments, someone asked me my race

 I like to think that this blog is appealing to the more intelligent individuals around the world and I'm a "Geechy". You know how to look it up.







Wednesday, August 15, 2018

Do I have Laser Printed Gun Downloads?

*Of course I do.

Did you think they were free?

I also have the how to's of creating a weaponized drone, but again Not free.

Where AI is headed in 2018


Stephen Hawking said, “The development of full artificial intelligence could spell the end of the human race….It would take off on its own, and re-design itself at an ever increasing rate. Humans, who are limited by slow biological evolution, couldn’t compete, and would be superseded.”
Ever since its genesis, there have been conflicting views and concerns on the potential enhancement or doom that it can cause to human civilization. While some experts believe that this technology will advance and augment our intelligence, some like Bill Gates have expressed concerns on how a machine’s intelligence becomes strong enough to be a concern.

Trending AI Articles:

1. How to train a neural network to code by itself ?
2. From Perceptron to Deep Neural Nets
3. Neural networks for solving differential equations
For now, let’s take a look at the current trends of AI and where it is headed to in 2018:
AI to fully integrate in human lives
If 2017 was the year where the warnings from Elon Musk and Stephen Hawking about the potential evil from AI clashed with predictions from Mark Zuckerberg and Bill Gates on its potential good, 2018 will be the year when the debate shifts to its practical utility.
We would get to see more robots that could master complex tasks like ‘walking around a room and over objects’. 2018 will see “Vast applications on smartphones will run deep neural networks to enable AI,” as said by Robinson Piramuthu, chief scientist for computer vision, eBay.
Google CEO Sunder Pichai has said that the future of search giant Google is AI. Pichai has already made a conceptual shift from ‘mobile first’ to ‘artificial intelligence first’ laying full emphasis on machine learning and voice recognition in 2018.
More research on AI and demand for AI experts to increase in 2018
From 2018 and beyond, there would certainly be more people from all kinds of backgrounds who would participate in building, developing and productizing AI.
There would be more product usage, creating apps, translating data and algorithms into real-world usage. As per reports, linguists, data scientists, UX experts, cognitive programmers would massively scale-up.
Rise of Capsule Networks and AI content creation
2018 would see more use of converting structured data into intelligent narratives based on natural language generation (NLG) and natural language processing (NLP). AI would see more use in automated content generation in news coverage, sports, financial reports, and social media and so on using rule-based systems.
There would be more use of capsule networks accounts (CapsNet) for image recognition and computer vision. (Read more here: PDF)
More use of smart automation and chat boxes
In 2018, advanced AI is predicted to make more accurate, more instant verbal and visual translations. It is estimated that some 85% of customer interactions will be managed by AI by 2020.

Trend indicates more focus on bot sensitivity training that would divest more work on chatbot shoulders like Amazon’s Alexa or “Amy” the new virtual assistant from X.ai for responding regarding meals, meetings and calls without indicating that she’s a bot.
Rise of bots and conversational AI
More efficacies in conversational AI are likely to increase in 2018 as Forbes has highlighted well here.
Trend indicates there would be more research on emotional sensitivity and translational technology in AI. Amazon has gone a step ahead in training Alexa to recognize speech patterns that may be indicative of suicide. This could well be a future promise of using bots effectively for psychiatric counseling.
AI and machine empathy
“Artificial intelligence is growing up fast, as are robots whose facial expressions can elicit empathy and make your mirror neurons quiver,” Diane Ackerman. With main advances in the last six decades in search algorithms, 2018 would see more research on ability of robots to empathise.
AI in medicine and clinical system
By the end of next year, it is expected that half of leading healthcare systems will have adopted some form of AI within their diagnostic groups.
“AI in 2018 and in the coming years will be so embedded into our clinical systems that it will no longer be called AI but rather just a regular system,” Luciano Prevedello, M.D., M.P.H., Radiology & Neuroradiology, Ohio State University Wexler Medical Center
AI to scale up marketing and sales in B2B companies
Enterprises are likely to scale up excellence AI to deal with more complex IT ecosystems. Marketing companies would put AI to best use for original gathering of information of lead generation and making predictive account management and sales.
AI is likely to open up new scope of research in astrophysics and energy
AI is expected to revolutionize the energy industry. Experts predict AI will enable the detection of an unexpected astrophysical event that emits gravitational waves, opening a new field of research in contemporary astrophysics.

For now there isn’t a foolproof mechanism to predict whether it is a fail-safe mechanism designed to enhance human survival or can cause human destruction. It is only the future which would clear up all speculations.

Patriotism, Race, Religion & the Truth

 Throughout my blog I have said many things about my character, my past drinking and drugging, my lack of concern about people that don't help themselves, etc. I admit and even profess these things because I am human with flaws.


 From time to time I get an email about my blogging things about a race, religion, country or whatever.
Let me make this clear, I could care less about your objection! I was about to blog about the 300 Catholic priests that molested or raped over 1000 children and I have Catholic friends, so what.

 If I'm not concerned about the things people know about me, I'm more than certain that I don't care about what people know about you, your race, your faith and your country.

 I don't post to make friends, I have a puppy for that.

How to remain humble

 Almost everyone has a cell phone yet almost no one knows who invented the first one. Add to this that no one knows the name of the engineer that created the cell phone on right now.
 I submit that if almost no one knows these things, what in the hell would they know or remember me for?

Humbled



The line between truth and lies is becoming ever murkier



It is no secret that politicians often lie, but consider this ­– they can do so simply by telling the truth. Confused?
That statement becomes clearer when you realise that we've probably all done it. A classic example might be if your mum asks if you've finished your homework and you respond: "I've written an essay on Tennessee Williams for my English class." This may be true, but it doesn't actually answer the question about whether your homework was done. That essay could have been written long ago and you have misled your poor mother with a truthful statement. You might not have even started your homework yet. 
Misleading by "telling the truth" is so pervasive in daily life that a new term has recently been employed by psychologists to describe it: paltering. That it is so widespread in society now gives us more insight into the grey area between truth and lies, and perhaps even why we lie at all.

In 1996 one researcher, Bella DePaulo even put a figure on it. She found that each of us lies about once or twice a day. She discovered this by asking participants for one week to note down each time they lied, even if they did so with a good intention. Out of the 147 participants in her original study, only seven said they didn’t lie at all - and we can only guess if they were telling the truth.
Many of the lies were fairly innocent, or even kind, such as: "I told her that she looked good when I thought that she looked like a blimp." Some were to hide embarrassment, such as pretending a spouse had not been fired. DePaulo, a psychologist at the University of California Santa Barbara, says that the participants in her study were not aware of how many lies they told, partly because most were so "ordinary and so expected that we just don't notice them".

It is when individuals use lies to manipulate others or to purposely mislead that it is more worrying. And this happens more often than you might think.
Complete article > 

How To Be The Master Of Your Own Destiny



American writer Henry David Thoreau is famous for once writing:
The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation.
Many people live their entire lives as if they were at the mercy of their life circumstances. Now it's true that there are some things in life that we have no direct control over, like natural disasters and other people's behavior. But it's equally true that we often have more say in how our life goes than we think we do. For instance, we can choose to live on a fault line in an earthquake-prone city or we can choose to live away from hotspots of seismic activity; and some forms of communication are much better at getting a response that we would like from other people than others.
We have two choices in life: We can either submit to our life circumstances, give up our power and lead a life of resignation and often-not-so-quiet desperation; or we can choose to be the master of our own destiny.
If the idea of being the captain of your own ship sounds appealing, here's how we can do it:

Decide What We Want In Life, And Go After It

When we were a child, a bunch of well-meaning adults put a whole heap of restrictions on our behavior for our own good. Well, at least they probably said it was for our own good. Sometimes it really was, and other times it was just a way of controlling us in order to fit in with their needs and to lessen their own anxiety about us getting into mischief. Families, schools, religions and other societal structures all bombard us with rules and limitations about what is possible, permissible and available to us in life. Over time these limiting beliefs filter down into our nervous system and appear very real, even though they're actually just viral copies of other people's rules and limiting beliefs.
Families in particular tend to inculcate us unconsciously with their own set of beliefs about what is permissible for us. Parents with low self-esteem tend to raise children with low self-esteem. The lower our self-esteem, the less we will believe is possible in life for us.
As an adult, we are responsible for how our life goes: So decide what you want in life, and go after it.

Focus On What We Can Control, Not What We Can't

I often notice that my coaching clients, my friends, my self and many other people I meet seem to get these two things around backwards: We often expend enormous energy on trying to control the things in life that we have no power over, and yet neglect or act powerless in the face of things that we can actually control.
The serenity prayer from Alcoholics Anonymous seems to put this most succinctly:
God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to change the things I can, and wisdom to know the difference.
Getting this around the right way will make a massive difference to whether we feel like we're in charge of our life circumstances or whether we're victim to them.
Much of our lasting joy in life comes from our relationships with other people. Attempting to control and manipulate other people at their own expense isn't likely to lead to sustained happiness. There's a big karmic difference between behaving and communicating in ways that encourage other people to want to contribute to our life, and attempting to control or exploiting other people in destructive and manipulative ways. Learn to recognize the difference.

Quit Playing Victim

Playing victim to our life circumstances is the quickest way to undermine our own personal power. Nothing is bad as the smell of a burning martyr. Being a victim is an uninspiring way of living that will attract other victims to us; and that will make it even harder to get what we want out of life.
Adversity is a part of life, and I'm sure you've had more than your fair share of upsets, disappointments and setbacks. I'm not going to minimize the impact that adversity has, because traumatic life circumstances can leave emotional scars that get lodged deep in our nervous system, and it's taken me a long time to extricate many of mine.
If bad stuff has happened to you, get yourself to a psychologist, therapist or life coach and do some emotional healing work to release the stranglehold that the past has over you so you can build a better future. But if you've just developed a bad habit of complaining about your life circumstances, stop focusing on the past and take action to create the future that you want.
You won't be bothered complaining about your past once your present life is amazing.

Put Yourself First, And Don't Neglect Others

Sometimes as a child we are encouraged to focus on other people's happiness at our own expense and put everyone else's needs before our own. That's a formula for resentment and depression. There's a reason that we start out life believing that we are the center of the universe: Because we are at the center of our life experience. Trying to please everyone around us at our own expense will simply make us resentful, and that's ultimately not going to please anybody.
The old airplane analogy is very apt: In the event of a disaster, we fit our own oxygen mask first, so we can then help other people fit theirs. When I did my first aid training, I was taught to look out for my own safety first, so I didn't become just another casualty needing help in a potentially dangerous situation.
Lasting happiness comes largely from connection with other people and contributing to their lives; but the paradox is that in order to do that effectively, we need to make sure that our needs are getting met as well. It's a balancing act: If we focus entirely on ourselves and our problems, we end up lonely and miserable. If we always put other people before ourselves and neglect our own needs, we'll end up resentful. Somewhere in the middle of this spectrum is the sweet spot and getting this balance right is key to living a great life.

Face Our Fears

Standing in between us and anything that we want but don't yet have, is usually an unpleasant emotion that we haven't yet faced. Often it's fear: maybe the fear of failure, or of rejection, or of being seen for who we really are.
The key to facing fears is to do it incrementally by taking gradual steps every day to expand our comfort zone in the direction of the life that we want.
I don't recommend that you go too crazy, since you don't want to give yourself a nervous breakdown. But the life of our dreams will not arrive at the doorstep while we just sit at home in front of the TV. At some point, we need to face the fears that are currently preventing us from having the life that we want, and I suggest that building a consistent habit of facing a little fear each day is the most sustainable way to get there.

Embrace Failure

One of my biggest fears in the past has been the fear of failure. It was huge for me, and it still kicks in sometimes in the form of self-doubt. It even came up when I sat down to write this article and I found myself thinking: “What if nobody reads it?”
“Well, thank you habitual negative self-talk, for trying to protect me from the pain that I might feel if nobody does read it.”, I replied to my inner critic, “But I think I'm mature enough to handle that pain now, thank you. Certainly nobody will read it if I give up before I start and don't even write it. Then I'd be shortchanging everyone who might benefit from my experience. So I think I'll just have a go and write it anyway”.
Failure is a part of the road to success. Every successful person I've met says this: They often failed many times before achieving success, but we just didn't see it. The media revels in bad news failure stories. Don't listen to it. Stop shaming other people who fail, and start feeling pride in their willingness to give something a go. Focus on enjoying the journey of working towards what you want in life, and let go of your attachment to results so you see everything as a learning experience rather than a “success” or “failure”.

Learn To Trust Yourself

Many of us have been brought up with religions or life philosophies that dictate that other people know how to run our lives better than we do. As a child that may have been true, although I've got to say that the jury is still out on that one for me. Many adults never self-actualize and those school and Sunday school teachers I looked up to as a kid turned out to be barely adults. I look back at them and their supposed wisdom very differently now I'm a little older and wiser myself.
Now it's true that there's a lot of valuable life lessons to learn from every teacher, religion and life philosophy. It's a lot easier to learn from other people's experience than to rediscovery everything about life from first principles. But there's a lot of bullshit out there too, and the lessons that we learn from our own experience will always be more impactful than wisdom gained from a book, no matter how divinely inspired someone claims it to be.
Learn to trust our own inner guidance: We won't always get it right, but we will learn over time from experience. That involves deciding what we want, having a go at taking action towards getting it, and refocusing our efforts each time we make mistakes we make along the way.

Take Action

Nothing happens without taking action. We can do all the conscious manifesting in the world, but it will come to nothing if we take no action towards getting what we want. We can read all the self-help books in the world too, and that will make no difference if we don't actually implement what they say. If you purchase the Confident Man Program, read the guide and listen to all the audio bonuses; and then go back to watching porn on the Internet, your life will not change one iota.
If we want to be the master of our own destiny, we need to take sustained, positive action towards our goals every day; and we need to enjoy the process since there will inevitably be ups and downs along the way.
If you're not sure where to start, the secret answer to that question is: It doesn't matter. Start anywhere, and you'll soon enough discover whether you're heading in the right direction. But you won't find that out if you're not moving at all, so get started today. If you're still stuck for ideas, check out The Confident Man Program Guide; and quit making the excuse that you don't know what to do!

Mini-nukes and mosquito-like robot weapons being primed for future warfare


Several countries are developing nanoweapons that could unleash attacks using mini-nuclear bombs and insect-like lethal robots.
While it may be the stuff of science fiction today, the advancement of nanotechnology in the coming years will make it a bigger threat to humanity than conventional nuclear weapons, according to an expert. The U.S., Russia and China are believed to be investing billions on nanoweapons research.
“Nanobots are the real concern about wiping out humanity because they can be weapons of mass destruction,” said Louis Del Monte, a Minnesota-based physicist and futurist. He’s the author of a just released book entitled“Nanoweapons: A Growing Threat To Humanity.”
One unsettling prediction Del Monte’s made is that terrorists could get their hands on nanoweapons as early as the late 2020s through black market sources.
According to Del Monte, nanoweapons are much smaller than a strand of human hair and the insect-like nanobots could be programmed to perform various tasks, including injecting toxins into people or contaminating the water supply of a major city.  


Another scenario he suggested the nanodrone could do in the future is fly into a room and drop a poison onto something, such as food, to presumably target a particular individual.
The federal government defines nanotechnology as the science, technology and engineering of things so small they are measured on a nanoscale, or about 1 to 100 nanometers. A single nanometer is about 10 times smaller than the width of a human’s DNA molecule.
While nanotechnology has produced major benefits for medicine, electronics and industrial applications, federal research is currently underway that could ultimately produce nanobots.
For one, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA, has a program called the Fast Lightweight Autonomy program for the purpose to allow autonomous drones to enter a building and avoid hitting walls or objects. DARPA announced a breakthrough last year after tests in a hangar in Massachusetts.
Previously, the Army Research Laboratory announced it created an advanced drone the size of a fly complete with a set of “tiny robotic legs” — a major achievement since it presumably might be capable of entering a building undetected to perform surveillance, or used for more nefarious actions.
Frightening details about military nanotechnologies were outlined in a 2010 report from the Pentagon’s Defense Threat Reduction Agency, including how  “transgenic insects could be developed to produce and deliver protein-based biological warfare agents, and be used offensively against targets in a foreign country. ”
It also forecast “microexplosives” along with “nanobots serving as [bioweapons] delivery systems or as micro-weapons themselves, and inhalable micro-particles to cripple personnel.”
In the case of nanoscale robots, Del Monte said they can be the size of a mosquito or smaller and programmed to use toxins to kill or immobilize people; what’s more, these autonomous bots ultimately could become self-replicating.
Last month’s targeted assassination of Kim Jong-nam, the half-brother of North Korea’s ruler, was a stark reminder that toxins are available from a variety of sources and can be unleashed in public locations. It’s also been alleged by Russia’s Pravda paper that nanoweapons were used by the U.S. against foreign leaders. 
A Cambridge University conference on global catastrophic risk found a 5 percent risk of nanotech weapons causing human extinction before the year 2100.
As for the mini-nukes, Del Monte expects they represent “the most horrific near-term nanoweapons.” 
Nanotechnology opens up the possibility to manufacture mini-nuke components so small that they are difficult to screen and detect. Furthermore, the weapon (capable of an explosion equivalent to about 100 tons of TNT) could be compact enough to fit into a pocket or purse and weigh about 5 pounds and destroy large buildings or be combined to do greater damage to an area.
“When we talk about making conventional nuclear weapons, they are difficult to make,” he said. “Making a mini-nuke would be difficult but in some respects not as difficult as a full-blown nuclear weapon.”
Del Monte explained that the mini-nuke weapon is activated when the nanoscale laser triggers a small thermonuclear fusion bomb using a tritium-deuterium fuel. Their size makes them difficult to screen, detect and also there’s “essentially no fallout” associated with them. 
Still, while the mini-nukes are powerful in and of themselves, he expects they are unlikely to wipe out humanity. He said a larger concern is the threat of the nanoscale robots, or nanobots because they are “the technological equivalent of biological weapons.”
The author said controlling these “smart nanobots” could become an issue since if lost, there could be potentially millions of these deadly nanobots on the loose killing people indiscriminately.
Earlier in his career, Del Monte said he held a secret clearance when he worked on Defense Department programs at Honeywell, ranging from missiles to satellites. He also previously worked on advanced computers at IBM and has several patents on microelectronics. In those roles, he led development of microelectronics and sensors.

You believe you know something? That's just foolish

 Why I'm addressing this foolishness, I have no idea, here we go.


  The human body has neuroreceptors in order to taste, touch, see, hear and smell. These receptors traverse a "flawed" system to reach the brain.
The path is an information "loss and distortion" holy grail. Information travels from receptors to dendrites, synapses, neurotransmitters, voltage gated channels and even more crap to reach the brain.

 When this "less than perfect" pathway delivers this distorted messages to the brain, another flawed and distorted pathway of processes begins.
 The human mind associates, draws into play past experiences, interprets, assumes, connects non-existent dots and tons of other things "before" it presents you with a picture. With that picture the id and the ego do their dance before a decision is made by the superego, wholly crap!

 Think of the best fiber optic system in the world and it still has loss and distortion but people seem to think their human system is perfect when they say, "I know".

 I write this post "gathering, believing, interpreting, assuming and even assessing" I'm correct but damn sure don't "know".

 If you don't believe me, go here > "Hello"

Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Finding Jobs Overseas

 I have taught you how to cross reference businesses overseas for validity, I have also shared what to look for as far as scams.
 As of this date, I am finding more opportunities abroad via Craigslist than I am by means of employment sites.
 Do your homework and good luck.


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