Saturday, March 28, 2026

As the AI Future Approaches



Dr. Kai-Fu Lee, the chairman and CEO of Sinovation Ventures, was asked these questions by some five-year-olds at a Beijing kindergarten:

"Are we going to have robot teachers?"

"What if one robot car bumps into another robot car and then we get hurt?"

"Will people marry robots and have babies with them?"

"Are computers going to become so smart that they can boss us around?"

"If robots do everything, then what are we going to do?"

- From AI Superpowers: China, Silicon Valley, and the New World Order by Kai-Fu Lee


[Photo by Getty Images for Unsplash+]

Back by Popular Demand

 


Friday, March 27, 2026

Next Step to Mars

 


Five Management Tools

Nicholas Bate now has five eBooks out in his Companion Series.

Practical advice, easy to understand, and which can be put to immediate use.

Up Up Up

 


When Things Slip Past



While preparing a Substack essay on organizational problems, I thought of the great John Lennon observation: 

"Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans."

I would add this: "The most dangerous distractions are disguised as something else."

That's a small part of my upcoming analysis. It should be out in a few days.


[Photo by Stephen Ellis at Unsplash]


1970 Film on Computer Takeover

 


Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Definitely On My List

 


Worth Another Look

 

Edward N. Luttwak wrote The Endangered American Dream in 1993.

 It's both disturbing and strangely amusing to see his analysis of the American Border Patrol at that time. He notes that as of 1990, the Border Patrol only had 3,857 agents on duty. That included those at the Mexican border, the Canadian border, and Alaska.

In contrast, he noted that Italy had 53,000 border guards plus the Carabinieri and the police for passport control.

He also noted: But preemptive declarations of impotence that disregard perfectly available remedies have become something of an American habit. When gangs were rampaging in Los Angeles in their regular everyday fashion even before the spectacular May 1992 riots, the city authorities reacted by asking for sociological studies of the gangs. Actually it is the city authorities themselves that are sociologically much more interesting and definitely worth studying: with a population  of 3.5 million, the city had a grand total of 8,381 police officers (yes, eight thousand three hundred eighty-one), a ratio of 2.3 per 1,000 inhabitants. That would be just about enough for, say, quietly industrious Nagoya in law-abiding Japan. By contrast, the Italian countrywide ratio is 4.2 - though even crime-ridden Italy is a paradise of tranquility as compared to Los Angeles. The Border Patrol, or rather the lack of it on the Mexican border, is exactly the same category: self-inflicted impotence, rationalized as an inherent impossibility.