Saturday, November 08

Geek

Daily News Stuff 8 November 2025

The Kangaroo Paw Curls Edition

Top Story

  • Sam Altman's pants are totally on fire.  (Marcus on AI)

    So, Sam Altman recently said that OpenAI was not asking for government loan guarantees to bail the company out when things blew up in their faces, after Trump Administration AI Czar David Sacks said point-blank that no such guarantees would be forthcoming after OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar said that the company was in fact seeking government guarantees for its several septillion dollars in loans, currently backed only by its annual revenues of $3.18.

    With me so far?

    Well, slight problem.  The author of this piece did a little digging and found that Sam Altman went on a podcast just recently to say that the company was seeking such loan guarantees, and documents still on OpenAI's own web site confirm this.

    There's a reason I call him Sam Altman-Fried.


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Disclaimer: You shall not pass!

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 05:25 PM | Comments (3) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
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1 X-ray/particle beam, I am not gonna say that it technically impossible, I only know enough to say that it is not slam dunk easy. But, if the core business team has previously had issues with software stuffs, then they probably don't have the software management sophistication for what might be a key task in maturing such a technology. (IE, are current EM solvers good enough, or would you need some in house developers to add needed features?) I may be stupid, and think everything is harder than it actually needs to be.

Posted by: PatBuckman at Sunday, November 09 2025 01:59 AM (rcPLc)

2 X-rays and particle beams for that application are probably a combination that I could identify as sexy, and maybe a logical extrapolation if I knew nothing first hand about engineering and about physics. The question is whether it is still sexy after you have relevant study, and if there is a viable path to using those ideas to develop that technology. I have the vague impression that there is no algorithm for mapping ideas to successful tech development pathways, only a lot of attempts at such an algorithm.

Posted by: PatBuckman at Sunday, November 09 2025 02:03 AM (rcPLc)

3 X-ray lithography is not a new idea. The reason we haven't seen it yet from any of the large and rich companies (TSMC, ASML, Samsung, etc) that have an incentive to develop it is that it is very hard. For example, x-rays obviously can't be reflected, refracted, or blocked efficiently by any of the materials conventionally used. That makes optics and masking a nightmare. A practical version will probably eventually be invented by someone, but the chance that a given startup has figured it all out is very small.

Posted by: Matthew Dixon Cowles at Sunday, November 09 2025 01:19 PM (irynM)

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Apple pies are delicious. But never mind apple pies. What colour is a green orange?




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