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Chess the beautiful game

    I have just finished watching an exciting television series that came out last year. It is on Netflix, Disney+, and Amazon Prime. It is about the game known as "the battle of the minds" between the greatest Chess champion,  Garry Kasparov  and the IBM supercomputer,  Deep Blue , in 1997. However, much has been said and written about this "battle of the minds". However, this particular television series examines it from a different perspective, focusing more on the emotional and psychological aspects, as well as its impact on the main characters. I relate to this series because I have worked as a psychiatrist and software developer. Some characters are fictionalised to produce a better story, as the main narrative focuses on the psychological and emotional effects that Deep Blue had, especially on Kasparov. It begins with a disclaimer stating that some aspects of what you might be watching may be inaccurate, but at least it is "based" on actual even...

Tracing the American Black culture

This is a fascinating book that presents a different perspective on the generally accepted narrative. Thomas Sowell appears to have done his homework, and the extent of his work supports this conclusion. He has spoken on several topics and presents a conservative viewpoint. Thomas Sowell said in the preface of the book that "the purpose of this book is to expose some of the more blatant misconceptions poisoning race relations in our time." He believes that too much has been assumed and too little has been scrutinised. He is something that is not so common in the United States of America, a Black academic Conservative, as most academicians are Liberal, and a majority of the Black population in the US are Democrats.    Thomas Sowell is an American economist, social theorist, and author, born on 30th June 1930, in North Carolina. Raised in Harlem, he served in the Marine Corps during the Korean War before earning degrees from Harvard, Columbia, and the University of Chi...

The Machines are here

  I do not want to be seen as a prophet of doom. Nor do I see myself as a modern-day Isaiah, Hosea, Jeremiah or Daniel who constantly warned Israel about their behaviour, their worshipping of other false gods, and trying to be like other surrounding tribes until they were conquered by Assyria, Babylon, or Rome. But the issue of AI is evident to me, and I must see it in the face, as I am working in that area. I use it regularly to do my work, and it makes my job more effective and easier. A simple example, I had a meeting with my boss recently, and we talked about technical and other topics. An AI was taking minutes of our more than one-hour-long meeting. In the minutes, the key points we discussed were neatly laid out, including the main points and actions to be taken. The non-work-related stuff was summarised as "discussed weekend plans and shared updates about families, while also discussing the similar nature of political parties and their tendency not to fulfil their promises...

Further explaination of the universe

  Stephen Hawking, a theoretical physicist, cosmologist, and author, has always tried to explain complex astrophysical phenomena in simple language that everyone can understand. The subtitle of this book is "a further explanation of a science classic made more accessible". To his surprise, his book A Brief History of Time was a bestseller and was on the top ten list for 237 weeks and sold one copy for every 750 people on Earth. The book was a remarkable success for a modern physics book. Many people were asking for a sequel to the book. A Brief History of Time explained how Newtonian Astrophysics described the laws that control planets and stars' movement. This book takes into consideration the most recent theoretical and observational results. How light speed is finite and constant at 299,792,458 m/s. Since the speed of light is constant, to explain the different observations for different observers, time must be relative. Producing the twin paradox, i.e., time slows d...

The future we fear - decivilization, piracy and localisation

  This is a book that tries to predict the future based on what is happening currently. In summary, the future looks dire for everyone, but some are worse than others. In some areas, it is just a mild inconvenience, it could be not drinking Coke but drinking Pepsi instead. But in others, it is a total societal collapse, massive starvation, and a Mad Max-like environment where all institutions are gone and everyone is out for himself. There would be deglobalisation, leading to decivilisation in some areas. No electricity, a disjointed food supply, communication and everything that made modern living a luxury is gone or is made more expensive. But there is one exception: America, he says that America will survive, except for a few inconveniences, and this is because not only is it far from the rest of the world. Also, because it is vast, and the land is plentiful, it has almost all of the minerals and products that can be found within its borders it is also protected by two great oce...

The world according to the Corleone family

"Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.”    Michael Corleone The film The Godfather, directed by Francis Ford Coppola, is based on the book "The Godfather" by Mario Puzo, who also wrote the screenplay. The Godfather has entered our culture, and its actors and actresses have become icons. The Godfather follows the Corleone family's rise and conflicts in the mafia world, as patriarch Vito Corleone, played by Marlon Brando,   leads with wisdom and ruthlessness. Michael, his youngest son, played by Al Pacino evolves from a reluctant outsider to the cold, calculated head of the family. The book and the film title "The Godfather" follow his rise, and with each activity, we see similarities to that of a great superpower, in this case, the USA. It. "For in his chronicling of the rise, fall, and rebirth of the Corleone Mafia empire, Coppola presents two hauntingly prophetic messages that speak directly to America today: that the fall of the powerful i...