
Sunday, 12 January 2025
danger danger high voltage

Saturday, 11 January 2025
Friday, 10 January 2025
Snow Crash happens in real life
Snow Crash 30-year-old cover art by Bruce Jensen - Hiro Protagonist waves a katana.
Guess what? Google and Microsoft are the latest names making some waves with a sizable donation to the group organizing President-elect Donald Trump’s slushy inauguration.
Google, based in Mountain View, California, is stepping up with $1 million for the inaugural fund. Karan Bhatia, who used to be a senior official in the Bush administration and now heads policy at Google, shared the news. It turns out Google has a history of contributing to inaugural events, as confirmed by a spokesperson. CNBC was quick to report on this donation. Bhatia said, “We’re excited to support the 2025 inauguration with a livestream on YouTube and a direct link on our homepage. Plus, we’re chipping in to the inaugural committee.” Google: 'Don't be evil' (deprecated)
Then, we have Microsoft from Redmond, Washington, who also confirmed they’re donating $1 million to the inauguration. Interestingly, they’ve got a bit of a track record too—they donated $500,000 to Trump’s first inauguration back in 2017, as well as to President Joe Biden’s inauguration in 2021.
These donations are part of a larger tech-bro trend, echoing similar contributions from other heavyweights like Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta Platforms, Jeff Bezos’ Amazon, and even an AI startup called Perplexity AI. And let’s not forget that Sam Altman from OpenAI and Tim Cook from Apple also put in their own personal donations of $1 million each. Fascinating times, right?
It’s hard not to think about how all these developments resonate with themes from Neal Stephenson’s "Snow Crash." I discovered the book when I was on a trip to Silicon Graphics in Mountain View, California, just after Stephenson's book was been published. The presenter of the SGI machine was so excited and told us as much about the novel. In the book, the intertwining of technology, media, and society creates a digital world teeming with complexity and corporate influence. The massive donations and engagement by these tech giants reflect a tangible version of that fictional landscape, where Hiro Protaganist faces corporations playing influential roles in national events.
And that's not all - Amazon also announced it’s contributing $1 million by streaming the inauguration event on Amazon Video.
While it’s pretty common for big companies to donate to inaugural committees, Trump is breaking records this time around. Biden’s inaugural committee raised $61.8 million back in 2021, and Trump’s in 2017 brought in $106.8 million according to the filings. But now, the Trump-Vance inaugural committee has outdone them all with a whopping $170 million, as reported by the Associated Press.
The amount of money raised is so massive that some donors who gave seven figures won’t get VIP tickets or special perks for the inauguration, thanks to the high demand, according to the New York Times. This shows how major companies view these opportunities as a way to gain favour with the new president, especially those who struggled to stay in his good graces during his first term.
Dmitry Shevelenko, an executive at Perplexity AI, stated last month, "Unlike other tech companies that have recently tossed cash into Trump’s inaugural fund, we weren't around during his first term, so this is a chance for us to team up on common goals rather than trying to fix a rocky relationship."
Google's CEO, Sundar Pichai, seemed pretty excited to discuss a big idea for artificial intelligence, likening it to a “Manhattan Project” before a December meeting with Trump. And let’s not forget Bezos, who sat down for dinner with Trump and Tesla’s Elon Musk that same month.
Just this week, Zuckerberg made some moves to win over Trump and his supporters—he added UFC CEO Dana White to Meta’s board and ended the company’s long-standing practice of using independent fact-checkers.
Awash with the dosh. No gain without gravy train.
Wednesday, 8 January 2025
ketamine kamchatka kommentary
So much of what I now see in news feeds comes from doped sources. We get billionaires competing for clicks, making whacky pronouncements, and drug addled unstable leaders trying to rule the world as angry bullies.
"I'll take Kamchatka," as the Risk saying goes.
Meanwhile, I see a large proportion of online tittle-tattling around with idiot 'look at me' pronouncements about hair colouring and hyaluronic acid.
The rest of the journalists, with a few thinking exceptions, recycle whatever PR guff they are sent.
This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours, as Aneurin Bevan, NHS creator said.
Tuesday, 7 January 2025
in this twilight redux
Monday, 6 January 2025
In this twilight
This month's U3A creative writing challenge. Strangely it is also about event horizons.
I put it into this blog for safe keeping.
"
Keira and I often visited a pub in Camden called The World’s End. It truly suited us—a chaotic sanctuary where we immersed ourselves in rich, bitter ale, struggling to be heard above the overwhelming clamour. We both knew things were ending; our conversation was not merely challenging; it felt futile, so we treated those moments as sultry therapy.
Shrouded in half-light and neon slime at one end of the bar, a strobed doorway yawned open. It led to a staircase spiralling down into a place people whispered about with nervous grins. Some claimed it was the Gates of Hell, but we all knew it as the Underworld.
This twilight pulsed beneath the pub’s floorboards, where a growling bass shook ancient London ancestors’ dust loose. Metallic shrieks and overdriven wails seeped up the stairs like smoke, bleeding into the pub above. Below, the air was slick with heat and latex, bodies glistening as they writhed and preened under sickly light. The smell of sweat and solvent clung to every surface.
This wasn’t a club; it was a crucible. The stage—a sacrificial altar—hosted Rammsteinian bands wielding chainsaws, hammers, and scorched welding torches. Tools of construction became instruments of destruction, blasting their frequencies through towering Marshall stacks that could split the earth apart.
I don’t recall how Keira and I first found this. I’m not sure anyone did. One night, a band called The Ten Inch Screws took the stage, their sound so oppressive it felt like drowning in molten steel. Their lyrics—half-snarled, half-screamed—burned into my memory. They sang of a corrupted Earth’s slow demise, the death of reason, and humanity consuming itself in a blind frenzy until only ash remained.
Here’s what I can still recall:
“When logic rots and reason dies,
The earth will choke beneath black skies.
No gods to weep, no saviours born,
Just silence remains when the world is torn.”
Even now, I can hear the echoes from that night. The Underworld wasn’t just a club—it was a warning, a glimpse into the abyss. And we laughed as we danced ever closer to the edge.
And now, the unravelling free verse:
The sky splinters in muted chaos,
light bleeding softly into the void.
Certainty crumbles—
mountains bow, cities sigh,
oceans whisper secrets to ash-laden sky.
Beside you, Keira, this world feels less fragile.
Your hand in mine steadies the tremor
of earth’s final breath.
We stand at the edge of everything,
watching it dissolve,
a quiet defiance against the inevitable.
The end hums softly,
not in fury but in quiet surrender.
Your voice, steady in the fading glow,
anchors me—
a tether on this unravelling ride.
Your warmth burns brighter
than the dimming horizon.
In this twilight, we do not grieve;
we stand still together,
wrapped in the weight of what is and what was.
It is not an end but a becoming,
the last breath of a universe folding into itself.
"
Sunday, 5 January 2025
20 vision
I initially set up rashbre central as a quick experiment, and look at it now 20 years on, with an average of 261 posts per year, which has been progressively declining year on year. Of course, in the early days, there was limited competition from other platforms, but later, a whole slew of alternative platforms drifted in.
I'll stick with my current one because it is largely unaffected by the likes of Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Wotzap, usw.
I'm in awe of those who have taken up Substack, which feels as if it would be my next preferred choice, although I'm not sure I'd have enough to post, so I'll still stick with my un-monetisable rashbre central.
Saturday, 4 January 2025
Event-horizon?
Friday, 3 January 2025
Wednesday, 1 January 2025
Sunday, 15 December 2024
Stealing a march - Type Thief #arc
Here's an interesting free review book offer from a fellow blogger:
A new historical novel, set in 1503 and beyond, spanning much of Europe: It's the Year of Three Popes. One of them commissions a typeface from a renowned Venetian printer for exclusive use by the Vatican. The resulting font is beautiful, but the type punches are destined to be stolen on their way to Rome.
Meanwhile, in the 21st century, a book collector who specialises in typographical first editions is trying to track the type's amazing journey.
Who was the type thief? It's an interesting road novel with many entertaining twists and appearances by historical figures.
And right now (for a short time) it's possible to get a 'Free' Advanced Reader Copy (sometimes called galleys), by following the link to R F McMinn's page: It's here with the simplest of instructions to obtain a paperback or eBook. Recommended!