It should be apparent that I'm NOT the one you go to for new tech information.
You've heard of "early adapters" of the latest and greatest tech thing? I'm sort of a "finally get around to it" adapter.
In the early years of the cell phone, I had a little one. It fit in my pocket. It rang, and I answered it. One time I decided to go a little crazy, and I put the "Hawaii 5-0" theme as my ringtone.
By the way, the "Hawaii 5-0" theme absolutely slaps, as the kids say today.
That was pretty cool until I forgot to put the ringer on silent, and during a particularly reflective moment of our church's Christmas concert, my late great friend, Bill Wade, decided to give me a call.
Nothing says Christmas like the "Hawaii 5-0" theme.
After that phone, I got a flip phone, which was the worst cell phone ever created. However, the flip phone could text and take pictures in a very primitive way.
Then I got a Blackberry, which I thought was pretty cool. To show how cool it was, Karl Rove had a Blackberry. You could text on it, and (this is important), you could have the Facebook and Twitter apps, so you could always be engaged with social media. That might not have been such a great idea.
Soon, I learned the Blackberry was like the K-mart tennis shoes that your mom would buy you because it sort of, kind of, looked like the Adidas shoes everyone at Wheeler wore, because we were not going to spend $30.00 for a pair of tennis shoes, Alan.
Then one day, my wife and I walked into the 21st Century and got an iPhone. It drove Blackberry out of the market. I don't even think Karl Rove has one now.
The big topic in tech is Artificial Intelligence or "AI".
What is AI? According to my deep research (Wikipedia) "AI" is artificial intelligence, which is intelligence that is artificial. It is computer systems that "perform tasks typically associated with human intelligence, such as learning, reasoning, problem solving, perception, and decision making".
AI also helps you to spell better and pick out Netflix shows.
AI is supposed to do many of things. However, right now, it looks like the main function of AI is to make cat videos for TikTok and Facebook.
One video shows cat restaurant servers bringing food to human customers, which is a hoot because, as anybody who has been around a cat knows, they would never bring you anything unless they killed it themselves.
Another video shows cats dancing around to Taylor Swift songs.
So I was surprised at a post by Matt Shumer, who owns an AI firm titled "Something Big Is Happening". Read it here: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/something-big-happening-matt-shumer-so5he/
Matt Shumer said today reminds him of February of 2020, when we heard rumblings about this "virus" in China that would kill everybody. You might remember it, I think it was called Covid.
The virus was very bad, and it killed John Prine, but there is a line of thinking that if somebody, like, oh, President Trump, had just done something (exactly what nobody has ever explained), maybe so many people would not have died.
Shumer says in 2022, a mere four years ago, AI could not do simple math. (Finally, me and high tech have something in common.) Now, AI can pass the bar exam. AI won't make lawyers disappear, (dang) but Shumer advises that you better be aware of the changes that AI will cause. AI might actually do some work.
Shumer's thesis is simple: brace yourself. Things are going to change fast, so be prepared. Forbes magazine says this: "His (Shumer) prescription is blunt: get ahead of it. Learn to use AI. Become indispensable. Invest wisely. Prepare for volatility."
The only problem this slightly less tech-savvy person sees is that learning to use AI, becoming indispensable, investing wisely, and preparing for volatility is just good advice anyway.
I remember a lot of the latest and greatest things. The color TV. Microwave ovens. Calculators. All of these presented a challenge and would change everything. I remember during the dot.com boom, I heard that brick-and-mortar stores would go out of business. Okay, maybe they were right about that.
AI is just a tool. It can make things easier and make things more complicated. It depends on how we use it.
So maybe it is not the end of the world as we know it. Maybe it is just another gadget that can make life better. Or make more cat videos, we'll see.







