Celebrating Liza’s Commencement and New Beginnings at Virginia Tech | May 16 2025, 02:00

Liza has finally graduated from the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, and now we have a certified architect in the family! Over here, a graduation ceremony is called a “Commencement,” which translates from English as “beginning.” Today, there was a formal diploma presentation ceremony. However, they don’t actually hand out diplomas but something like a voucher for a diploma, which can be converted into a diploma as long as you don’t have any “tails” left. Because the ceremony is a thing unto itself, and of course, no one is going to move or adjust it. The actual diploma will be sent by mail.

Today and tomorrow, our entire family, including our menagerie, is in Blacksburg—the place where the huge university campus is located, seemingly taking over the entire little town in southern Virginia. Nearly 40,000 students study here alongside about 13,000 staff members. It’s a whole universe, its branches shining even in our parts: campuses and research centers are not only here in Blacksburg. But this place is the “core.”

Well, now Liza, learn to drive! You won’t manage to get to work on public transportation around here; it’s very fragmented, slow, and unreliable. All in all, we are very happy. Tomorrow is the main event at the big stadium, and then, onto new tracks!

It seems like it was only yesterday. 2020, masks, COVID. But they let you study “in-person.” With a lot of restrictions, but at least not from home. You chose architecture, and people constantly asked us if we had architects in the family? Of course, we do, that’s me, except, well, I’m not really about houses and bridges. But now we have the full spectrum!

If the standard bachelor’s diploma in the States is obtained in four years, at Virginia Tech it takes five years to study architecture—and that’s still not a master’s degree. Initially, we were all worried about how we were going to afford this. When you apply to the institute, you show them all your income and expenses, and some smart system made up of a mix of people and computers tells you, for example, you’re poor but smart, so the university will charge you little, not a lot. Or it says, “you can afford it, I see,” so they give you the full load, tighten your belts. We didn’t quite meet the necessary level of poverty, and the numbers were initially scary, but somewhere along the way educational loans helped, and we also grew over time and started to get scared less.

And just like that, five years have flown by, and now Liza will start earning her own money. A big deal. From mid-June, Liza starts her first job—the one that had already offered her several internships in summer and winter. So there probably wasn’t even a question of whether to hire her full-time or not.

Lizochka, congratulations again! And wishing you success!

P.S. Also, today is Yuki’s birthday—he’s 4 years old. He sadly watched from the window as we loaded our suitcases into the car. Nadia quietly said, “Yuki, we’re going to Liza and Levchik,” and he, skidding his claws on the floor, charging at full speed, with skids on the turns, dashed to the door and sat next to it! And that’s considering how we usually have to shove him out the door to walk him—he’s a real homebody. Literally: you push him down the steps toward the door and he moves as long as you push him, reluctantly gets dressed in his harness, then he starts his half-hour pond avoidance program. But this time, he totally lost his mind! He understands us somehow.

Navigating Art and Meaning: The Journey of Misha Marker | May 14 2025, 20:26

Misha Marker is one of the few artists I follow who prioritizes meanings and words over technique, though he clearly possesses ample skill in both areas. Residing in Russia, he must navigate his expressions cautiously, yet he appears to manage it successfully. Recently, I had the opportunity to speak with Virgil Elliot, author of Traditional Oil Painting (arguably the premier resource on the topic) and I posed a question: which holds greater value today, the skill to replicate reality or the creativity that fosters new interpretations? Unsurprisingly, there is no straightforward or sole correct response. Misha’s art primarily explores meanings.

Posts like these are categorized under the tag #artrauflikes, and on beinginamerica.com, the “Art Rauf Likes section compiles all 151 entries (in contrast to Facebook, where tag searches often omit nearly half).

How Ticks Use Electric Fields to Find Hosts | May 08 2025, 03:39

By the way, have you ever wondered how ticks, those slow, wingless creatures, end up on a human body so quickly? And not just on humans. It turns out the answer to this question emerged quite recently — in 2023.

Sam England and Katie Lihou hypothesized that ticks can sense and react to the electric fields emitted by all living beings, including humans. To test this, they collected ticks and placed them on a specially grounded surface that mimicked a plant. Then they passed a 750-volt electrode over them — approximately the amount emitted by a typical mammal. The ticks immediately “jumped towards the electrode. The same thing happened when the scientists used a charged rabbit’s paw.

In general, it was discovered that ticks do not jump, fly, or even crawl deliberately towards humans. They are simply attracted to us because of the electrostatic charge — like dust or hair to a charged balloon.

Anomalies in Linguistic Output and the Case for AI Deployment in U.S. Politics

So, I’m convinced that Trump is operating on AI models, likely an early Grok, through a chip in his noggin, by special robots. All the signs are there, and I’ll provide the arguments.

That is, whenever Trump opens his mouth to say something, his TrumpGPT invents the next word for the already spoken ones, and since GPT hallucinations are not canceled, it ends up as it does. TrumpAI can’t finish a thought. It operates on looped inference: each word triggers the next without any notion of the end of the sequence. This isn’t rhetoric—it’s runaway generation. The speech patterns of TrumpGPT-0 remind one of a Markov Chain with lags.

Before elections, they just fine-tuned him on everything good, so when he comes up with the next token, it often clashes with what he was taught, but at the same time, generates a lot of accompanying nonsense. Anyway, he and Melania have their tokens, so everything’s in its place.

The pre-trained foundational model, as we see, is rather simple, probably about 1.5B parameters at best. Maybe GPT-2. Or something like that. This explains the irreducible inclination to looped inference. Apparently, there were a few volunteers, one went off to control a mouse cursor on the screen and play Minecraft, and the other, well, went off to become president. The timings match up.

Friendship with Elon is not about politics, it’s tech support. Elon did what he could to fine-tune the model, but apparently, they hit the limits of the technology.

The model was trained on Fox News broadcasts over 20 years. Everyone knows he “thinks what he sees on TV. Hence the “They’re eating the dogs, the cats”. Actually, it’s a vulnerability. As soon as the words “they’re stealing the election are uttered, Grok v0.1 intercepts and begins to playback the script. The syndrome of a “model too open to external context.

Retrieval-Augmented Generation? Not in this build. Question: “Who was the first president of the USA? might trigger an answer “Me. Because the model does not have access to external databases. Only pretrain on personal memoirs and commercials for Trump Steaks.

TrumpGPT operates on a custom version of TensorFlow from 2009, where half of the dependencies conflict with reality. That’s why it freezes at the words “climate change, “facts, and “evidence.

So, we just need to add a disclaimer:

This content was generated by artificial intelligence and for entertainment purposes only. This content is It should not be used for any other purpose, such as making financial decisions or providing medical advice. It may contain errors or inaccuracies, and should not be relied upon as a substitute for professional advice.

The Dual Legacy of William Mulholland | May 06 2025, 19:31

I just read that Mulholland Drive was named after William Mulholland, who on one hand provided Los Angeles with water, but on the other hand buried 431 people after the St. Francis Dam he built collapsed, merely twelve hours after he and his assistant had inspected it. Essentially, it was the worst technological disaster in the US of the 20th century.

So, he truly did supply the county with water. Initially through good engineering, and then again through bad.

Incidentally, it serves as a good example of why it’s improper to name things after living individuals.

Reflective Interlude: Jean Nouvel’s Mirrored Cube in Paris | May 06 2025, 03:59

This building pleasantly surprised me in Paris. It’s a large mirrored cube that covers some construction at this site (I will attach what used to stand here before the cube was erected in the comments). The idea of architect Jean Nouvel. Notice how both buildings are reflected and seem to be “completed” by the reflections. In autumn 2025, this spot will open as the Cartier Foundation Museum of Contemporary Art, so this is a temporary structure.

Daniela Werneck: From Rio to Realism | May 04 2025, 13:24

An intriguing artist from Houston — Daniela Werneck. She specializes in watercolors. Born and raised in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. A self-taught painter who holds a degree in interior design from the School of Fine Arts in Rio de Janeiro. She has dedicated herself to realistic figurative art for just the past decade. Thus, with sufficient resolve, anything is achievable.

Posts discussing art like this are categorized under the tag #artrauflikes, and at beinginamerica.com in the “Art Rauf Likes” section, one can discover all 150 (unlike Facebook, which tends to forget (or omit) nearly half of them).