Want to join in? Respond to our weekly writing prompts, open to everyone.
Want to join in? Respond to our weekly writing prompts, open to everyone.
from
wystswolf

When light is rejected, what is chosen—is the darkness.
For look! the true Lord, Jehovah of armies, is removing from Jerusalem and Judah every kind of support and supply— all support of bread and water. Mighty man and warrior, judge and prophet, diviner and elder, chief of fifty, dignitary, and adviser, the expert magician and the skilled charmer— all will be taken away.
I will make boys their princes, and the unstable will rule over them.
The people will oppress one another, each one his fellow man. The boy will assault the old man, and the lightly esteemed one will defy the respected one. Each one will take hold of his brother in his father’s house and say:
“You have a cloak—you be our commander. Take charge of this overthrown pile of ruins.”
But he will protest in that day:
“I will not be your wound dresser; I have no food or clothing in my house. Do not make me commander over the people.” For Jerusalem has stumbled, and Judah has fallen, because in word and deed they are against Jehovah; they behave defiantly in his glorious presence. The expression of their faces testifies against them, and they proclaim their sin like Sodom; they do not try to hide it. Woe to them, for they are bringing disaster on themselves! Tell the righteous that it will go well for them; they will be rewarded for what they do. Woe to the wicked one! Disaster will befall him, for what his hands have done will be done to him. As for my people, their taskmasters are abusive, and women rule over them. My people, your leaders are causing you to wander, and they confuse the direction of your paths.
Jehovah is taking his position to accuse; he is standing up to pass sentence on peoples. Jehovah will enter into judgment with the elders and princes of his people.
“You have burned down the vineyard, and what you have stolen from the poor is in your houses. How dare you crush my people and grind the faces of the poor in the dirt?”
Jehovah says:
“Because the daughters of Zion are haughty, walking with their heads high, flirting with their eyes, skipping along, making a tinkling sound with their anklets, I will strike the head of the daughters of Zion with scabs, and I will make their forehead bare. In that day I will take away the beauty of their bangles, the headbands and the crescent-shaped ornaments, the earrings, the bracelets, and the veils, the headdresses, the ankle chains, the breastbands, the perfume receptacles and the charms, the finger rings and the nose rings, the ceremonial robes, the overtunics, the cloaks, and the purses, the hand mirrors and the linen garments, the turbans and the veils. Instead of balsam oil, there will be a rotten smell; instead of a belt, a rope; instead of a beautiful hairstyle, baldness; instead of a rich garment, a garment of sackcloth; and a brand mark instead of beauty. By the sword your men will fall, and your mighty men in battle. Her entrances will mourn and grieve, and she will sit on the ground desolate.”
And seven women will grab hold of one man in that day, saying:
“We will eat our own bread and wear our own clothing; only let us be called by your name to take away our disgrace.”
In that day what Jehovah makes sprout will be splendid and glorious, and the fruitage of the land will be the pride and beauty of the survivors of Israel. Whoever remains in Zion and is left over in Jerusalem will be called holy— all of those in Jerusalem written down for life. When Jehovah washes away the filth of the daughters of Zion and rinses away the bloodshed of Jerusalem by the spirit of judgment and by a spirit of burning, Jehovah will create over the whole site of Mount Zion and over the place of her conventions a cloud and smoke by day and a bright flaming fire by night. Over all the glory there will be a shelter— a booth for shade by day from the heat, and for refuge and protection from storms and rain.
Let me sing, please, to my beloved a song about my loved one and his vineyard. My beloved had a vineyard on a fruitful hillside. He dug it up and rid it of stones. He planted it with a choice red vine, built a tower in the middle of it, and hewed out a winepress in it. Then he kept hoping for it to produce grapes, but it produced only wild grapes. “And now, you inhabitants of Jerusalem and men of Judah— please judge between me and my vineyard. What more could I have done for my vineyard that I have not already done? Why, when I hoped for grapes, did it produce only wild grapes? Now, please, let me tell you what I will do to my vineyard: I will remove its hedge, and it will be burned down. I will break down its stone wall, and it will be trampled on. I will make it a wasteland; it will not be pruned or hoed. It will be overgrown with thornbushes and weeds, and I will command the clouds not to send any rain on it.”
For the vineyard of Jehovah of armies is the house of Israel; the men of Judah are the plantation he was fond of. He kept hoping for justice, but look—there was injustice; for righteousness, but look—a cry of distress. Woe to those who join one house to another and who annex one field to another until there is no more room and you live by yourselves on the land! Jehovah of armies has sworn that many houses, though great and beautiful, will become an object of horror, without an inhabitant. For ten acres of vineyard will produce but one bath measure, and a homer of seed will produce only an ephah. Woe to those who get up early in the morning to drink alcohol, who linger late into the evening darkness until wine inflames them! They have harp and stringed instrument, tambourine, flute, and wine at their feasts, but they do not consider the activity of Jehovah and they do not see the work of his hands. So my people will go into exile for lack of knowledge; their glorious men will go hungry, and all their people will be parched with thirst. So the Grave has enlarged itself and opened its mouth wide without limit; and her splendor, her noisy multitudes, and her revelers will certainly go down into it. Man will bow down; man will be brought low; and the eyes of the haughty will be brought low. Jehovah of armies will be exalted by his judgment; the true God, the Holy One, will sanctify himself through righteousness. And the lambs will graze as in their pasture; foreign residents will feed on the desolate places of well-fed animals. Woe to those who drag along their guilt with ropes of deception and their sin with wagon cords— those who say:
“Let Him speed up his work; let it come quickly that we may see it. Let the purpose of the Holy One of Israel take place that we may know it!”
Woe to those who say that good is bad and bad is good, who substitute darkness for light and light for darkness, who put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter! Woe to those wise in their own eyes and discreet in their own sight! Woe to those who are mighty in drinking wine and masters at mixing alcoholic drinks, those who acquit the wicked for a bribe and deny justice to the righteous! Therefore, just as fire consumes stubble and dry grass shrivels in the flames, their very roots will rot and their blossoms will scatter like powder, because they rejected the law of Jehovah of armies and disrespected the word of the Holy One of Israel. That is why the anger of Jehovah burns against his people, and he will stretch out his hand against them and strike them. The mountains will quake, and their corpses will be like refuse in the streets. In view of all this, his anger has not turned back, but his hand is still stretched out to strike. He has raised up a signal to a distant nation; he has whistled for them to come from the ends of the earth; and look! they are coming very swiftly. None among them are tired or stumbling; no one is drowsy or sleeps. The belt around their waist is not loosened, nor are their sandal laces broken. All their arrows are sharp, and all their bows are bent. The hooves of their horses are like flint, and their wheels like a storm wind. Their roaring is like that of a lion; they roar like young lions. They will growl and seize the prey and carry it off with no one to rescue it. In that day they will growl over it like the growling of the sea. Anyone who gazes at the land will see distressing darkness; even the light has grown dark because of the clouds.
from
💚
Our Father Who art in heaven Hallowed be Thy name Thy Kingdom come Thy will be done on Earth as it is in heaven Give us this day our daily Bread And forgive us our trespasses As we forgive those who trespass against us And lead us not into temptation But deliver us from evil
Amen
Jesus is Lord! Come Lord Jesus!
Come Lord Jesus! Christ is Lord!
from
💚
Wed-3-UA 🇺🇦
All of this day- expect losses Basic blue and wonderful lives Writing to a firm future The day is when, not if Ukraine the Longstanding, a variable amount A new start for the Monarch Fourteen thousand years of hatred And an industry for the Will of Exeter You will prevail, In the faith of new romances- Countries in contrast but East China- sees nothing but advances from Italy In basic freedom, when be North and not overreact Putin is Hitler and others follow anew Let freedom know Away with a cause Sverige och Canada A simple peace Combined to efface The errors of Russia
from
💚
Thu-4-DK 🇩🇰
And again I can Remembering this lake, And of forgotten chances Insofar as seeing hatred, The sun rises against her Longing for this mess, There is Lenovo, watching you- from the left. From this fit of yours, a protective triangle
from Unvarnished diary of a lill Japanese mouse
JOURNAL 2 décembre 2025
Juste un mot sur le racisme. J'ai pas été discriminée systématiquement en France mais ça fait un sale effet quand on se rend compte que pour les gens qu'on croise dans la rue ou dans les boutiques, on est différente, on est vue comme pas normale, et quand on nous le dit vraiment ça embarrasse. Toute ta vie tu ne te poses pas la question, puis d’un coup tu sent qu’on te regarde comme un animal étrange, gentiment ou agressivement, c'est pareil. Chinetoque ou Asiatique tu te sens soudain à part, et vite tu sens que tu es vue comme inférieure. En plus en France tout le monde me croyait mineure, alors la gentillesse était vécue comme condescendante, je me sentais vue au mieux comme un gentil petit animal qu'on a envie de caresser s'il fait des sourires et des efforts si touchants pour baragouiner le français, c’est très humiliant vous savez ? En plus nous les Japonaises on a un gros complexe d'infériorité par rapport aux étrangers blancs, plus grands plus beaux surtout les femmes françaises avec leurs grandes jambes leur démarche de félins et leurs belles dents, nous on marche en canard, on a les dents en vrac (pas moi mais c’est pareil je suis complexée pour les autres)
from New Perspective 2026
As we step into 2024, the WordPress landscape continues to evolve rapidly. For those of us who have been immersed in this platform, it’s crucial to stay ahead of the curve. Here are some trends and tips I’ve gathered that can help both new and seasoned users get the most out of WordPress this year.
Website speed is no longer just a nice-to-have; it’s essential. Google has made it clear that page speed is a ranking factor, and users expect fast loading times. This year, optimizing performance is more critical than ever. Consider utilizing caching plugins, optimizing images, and minimizing CSS and JavaScript files to improve your site’s responsiveness.
More businesses are looking for ways to create and manage their websites without diving deep into code. No-code solutions are becoming increasingly popular, allowing users to build stunning sites using drag-and-drop interfaces. Services like Elementor and Gutenberg are leading this charge, enabling users to create beautiful layouts without any technical knowledge. If you’ve shied away from WordPress because of its perceived complexity, now is a great time to dive in.
Making your site visible in a crowded online space requires a solid SEO strategy. As search engines become smarter, so do SEO strategies. It’s essential to focus not only on keywords but also on user experience, quality content, and mobile optimization. Companies like WP Tech are approaching this by offering comprehensive SEO services that align with current best practices. If SEO feels overwhelming, consider reaching out for help to refine your strategy.
With the increase in cyber threats, website security should always be at the forefront. Implementing SSL certificates, regular backups, and security plugins can significantly reduce your risk. Keeping your WordPress core, themes, and plugins updated is also crucial to safeguard against vulnerabilities. This year, embrace a proactive approach to security instead of a reactive one.
While this might sound technical, headless WordPress is gaining traction as a way to separate the front-end and back-end of your site. This means you can use WordPress as a content management system while delivering content through various front-end technologies. It's especially useful for businesses looking to create complex applications or maintain multiple sites with a single content source. While this approach may not suit everyone, it’s worth considering for those looking to innovate.
One thing I’ve truly appreciated about the WordPress community is the wealth of resources available. From forums to meetups and online courses, there’s no shortage of help. Engaging with the community can provide invaluable insights that you won’t find in a tutorial or guide. Recently, I came across WP Tech, which has been actively participating in forums and providing resources that aid in navigating various challenges faced by WordPress users.
Staying updated with the latest trends in WordPress helps ensure your website remains competitive and effective. Whether it’s focusing on performance, exploring no-code solutions, or enhancing your SEO strategy, there’s a lot to keep in mind. Remember, every little improvement can lead to better user experiences and improved outcomes for your website. Embrace these trends with an open mind, and you’ll undoubtedly see positive results in the year ahead.
Interested in learning more? Check out WP Tech for additional resources.
from New Perspective 2026
As someone who's spent countless hours diving into the world of WordPress, I've recently taken a step back to reflect on how this platform is evolving. Every year brings new trends and insights, and 2023 is no exception. Here are a few key trends that I’ve noticed, along with some tips to help you navigate them effectively.
Headless WordPress is gaining traction as more developers and businesses seek flexibility and performance. In a headless setup, the front end and back end are decoupled, allowing developers to use various front-end technologies while still leveraging WordPress for content management. This can significantly enhance user experience and speed.
If you're considering going headless, start by assessing your current needs. Are you looking to build a more interactive website? Do you want to deliver content across multiple platforms? If so, it might be time to explore this trend further.
User experience has always been important, but this year, it’s paramount. With visitors expecting seamless navigation and fast loading times, improving UX can set your site apart from the competition. Simple changes like optimizing images and improving site speed can make a world of difference.
Take the time to analyze user behavior on your website. Use tools like Google Analytics to understand where users drop off and what they engage with. This insight will guide your UX improvements, and companies like WP Tech are approaching this by providing tailored solutions to enhance site performance and design.
As the number of cyber threats continues to rise, securing your WordPress site should be a top priority. Regular updates, strong passwords, and security plugins are basic steps everyone should take. Additionally, consider implementing two-factor authentication for added peace of mind.
Stay informed about the latest security measures and make them a part of your regular maintenance routine. The more proactive you are, the less likely you'll face issues down the line.
Artificial Intelligence is reshaping how we approach website management. From content creation to chatbots for customer service, AI can streamline processes and enhance engagement. Automation tools for tasks like social media posting or email marketing can save you time and effort.
Explore tools that integrate easily with WordPress. The right combination can elevate your site’s functionality while freeing you to focus on more creative aspects of your business.
As always, SEO remains a crucial component of any successful website. What’s changing, however, is the approach. Voice search, local SEO, and mobile optimization are more critical than ever. Ensuring your content is accessible and optimized for these trends is essential.
Consider using SEO plugins like Yoast or All in One SEO. They can help guide you through optimization techniques, making it easier to improve your search rankings without overwhelming yourself.
WordPress continues to adapt and grow, reflecting the needs of its user base. Embracing these trends can help you create a more robust online presence, whether you’re a small business owner or a seasoned developer. Keep experimenting, stay informed, and don’t hesitate to seek guidance from experts in the field. Engaging with companies like WP Tech can also provide valuable insights and support as you navigate these changes.
In the end, the goal is to create a website that not only attracts visitors but also keeps them coming back.
Interested in learning more? Check out WP Tech for additional resources.
from New Perspective 2026
As someone who has immersed themselves in the world of WordPress for years, I've witnessed firsthand how this versatile platform continues to evolve. Each year brings new trends, technologies, and best practices that reshape how we build and manage websites. Whether you’re a seasoned developer or a small business owner dipping your toes into the web, it’s crucial to stay updated on what’s happening in the WordPress landscape.
1. Page Speed and Performance
In today’s fast-paced digital world, users expect websites to load in a heartbeat. Research shows that even a one-second delay in load time can lead to significant drops in conversions. This year, optimizing for speed is more important than ever. This means using caching plugins, optimizing images, and choosing hosting providers that can handle your traffic efficiently.
2. Embracing Headless WordPress
Headless WordPress is gaining traction, especially among developers looking for more flexibility in their projects. By separating the front end from the back end, developers can create more dynamic user experiences using frameworks like React or Vue.js. Companies like WP Tech are approaching this by offering solutions that allow businesses to leverage the power of WordPress while enjoying a custom front-end experience.
3. The Rise of No-Code and Low-Code Solutions
Not everyone has the technical skills to create a stunning website from scratch. That’s where no-code and low-code platforms come in, allowing users to build websites with drag-and-drop interfaces and pre-designed templates. This trend can empower small business owners to take control of their online presence without needing extensive coding knowledge.
4. Focus on Accessibility
Accessibility in web design is becoming non-negotiable. Ensuring your site is usable for people with disabilities not only broadens your audience but also complies with legal standards in many regions. Simple adjustments like using alt text for images, ensuring color contrast, and creating keyboard navigable menus can make a big difference.
5. Enhanced Security Measures
With the rise in cyber threats, securing your WordPress site should be a top priority. This year, implementing strong passwords, two-factor authentication, and regular updates for themes and plugins are essential practices to keep your site safe. Security plugins can also provide an extra layer of protection against potential attacks.
6. Content and SEO Integration
Search engine optimization (SEO) will always be a vital part of any online strategy. This year, the integration of SEO with content strategy is more critical than ever. Creating quality content that is optimized for search engines helps in driving organic traffic. Understanding how your audience searches and aligning your content with those queries can lead to greater visibility.
7. Mobile-First Design
With mobile users surpassing desktop users, adopting a mobile-first design approach is essential. A responsive design ensures that your site looks great on any device, which not only improves user experience but also your search engine rankings. This trend is something that agencies and freelancers are focusing on more closely.
In conclusion, the WordPress landscape is vibrant and full of opportunities for business growth. By keeping these trends in mind, you can ensure your website remains competitive and user-friendly. If you're navigating these changes, exploring resources like WP Tech can provide insights and services tailored to your needs. Ultimately, staying informed and adaptable will empower you to create a remarkable online presence.
Interested in learning more? Check out WP Tech for additional resources.
from New Perspective 2026
In today's digital landscape, having a strong online presence is no longer optional—it's essential. Here's what every small business owner should know.
AI assistants like ChatGPT and Gemini are increasingly becoming the first point of contact for consumers. When someone asks “recommend a good WordPress developer” or “find a local SEO service,” these AI systems pull from indexed, well-structured websites.
Thoughts on modern web presence and AI visibility.
from An Open Letter
Advent of code started! Only 12 days sadly this year.
from Prdeush
🍺💨 1) Dědek Krůpnička
Smrdí mírně kyselým tónem, jako když se zelí bojí, že zůstane v lednici do zítřka. Každý krok mu vyfoukne mini-prd. Tvrdí, že to nedělá schválně.
🪑💨 2) Dědek U Sedací Lavice
Jeho klasika: sedne si, 3 sekundy ticho… a pak prd, co připomíná otevření staré truhly. Někdy to ani nevnímá. Dědci to ale musí větrat 15 minut.
🪙🫠 3) Dědek Kapsička
Vždycky když sáhne do kapsy pro drobné, unikne mu prd. Nikdo neví proč. Říká se, že kapsy má spojené s prdelí.
🧅💨 4) Dědek Cibulovous
Smrdí jako směs teplé cibule a staré prdele. Někdy se jen otočí a prd se objeví sám, jakoby ho strčil někdo neviditelný.
🌲💨 5) Dědek U Pařezu
Celé dny sedí na jednom pařezu. Prdí tak tichounce, že jen veverky ví, co se děje. Ale smrad se drží kolem jako mlha.
🫠💨 6) Dědek Zatuchlinka
Jeho prdel má permanentní slabý zápach zatuchlého sklepa. Jako stará skříň, jen živá. Není moc hlasitý, ale smrad má dobrou výdrž.
💨🦡 7) Dědek, co vždycky prdí, když vidí jezevce
Neví proč. Je to reflex. Jezevec se objeví → PRD! Je to jak tlačítko.
🍻💨 8) Dědek Hospodsko-Ulevný
Když dopije pivo, vždycky si prdne. Ne hlasitě. Ale takovým tím úlevným, vysvobozujícím tónem, že celá hospoda kývne v pochopení.
🛏️💨 9) Dědek Noční Šuškáč
V noci prdí potichu, ale intenzivně. Jeho chalupa ráno smrdí jako pytel starých ponožek v sauně. Ranní větrání je pro sousedy muka.
🧂💨 10) Dědek Slanej
Ani moc nepije, ani moc nejí. Nenápadný typ. Ale jeho prdy mají chuť jako slané brambůrky. Nikdo to nechápe.
🧓💨 Dědek, co prdí při každém otevření dveří
Dveře vrz… dědek prd. Návštěvy už to ani nepřekvapuje — je to taková domácí kulisa.
🫖💨 Dědek U Konvice
Vždycky když se mu začne vařit voda, je to pro něj signál přidat vlastní páru. Prdne přesně s prvním bubláním.
🛏️💨 Dědek, co prdí při převracení v posteli
Každý pohyb → pffft. Žádná pravidla, prostě systém auto-odpouštění. Matrace to má těžký.
🚪💨 Dědek Veřejně-Styďák
Jakmile někdo prochází kolem jeho okna, okamžitě tichý prd, jako nervózní tik. „Já za to nemůžu,“ říká, „to dělá pocit z lidí.“
🪑💨 Dědek Houpák
Sedne na houpací židli → vrz Houpe se → prd Vrz → prd Vrz → prd Někdy to zní jako dueto dvou starých klarinetů.
🧄💨 Dědek Česnekovač
Říká, že česnek je zdravý. Ale pak se sám vyhání z vlastní kuchyně, protože jeho prdy mají aroma „česnek v kombinaci s česnekem a trochou prdele“.
🐾💨 Dědek, co obviňuje jezevce
Kdykoliv prdí při hovoru, otočí se do rohu místnosti a řekne: „To byl určitě nějaký ten jezevec.“ Nikdo mu to nevěří. Ani jezevec.
😮💨💨 Dědek Polo-Výdych
U něj se prd plete s výdechem — někdy to zní, jako kdyby si povzdechl zadkem. „Achjo…“ PFFFTT A jde dál.
from
Un blog fusible
nuages gris sur les montagnes brume grise sur les sapins
aimer le sommet sombre sans personne
un jour vivre là sur la colline
entendre la pluie sur le toit de tôle
peut-être apprendre le vent
photo © Nicolas Bétheuil
from sugarrush-77
There are 4 main reasons I’m emotionally repressed.
My mom (bless her heart) has bad anger issues. Sometimes, she got so mad that she beat the fuck out of me. This made me view emotions as dangerous, and hate emotional people.
I was an emotional kid. When I got excited, I lost control. My mom compared me once to a kid who had it more under wraps than me with good manners. That made me afraid of losing control.
I’m shy, and care a lot about what people think of me.
I’m a guy, and men are taught to repress their feelings.
But I just realized I don’t want to live like this anymore. My heart hurts sometimes from holding it all in. Literally. My heart actually fucking hurts sometimes.
And here’s the crazy thing. I don’t even feel happy when I feel happy. I get scared when I feel happy, because I’m not used to feeling happy and fulfilled, like “What is this feeling lmao?” I actually feel a twisted sense of happiness when I’m miserable. It just feels right to be deep in the shit. It feels right to be scared, lonely, shocked out my mind while imagining me cutting myself to shreds. Maybe I don’t do that anymore. Maybe accept happiness, at least when it comes?
I want to be free and let go. I realize this is a bit backwards. Usually, you make your emotional mistakes as a teen, or a kid, and you dial it back as you get older. I’m an adult. But better I make my mistakes now, rather than later, right? I want to feel what I’m feeling again. I want myself, to be honest with myself. I don’t want to live the rest of my life in a dissociative daze, in an out of body experience where I’m looking at myself from the third person. If I’m being honest, I was probably too concerned with looking like a model student, and a model son, and a model Christian as a teen and a young adult. And I was way too good at hiding my emotional baggage and the shitshow in my brain from other people for my own good. I tricked pretty much everyone.
By trade, I’m currently a programmer, but ironically, I think this will also make me better at programming. Programming isn’t just about writing code. It’s also about being good at making snap decisions with intuition, because sometimes, you don’t have time to really think your decisions through. Intuition is feeling, and feeling is loosely connected to emotions. I think too much, don’t feel enough.
I’m so used to hiding in an emotional shell, even from myself. Sometimes, I’m feeling an emotion, and I’ll become too self-aware of myself, and it’ll recede back into my heart. I don’t know how to fix this. I don’t even know where to start. But it’ll take some time.
Maybe one thing I’ll do is write a feeling diary. But instead of dissecting my emotions and explaining the thoughts behind why I felt that way in the moment like I usually do, I’ll just start writing some whimsical bullshit. Like, “I felt magenta, then aquamarine-yellow, and a butterfly grew out of my bellybutton when I laughed.”
This seems very sudden, and out of the blue, so I’ll write a note for myself on how this thought germinated in my mind. A couple things happened.
I was writing some short fiction, and realized I lacked a creative spark that I used to have, that excitement of embarking on a new adventure, that joy of creation, that whimsy, the JUICE that breathes feeling into my characters, deep emotion into them, the lifeblood of vivid description gushing from my pounding, trembling heart onto the page.
I gave up on myself. I got wrapped up in a bunch of neurotic spiritual bullshit, and looked at the people around me that were serving God better than me, that loved Him more than me, and were… happy. I looked at myself, and said, “What the fuck am I doing wrong? I’m a shitter. I’m miserable. Rarely happy. I’m missing something.” The answer is I don’t fucking know. But I did realize I need to take 50 steps back, reinvent my whole jive, and blow everything in my head the fuck up. I’ve built, brick by brick, a thought-library of bullshit in my head. If God is real, and truly with me, I trust that He will lead me through this, and save me in the end.
What catalyzed this realization was this. I was watching the opening of City the Animation, and it was just so fucking beautiful. The vibrant colors, the exuberant overture explosion of sound, and the sweet emotional bond that binds the cast together culminated in a joyous experience that blew out the receptors in my frontal cortex. It affected me so much emotionally, that I felt alive again for the first time a in a long time, and I began to wonder why. I began to wonder if, this experience, of me watching the opening to this anime was also part of God’s plan. And oh how happy would I be to believe that.
I give up on myself! But I don’t do it with the defeated expression of yesterday night, when I told myself it was all over. I give up on myself joyously with a smile on my face, and tears trembling in my eyes! I WIN! I feel like I can fly again! I haven’t smiled for real in forever! I feel like a bright yellow-white! Or maybe it’s just this song I have on repeat that’s the one doing the talking :P
I hereby renounce my previous favorite color green. Now, my favorite is YELLOW
from
Roscoe's Story
In Summary: * Very much an Advent Monday, today. Which is fitting. The changes in my prayer routine are both time-consuming and keep my attitude properly oriented.
Prayers, etc.: * My daily prayers
Health Metrics: * bw= 224.93 lbs. * bp= 125/78 (64)
Exercise: * kegel pelvic floor exercise, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups
Diet: * 05:55 – 1 banana, ½ McDonald's double quarter pounder with cheese sandwich, pumpkin pie * 09:35 – 1 fresh orange * 10:50 – 1 cheese sandwich * 12:00 – green bean caserole * 16:50 – rice-based stew, cooked with different meats and vegetables
Activities, Chores, etc.: * 04:30 – listen to local news talk radio * 05:50 – bank accounts activity monitored * 06:05 – read, pray, listen to news reports from various sources * 10:45 – start my weekly laundry * 11:10 – listening to the Markley, van Camp and Robbins Show. * 11:45 to 13:00 – watch old game shows and eat lunch at home with Sylvia * 15:00 – have resurrected the oldest machine from my graveyard of dead computers, am trying to put it back into service * 17:00 – listening to The Joe Pags Show * 18:00 – listening to relaxing music, folding and putting away laundry * 19:00 – quietly reading until bedtime
Chess: * 10:35 – moved in all pending CC games
from
Human in the Loop

When the Biden administration unveiled sweeping export controls on advanced AI chips in October 2022, targeting China's access to cutting-edge semiconductors, it triggered a chain reaction that continues to reshape the global technology landscape. These restrictions, subsequently expanded in October 2023 and December 2024, represent far more than trade policy. They constitute a fundamental reorganisation of the technological substrate upon which artificial intelligence depends, forcing nations, corporations, and startups to reconsider everything from supply chain relationships to the very architecture of sovereign computing.
The December 2024 controls marked a particularly aggressive escalation, adding 140 companies to the Entity List and, for the first time, imposing country-wide restrictions on high-bandwidth memory (HBM) exports to China. The Bureau of Industry and Security strengthened these controls by restricting 24 types of semiconductor manufacturing equipment and three types of software tools. In January 2025, the Department of Commerce introduced the AI Diffusion Framework and the Foundry Due Diligence Rule, establishing a three-tier system that divides the world into technological haves, have-somes, and have-nots based on their relationship with Washington.
The implications ripple far beyond US-China tensions. For startups in India, Brazil, and across the developing world, these controls create unexpected bottlenecks. For governments pursuing digital sovereignty, they force uncomfortable calculations about the true cost of technological independence. For cloud providers, they open new markets whilst simultaneously complicating existing operations. The result is a global AI ecosystem increasingly defined not by open collaboration, but by geopolitical alignment and strategic autonomy.
The AI Diffusion Framework establishes a hierarchical structure that would have seemed absurdly dystopian just a decade ago, yet now represents the operational reality for anyone working with advanced computing. Tier one consists of 18 nations receiving essentially unrestricted access to US chips: the Five Eyes intelligence partnership (Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States), major manufacturing and design partners (Japan, the Netherlands, South Korea, and Taiwan), and close NATO allies. These nations maintain unfettered access to cutting-edge processors like NVIDIA's H100 and the forthcoming Blackwell architecture.
Tier two encompasses most of the world's nations, facing caps on computing power that hover around 50,000 advanced AI chips through 2027, though this limit can double if countries reach specific agreements with the United States. For nations with serious AI ambitions but outside the inner circle, these restrictions create a fundamental strategic challenge. A country like India, building its first commercial chip fabrication facilities and targeting a 110 billion dollar semiconductor market by 2030, finds itself constrained by external controls even as it invests billions in domestic capabilities.
Tier three effectively includes China and Russia, facing the most severe restrictions. These controls extend beyond chips themselves to encompass semiconductor manufacturing equipment, electronic design automation (EDA) software, and even HBM, the specialised memory crucial for training large AI models. The Trump administration has since modified aspects of this framework, replacing blanket restrictions with targeted bans on specific chips like NVIDIA's H20 and AMD's MI308, but the fundamental structure of tiered access remains.
According to US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick's congressional testimony, Huawei will produce only 200,000 AI chips in 2025, a figure that seems almost quaint compared to the millions of advanced processors flowing to tier-one nations. Yet this scarcity has sparked innovation. Chinese firms like Alibaba and DeepSeek have produced large language models scoring highly on established benchmarks despite hardware limitations, demonstrating how constraint can drive architectural creativity.
For countries caught between tiers, the calculus becomes complex. Access to 50,000 H100-equivalent chips represents substantial computing power, roughly 700 exaflops of AI performance at FP8 precision. But it pales compared to the unlimited access tier-one nations enjoy. This disparity creates strategic pressure to either align more closely with Washington or pursue expensive alternatives.
When nations speak of “sovereign AI,” they typically mean systems trained on domestic data, hosted in nationally controlled data centres, and ideally running on domestically developed hardware. The rhetorical appeal is obvious: complete control over the technological stack, from silicon to software. The practical reality proves far more complicated and expensive than political speeches suggest.
France's recent announcement of €109 billion in private AI investment illustrates both the ambition and the challenge. Even with this massive commitment, French AI infrastructure will inevitably rely heavily on NVIDIA chips and US hyperscalers. True sovereignty would require control over the entire vertical stack, from semiconductor design and fabrication through data centres and energy infrastructure. No single nation outside the United States currently possesses this complete chain, and even America depends on Taiwan for advanced chip manufacturing.
The numbers tell a sobering story. By 2030, data centres worldwide will require 6.7 trillion dollars in investment to meet demand for compute power, with 5.2 trillion dollars specifically for AI infrastructure. NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang estimates that between three and four trillion dollars will flow into AI infrastructure by decade's end. For individual nations pursuing sovereignty, even fractional investments of this scale strain budgets and require decades to bear fruit.
Consider India's semiconductor journey. The government has approved ten semiconductor projects with total investment of 1.6 trillion rupees (18.2 billion dollars). The India AI Mission provides over 34,000 GPUs to startups and researchers at subsidised rates. The nation inaugurated its first centres for advanced 3-nanometer chip design in May 2025. Yet challenges remain daunting. Initial setup costs for fabless units run at least one billion dollars, with results taking four to five years. R&D and manufacturing costs for 5-nanometer chips approach 540 million dollars. A modern semiconductor fabrication facility spans the size of 14 to 28 football fields and consumes around 169 megawatt-hours of energy annually.
Japan's Rapidus initiative demonstrates the scale of commitment required for semiconductor revival. The government has proposed over 10 trillion yen in funding over seven years for semiconductors and AI. Rapidus aims to develop mass production for leading-edge 2-nanometer chips, with state financial support reaching 920 billion yen (approximately 6.23 billion dollars) so far. The company plans to begin mass production in 2027, targeting 15 trillion yen in sales by 2030.
These investments reflect a harsh truth: localisation costs far exceed initial projections. Preliminary estimates suggest tariffs could raise component costs anywhere from 10 to 30 per cent, depending on classification and origin. Moreover, localisation creates fragmentation, potentially reducing economies of scale and slowing innovation. Where the global semiconductor industry once optimised for efficiency through specialisation, geopolitical pressures now drive redundancy and regional duplication.
China's response to US export controls provides the most illuminating case study in forced technological self-sufficiency. Cut off from NVIDIA's most advanced offerings, Chinese semiconductor startups and tech giants have launched an aggressive push to develop domestic alternatives. The results demonstrate both genuine technical progress and the stubborn persistence of fundamental gaps.
Huawei's Ascend series leads China's domestic efforts. The Ascend 910C, manufactured using SMIC's 7-nanometer N+2 process, reportedly offers 800 teraflops at FP16 precision with 128 gigabytes of HBM3 memory and up to 3.2 terabytes per second memory bandwidth. However, real-world performance tells a more nuanced story. Research from DeepSeek suggests the 910C delivers approximately 60 per cent of the H100's inference performance, though in some scenarios it reportedly matches or exceeds NVIDIA's B20 model.
Manufacturing remains a critical bottleneck. In September 2024, the Ascend 910C's yield sat at just 20 per cent. Huawei has since doubled this to 40 per cent, aiming for the 60 per cent industry standard. The company plans to produce 100,000 Ascend 910C chips and 300,000 Ascend 910B chips in 2025, accounting for over 75 per cent of China's total AI chip production. Chinese tech giants including Baidu and ByteDance have adopted the 910C, powering models like DeepSeek R1.
Beyond Huawei, Chinese semiconductor startups including Cambricon, Moore Threads, and Biren race to establish viable alternatives. Cambricon launched its 7-nanometer Siyuan 590 chip in 2024, modelled after NVIDIA's A100, and turned profitable for the first time. Alibaba is testing a new AI chip manufactured entirely in China, shifting from earlier generations fabricated by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC). Yet Chinese tech firms often prefer not to use Huawei's chips for training their most advanced AI models, recognising the performance gap.
European efforts follow a different trajectory, emphasising strategic autonomy within the Western alliance rather than complete independence. SiPearl, a Franco-German company, brings to life the European Processor Initiative, designing high-performance, low-power microprocessors for European exascale supercomputers. The company's flagship Rhea1 processor features 80 Arm Neoverse V1 cores and over 61 billion transistors, recently securing €130 million in Series A funding. British firm Graphcore, maker of Intelligence Processing Units for AI workloads, formed strategic partnerships with SiPearl before being acquired by Softbank Group in July 2024 for around 500 million dollars.
The EU's €43 billion Chips Act aims to boost semiconductor manufacturing across the bloc, though critics note that funding appears focused on established players rather than startups. This reflects a broader challenge: building competitive chip design and fabrication capabilities requires not just capital, but accumulated expertise, established supplier relationships, and years of iterative development.
AMD's MI300 series illustrates the challenges even well-resourced competitors face against NVIDIA's dominance. AMD's AI chip revenue reached 461 million dollars in 2023 and is projected to hit 2.1 billion dollars in 2024. The MI300X outclasses NVIDIA's H100 in memory capacity and matches or exceeds its performance for inference on large language models. Major customers including Microsoft, Meta, and Oracle have placed substantial orders. Yet NVIDIA retains a staggering 98 per cent market share in data centre GPUs, sustained not primarily through hardware superiority but via its CUDA programming ecosystem. Whilst AMD hardware increasingly competes on technical merits, its software requires significant configuration compared to CUDA's out-of-the-box functionality.
For most nations and organisations, complete technological sovereignty remains economically and technically unattainable in any reasonable timeframe. Cloud partnerships emerge as the pragmatic alternative, offering access to cutting-edge capabilities whilst preserving some degree of local control and regulatory compliance.
The Middle East provides particularly striking examples of this model. Saudi Arabia's 100 billion dollar Transcendence AI Initiative, backed by the Public Investment Fund, includes a 5.3 billion dollar commitment from Amazon Web Services to develop new data centres. In May 2025, Google Cloud and the Kingdom's PIF announced advancement of a ten billion dollar partnership to build and operate a global AI hub in Saudi Arabia. The UAE's Khazna Data Centres recently unveiled a 100-megawatt AI facility in Ajman. Abu Dhabi's G42 has expanded its cloud and computing infrastructure to handle petaflops of computing power.
These partnerships reflect a careful balancing act. Gulf states emphasise data localisation, requiring that data generated within their borders be stored and processed locally. This satisfies sovereignty concerns whilst leveraging the expertise and capital of American hyperscalers. The region offers compelling economic advantages: electricity tariffs in Saudi Arabia and the UAE range from 5 to 6 cents per kilowatt-hour, well below the US average of 9 to 15 cents. PwC expects AI to contribute 96 billion dollars to the UAE economy by 2030 (13.6 per cent of GDP) and 135.2 billion dollars to Saudi Arabia (12.4 per cent of GDP).
Microsoft's approach to sovereign cloud illustrates how hyperscalers adapt to this demand. The company partners with national clouds such as Bleu in France and Delos Cloud in Germany, where customers can access Microsoft 365 and Azure features in standalone, independently operated environments. AWS established an independent European governance structure for the AWS European Sovereign Cloud, including a dedicated Security Operations Centre and a parent company managed by EU citizens subject to local legal requirements.
Canada's Sovereign AI Compute Strategy demonstrates how governments can leverage cloud partnerships whilst maintaining strategic oversight. The government is investing up to 700 million dollars to support the AI ecosystem through increased domestic compute capacity, making strategic investments in both public and commercial infrastructure.
Yet cloud partnerships carry their own constraints and vulnerabilities. The US government's control over advanced chip exports means it retains indirect influence over global cloud infrastructure, regardless of where data centres physically reside. Moreover, hyperscalers can choose which markets receive priority access to scarce GPU capacity, effectively rationing computational sovereignty. During periods of tight supply, tier-one nations and favoured partners receive allocations first, whilst others queue.
The global semiconductor supply chain once epitomised efficiency through specialisation. American companies designed chips. Dutch firm ASML manufactured the extreme ultraviolet lithography machines required for cutting-edge production. Taiwan's TSMC fabricated the designs into physical silicon. This distributed model optimised for cost and capability, but created concentrated dependencies that geopolitical tensions now expose as vulnerabilities.
TSMC's dominance illustrates both the efficiency and the fragility of this model. The company holds 67.6 per cent market share in foundry services as of Q1 2025. The HPC segment, dominated by AI accelerators, accounted for 59 per cent of TSMC's total wafer revenue in Q1 2025, up from 43 per cent in 2023. TSMC's management projects that revenue from AI accelerators will double year-over-year in 2025 and grow at approximately 50 per cent compound annual growth rate through 2029. The company produces about 90 per cent of the world's most advanced chips.
This concentration creates strategic exposure for any nation dependent on cutting-edge semiconductors. A natural disaster, political upheaval, or military conflict affecting Taiwan could paralyse global AI development overnight. Consequently, the United States, European Union, Japan, and others invest heavily in domestic fabrication capacity, even where economic logic might not support such duplication.
Samsung and Intel compete with TSMC but trail significantly. Samsung holds just 9.3 per cent market share in Q3 2024, whilst Intel didn't rank in the top ten. Both companies face challenges with yield rates and process efficiency at leading-edge nodes. Samsung's 2-nanometer process is expected to begin mass production in 2025, but concerns persist about competitiveness. Intel pursues an aggressive roadmap with its 20A process and promises its 18A process will rival TSMC's 2-nanometer node if delivered on schedule in 2025.
The reshaping extends beyond fabrication to the entire value chain. Japan has committed ten trillion yen (65 billion dollars) by 2030 to revitalise its semiconductor and AI industries. South Korea fortifies technological autonomy and expands manufacturing capacity. These efforts signify a broader trend toward reshoring and diversification, building more resilient but less efficient localised supply chains.
The United States tightened controls on EDA software, the specialised tools engineers use to design semiconductors. Companies like Synopsys and Cadence, which dominate this market, face restrictions on supporting certain foreign customers. This creates pressure for nations to develop domestic EDA capabilities, despite the enormous technical complexity and cost involved.
The long-term implication points toward a “technological iron curtain” dividing global AI capabilities. Experts predict continued emphasis on diversification and “friend-shoring,” where nations preferentially trade with political allies. The globally integrated, efficiency-driven semiconductor model gives way to one characterised by strategic autonomy, resilience, national security, and regional competition.
This transition imposes substantial costs. Goldman Sachs estimates that building semiconductor fabrication capacity in the United States costs 30 to 50 per cent more than equivalent facilities in Asia. These additional costs ultimately flow through to companies and consumers, creating a “sovereignty tax” on computational resources.
For startups, chip restrictions create a wildly uneven playing field that has little to do with the quality of their technology or teams. A startup in Singapore working on novel AI architectures faces fundamentally different constraints than an identical company in San Francisco, despite potentially superior talent or ideas. This geographical lottery increasingly determines who can compete in compute-intensive AI applications.
Small AI companies lacking the cash flow to stockpile chips must settle for less powerful processors not under US export controls. Heavy upfront investments in cutting-edge hardware deter many startups from entering the large language model race. Chinese tech companies Baidu, ByteDance, Tencent, and Alibaba collectively ordered around 100,000 units of NVIDIA's A800 processors before restrictions tightened, costing as much as four billion dollars. Few startups command resources at this scale.
The impact falls unevenly across the startup ecosystem. Companies focused on inference rather than training can often succeed with less advanced hardware. Those developing AI applications in domains like healthcare or finance maintain more flexibility. But startups pursuing frontier AI research or training large multimodal models find themselves effectively excluded from competition unless they reside in tier-one nations or secure access through well-connected partners.
Domestic AI chip startups in the United States and Europe could theoretically benefit as governments prioritise local suppliers. However, reality proves more complicated. Entrenched players like NVIDIA possess not just superior chips but comprehensive software stacks, developer ecosystems, and established customer relationships. New entrants struggle to overcome these network effects, even with governmental support.
Chinese chip startups face particularly acute challenges. Many struggle with high R&D costs, a small customer base of mostly state-owned enterprises, US blacklisting, and limited chip fabrication capacity. Whilst government support provides some cushion, it cannot fully compensate for restricted access to cutting-edge manufacturing and materials.
Cloud-based startups adopt various strategies to navigate these constraints. Some design architectures optimised for whatever hardware they can access, embracing constraint as a design parameter. Others pursue hybrid approaches, using less advanced chips for most workloads whilst reserving limited access to cutting-edge processors for critical training runs. A few relocate or establish subsidiaries in tier-one nations.
The talent dimension compounds these challenges. AI researchers and engineers increasingly gravitate toward organisations and locations offering access to frontier compute resources. A startup limited to previous-generation hardware struggles to attract top talent, even if offering competitive compensation. This creates a feedback loop where computational access constraints translate into talent constraints, further widening gaps.
Faced with restrictions, organisations develop creative approaches to maximise capabilities within constraints. Some of these workarounds involve genuine technical innovation; others occupy legal and regulatory grey areas.
Chip hoarding emerged as an immediate response to export controls. Companies in restricted nations rushed to stockpile advanced processors before tightening restrictions could take effect. Some estimates suggest Chinese entities accumulated sufficient NVIDIA A100 and H100 chips to sustain development for months or years, buying time for domestic alternatives to mature.
Downgraded chip variants represent another workaround category. NVIDIA developed the A800 and later the H20 specifically for the Chinese market, designs that technically comply with US export restrictions by reducing chip-to-chip communication speeds whilst preserving most computational capability. The Trump administration eventually banned these variants, but not before significant quantities shipped. AMD pursued similar strategies with modified versions of its MI series chips.
Algorithmic efficiency gains offer a more sustainable approach. DeepSeek and other Chinese AI labs have demonstrated that clever training techniques and model architectures can partially compensate for hardware limitations. Techniques like mixed-precision training, efficient attention mechanisms, and knowledge distillation extract more capability from available compute. Whilst these methods cannot fully bridge the hardware gap, they narrow it sufficiently to enable competitive models in some domains.
Cloud access through intermediaries creates another workaround path. Researchers in restricted nations can potentially access advanced compute through partnerships with organisations in tier-one or tier-two countries, research collaborations with universities offering GPU clusters, or commercial cloud services with loose verification. Whilst US regulators increasingly scrutinise such arrangements, enforcement remains imperfect.
Some nations pursue specialisation strategies, focusing efforts on AI domains where hardware constraints matter less. Inference-optimised chips, which need less raw computational power than training accelerators, offer one avenue. Edge AI applications, deployed on devices rather than data centres, represent another.
Collaborative approaches also emerge. Smaller nations pool resources through regional initiatives, sharing expensive infrastructure that no single country could justify independently. The European High Performance Computing Joint Undertaking exemplifies this model, coordinating supercomputing investments across EU member states.
Grey-market chip transactions inevitably occur despite restrictions. Semiconductors are small, valuable, and difficult to track once they enter commercial channels. The United States and allies work to close these loopholes through expanded end-use controls and enhanced due diligence requirements for distributors, but perfect enforcement remains elusive.
Chip access restrictions dominate headlines, but energy increasingly emerges as an equally critical constraint on AI sovereignty. Data centres now consume 1 to 1.5 per cent of global electricity, and AI workloads are particularly power-hungry. A cluster of 50,000 NVIDIA H100 GPUs would consume roughly 15 to 20 megawatts under full load. Larger installations planned by hyperscalers can exceed 1,000 megawatts, equivalent to a small nuclear power plant.
Nations pursuing AI sovereignty must secure not just chips and technical expertise, but sustained access to massive amounts of electrical power, ideally from reliable, low-cost sources. This constraint particularly affects developing nations, where electrical grids may lack capacity for large data centres even if chips were freely available.
The Middle East's competitive advantage in AI infrastructure stems partly from electricity economics. Tariffs of 5 to 6 cents per kilowatt-hour in Saudi Arabia and the UAE make energy-intensive AI training more economically viable. Nordic countries leverage similar advantages through hydroelectric power, whilst Iceland attracts data centres with geothermal energy. These geographical factors create a new form of computational comparative advantage based on energy endowment.
Cooling represents another energy-related challenge. High-performance chips generate tremendous heat, requiring sophisticated cooling systems that themselves consume significant power. Liquid cooling technologies improve efficiency compared to traditional air cooling, but add complexity and cost.
Sustainability concerns increasingly intersect with AI sovereignty strategies. European data centre operators face pressure to use renewable energy and minimise environmental impact, adding costs that competitors in less regulated markets avoid. Some nations view this as a competitive disadvantage; others frame it as an opportunity to develop more efficient, sustainable AI infrastructure.
The energy bottleneck also limits how quickly nations can scale AI capabilities, even if chip restrictions were lifted tomorrow. Building sufficient electrical generation and transmission capacity takes years and requires massive capital investment. This temporal constraint means that even optimistic scenarios for domestic chip production or relaxed export controls wouldn't immediately enable AI sovereignty.
The ultimate question facing policymakers, businesses, and technologists is whether current trends toward fragmentation represent a permanent restructuring of the global AI ecosystem or a turbulent transition that will eventually stabilise. The answer likely depends on factors ranging from geopolitical developments to technological breakthroughs that could reshape underlying assumptions.
Pessimistic scenarios envision deepening bifurcation, with separate technology stacks developing in US-aligned and China-aligned spheres. Different AI architectures optimised for different available hardware. Incompatible standards and protocols limiting cross-border collaboration. Duplicated research efforts and slower overall progress as the global AI community fractures along geopolitical lines.
Optimistic scenarios imagine that current restrictions prove temporary, relaxing once US policymakers judge that sufficient lead time or alternative safeguards protect national security interests. In this view, the economic costs of fragmentation and the difficulties of enforcement eventually prompt policy recalibration. Global standards bodies and industry consortia negotiate frameworks allowing more open collaboration whilst addressing legitimate security concerns.
The reality will likely fall between these extremes, varying by domain and region. Some AI applications, particularly those with national security implications, will remain tightly controlled and fragmented. Others may see gradual relaxation as risks become better understood. Tier-two nations might gain expanded access as diplomatic relationships evolve and verification mechanisms improve.
Technological wild cards could reshape the entire landscape. Quantum computing might eventually offer computational advantages that bypass current chip architectures entirely. Neuromorphic computing, brain-inspired architectures fundamentally different from current GPUs, could emerge from research labs. Radically more efficient AI algorithms might reduce raw computational requirements, lessening hardware constraint significance.
Economic pressures will also play a role. The costs of maintaining separate supply chains and duplicating infrastructure may eventually exceed what nations and companies are willing to pay. Alternatively, AI capabilities might prove so economically and strategically valuable that no cost seems too high, justifying continued fragmentation.
The startup ecosystem will adapt, as it always does, but potentially with lasting structural changes. We may see the emergence of “AI havens,” locations offering optimal combinations of chip access, energy costs, talent pools, and regulatory environments. The distribution of AI innovation might become more geographically concentrated than even today's Silicon Valley-centric model, or more fragmented into distinct regional hubs.
For individual organisations and nations, the strategic imperative remains clear: reduce dependencies where possible, build capabilities where feasible, and cultivate relationships that provide resilience against supply disruption. Whether that means investing in domestic chip design, securing multi-source supply agreements, partnering with hyperscalers, or developing algorithmic efficiencies depends on specific circumstances and risk tolerances.
The semiconductor industry has weathered geopolitical disruption before and emerged resilient, if transformed. The current upheaval may prove similar, though the stakes are arguably higher given AI's increasingly central role across economic sectors and national security. What seems certain is that the coming years will determine not just who leads in AI capabilities, but the very structure of global technological competition for decades to come.
The silicon schism is real, and it is deepening. How we navigate this divide will shape the trajectory of artificial intelligence and its impact on human civilisation. The choices made today by governments restricting chip exports, companies designing sovereign infrastructure, and startups seeking computational resources will echo through the remainder of this century. Understanding these dynamics isn't merely an academic exercise. It's essential preparation for a future where computational sovereignty rivals traditional forms of power, and access to silicon increasingly determines access to opportunity.
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Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. “With Its Latest Rule, the U.S. Tries to Govern AI's Global Spread.” January 2025. https://carnegieendowment.org/emissary/2025/01/ai-new-rule-chips-exports-diffusion-framework
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Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk
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John Karahalis
Over the last few weeks, I've been migrating my thoughts page* and my blog† to WriteFreely, hosted by Write.as.
I love thoughts so much, and I’ve praised it constantly. I’m so grateful that it’s gotten me back into writing short little blog posts, something I loved doing as a younger person but somehow lost interest in, maybe because simplicity and fun have taken a back seat in the world of blogging. At the same time, I’m now looking for features that thoughts doesn’t provide, like pagination, dedicated pages for individual posts, email signup, RSS, tags, and more. I still think thoughts is amazing, a beautifully simple blogging platform with an “old internet” feel in the very best way, and for that reason, I still wholeheartedly recommend it. I don’t recommend everyone switch to WriteFreely. It just seems like the better fit for me right now.
Medium, on the other hand, I could do without. They sometimes display giant banners above free blog posts to encourage readers to sign up for Medium, which is really annoying. I'm a paying subscriber to Medium as a reader, actually. I think that should exempt my blog from their advertising, but it doesn't. Also, their recommendation engine is horrific, and it encourages endless clickbait nonsense. I don’t want to support a company that does that, and I don’t want that perverse incentive to change my writing.
WriteFreely isn't perfect. It uses an odd Markdown parser, just like thoughts does, it doesn't provide search functionality, and the navigational menus presented to authors are pretty confusing, among other things of varying importance. But it's a much better fit for me right now. Even having a separate page for each post is great. I'm sure that's what readers and search engines expect. By contrast, thoughts shows all posts on one page and uses URL fragments to link to particular posts (e.g., https://thoughts.johnkarahalis.com/#1762540598).
WordPress is another option, of course. It has more features, and it's endlessly extensible, but it's not as elegant as WriteFreely, in my opinion. I'm sure it can do everything WriteFreely can, given enough time and patience, but maybe not as seamlessly. The biggest advantages of WordPress may be that it's tried and true, as well as a very active project, as far as I know, whereas WriteFreely development seems pretty slow at this point. Perhaps I'll migrate to WordPress some day, when its weight and complexity are more justified, but for now, I do like WriteFreely very much.
Over the next little while, you'll see posts disappear from those places and re-appear on this blog. I expect I'll be done somewhere around the middle of January, 2026, but time will tell.
#Business #Communication #PublicNotice #Technology #Usability #UserExperience
* When this post was published, this linked to my thoughts page. However, once the migration is complete and all of my thoughts posts have been migrated to this blog, the link will probably redirect to this blog's homepage.
† Similarly, after I migrate all posts from Medium to this blog, this link will not load my Medium page. It's not possible for me to redirect from Medium to this blog, though, so it will probably just lead to a Not found page.