I came across this TechCrunch article covering the recent news that Google is committing 150M to develop AI glasses with Warby Parker:

Google commits $150M to develop AI glasses with Warby Parker

My immediate thought was a new take on TEDs!  Everyone knows what TEDs are don’t they?

Ehh, not so much.  There are many acronyms for TED.

Google’s “AI Overview” confidently claims:

and of course has TED Conferences shown next to the AI boast.

There are lots of sites that will give me lists of what TED might stand for in my unknown context.  Some gems at first sight are:

Transient Enhanced Diffusion

Technology, Education, Design (not to be confused with Technology, Education, Design)

transmission electron diffraction

and the one I’m looking for isn’t there.  At this point I feel very small.  My immediate thought of TEDs is not what most of the world as presented by might Google thinks.  If you’ve hung on this long to my boring post, TEDs are Tactical Eye Devices.  You know, the very nerdy looking army glasses:

TED has been replaced by BCG – Birth Control Glasses.  And apparently NPR has an entire story about Birth Control Glasses, or BCGs.  Read it here https://www.npr.org/2012/01/27/145983999/military-drops-birth-control-glasses-for-fresher-pair

Why am I even blathering about this?  Because we all know the frustration of keeping any electronic item charged.  Smarth watches, phones of course, all sorts of other stuff.  Glasses will need a good thick frame to house an appropriate contoured battery.  I do think there can be a lot of game changing applications, such as using AI with a Google lens searching when identifying large groups of disparate items.

But if people look dorky will they wear them?

 

 

 

 

 

“Accumulation of Cognitive Debt”

There's an article published at MIT that studied "Your Brain on ChatGPT: Accumulation of Cognitive Debt when Using an AI Assistant for Essay Writing Task https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.08872 This blog post was pitched as a rebuttal of sorts to the MIT study - definitely...

read more

Oh the Humanity!’s Last Exam!

Humanity's Last Exam Benchmarks are interesting. Here's the deep thought - at what point in the overall benchmark process will AI inject bias into the benchmark test?  And to what end?  Maybe not so deep a thought. Humanity's Last Exam has been bantered about...

read more

Rollups best left to fruit

The Neuron newsletter served up this TechCrunch article about   Read the article https://techcrunch.com/2025/06/01/early-ai-investor-elad-gil-finds-his-next-big-bet-ai-powered-rollups/. Here's a quote from the article: "The idea is to identify opportunities to buy...

read more

Copilot Summarizes just the page

I saw a headline Windows dashboard about a popular internet provider that filed for Chapter 11.  I was curious and decided to check it out and clicked the story. The news item is from "TheStreet" and the initial page does not show the entire article, just the first...

read more

Character.AI and possible suicide

I came across this news item from a while back: This mom believes an AI chatbot is responsible for her son’s suicide  Wow, this is just brutal and my heart goes out to his family and friends. Character.ai and the other named defendents tried to use free speech in...

read more

SMH – AI-Driven Layoffs

Shaking my head in response to someone responding "We acted too quickly" with respect to downsizing as a result of AI implementation. Step 1 - Jump on AI bandwagon Step 2 - implement (pricey?) AI stuff hot off the presses Step 3 - Layoffs = more $$$ for us!  Or more...

read more

Bill Gates, not a jerk billionaire

Bill Gates has announced he's giving away 200B over the next 20 years to help address 3 moonshot global needs.  Here's the announcement from Gates Foundation There are a lot of people that idolize billionaires and I am not one of them.  A have an internal screed about...

read more