I have been reading a lot of children's books recently. I am currently
revisiting *"The Secret Garden"* and I read *"What Was I Scared Of - Glow
in the Dark Edition"* nearly every night. I do like audiobooks, but I
haven't finished one in a while. I do most of my own reading by headlamp at
night, when I can't sleep, and don't want to rummage for bluetooth
headphones.

That being said, the real reason I responded was to comment on Glen's
account about using the wrong LLM to discuss movies. I have been playing
with AI image generation and recently found a site called llmarena.ai
<https://www.google.com/url?source=gmail&sa=E&q=https://llmarena.ai/> which
lets you use some of the most state-of-the-art models for free, if you
don't mind participating in a bit of science.

I still haven't found an AI image generation tool that can predict the next
day's GOES-19 CONUS satellite image. Some research should probably be done
in that area.

_ Cody Smith _
[email protected]


On Tue, Jan 27, 2026 at 11:06 AM Steve Smith <[email protected]> wrote:

> good (and very relevant to my own experience) thread...  thanks...
>
> I was an early and avid reader, with modes and subjects shifting through
> time and context.
>
> I have shifted 99% of my fiction (text) consumption to audio and boosted
> my video fiction (4X) consumption significantly in the last 5-10 years for
> lots of reasons (social engagement, more free time).
>
> Like Jon said, "reading was (once) pure play", I've replaced it with
> lower-engagement/demand alternatives which is a bit like replacing the
> episodic wild berries in my diet with pure sugar or maybe pixie-stix?  Or
> maybe just candy-bars with *some* nuts and chocolate to buffer the
> power-hit of refined sugar?
>
> Following Glen's point, I do read more non-fiction via linear (and
> resampled linear) text than I do fiction... and it is a mixed blessing.
>  I've always enjoyed nonlinear/hyperlinked prose (e.g. browsing/tracing a
> dictionary/thesaurus/encyclopedia) as well as self-curation of tech/history
> material using ToC and Index navigation, but also highly value the
> author/editor's curation (what I think Marcus rankled at?).
>
> (about) the only time I read much in significant linear batches is when I
> soak in my clawfoot tub.   After a significant physical activity (usually
> chores) or during some mild illness (light flu/cold or taking a chill from
> exposure) I will settle into a long hot bath where I can sometimes read
> chapters and chapters from a book or some long-form journalism which I
> normally crash out of after 5-10 mins max.
>
> Mary is much more capable of dropping into a book (still) despite the
> distractions and has not really shifted into audio-consumption of fiction.
>  Her stack of "have read" grows monthly and reinforcing my "audio-forward"
> fiction, she reads aloud to me A) at bedtime; B) on short and long drives;
> C) when something is acutely compelling to her.
>
> I'm ashamed to admit that about all I have to offer in return to her is
> "being a good listener" and an occasional short-segment of an audio-book
> I've been listening to which is salient to whatever is afoot in the moment
> in the world or between us.   My offerings are a fraction of the quantity
> (and quality?) of hers to me.
>
> Too much of my reading happens from a screen (this one) and/but I can
> *barely* read from my TS (tiny-screen phone) which saves me in some ways (I
> spend less time staring at my palm than many) but not in others (when I'm
> staring at my palm I'm likely just reading headline-fragments)....
>
> My (midlife-adult) children both read modestly, though both have commutes
> which have pushed them into audio (something I introduced them to on car
> trips as children).  Both prefer Kindle-class screen-readers for
> portability/convenience but do still murder trees. ElderDotter before-child
> commuted 1hr each way by rail and read a LOT during that time.
> YungerDotter worked in our bookstore for a year while finishing her BA in
> Santa Fe which reinforced her appreciation for the used-book world, but the
> demands of parenting and careering and general adulting have cut into
> *their* reading time.   YD commutes in a TSLA (FU Elon Musk!) but loathes
> the (f?)SD features and definitely doesn't Read While Driving (best I
> know)....
>
> ED records/rates (most of?) her conquests on GoodReads (yes, I know, Bezos
> coopted that and is a dipshit for doing so) but does not review much if at
> all there.  So I know she is consuming (possibly on audio but not
> exclusively) order 1-4 novels/nonfics a month, many of which I myself have
> already read and. few which I have been inspired to (esp. if
> Audio-available).   Reading lists used to be an important part of my larger
> social fabric, now it is just with my familial and some professional
> intimates.
>
> Mary's children are also mid-life/career readers still and some of their
> consumption habits bleed into my awareness through her (2 are GoodReads
> rater/reviewers).  One D-in-Law is the most eclectic (a big Jane
> Austen/Raymond Chandler/Agatha Chrisite fan who also reads AE. Van Vogt and
> jack Williamson interleaved with heavy shite on Cancer (she is Stage 4 6
> years in now), as well as Feminist and Ethnic studies).  She is a trained
> Librarian-Archivist  which might explain her text-heavy orientation.  She
> and the son-husband declare to consume all their news and politics and
> economics strictly through long-form journalism and I (mostly) believe
> them.  He's a serious film-buff so the cinema he reports on is eclectic and
> arte-haus heavy.  He broadens our watch list significantly.  Sharing their
> diets as-such with us enhances our intergenerational coupling (gives us
> something to talk about besides Trump-Reviling, when we chat).
>
> My grandchildren (all 2 of them) are less likely to be lifelong readers
> beyond the basics required by school and friend-networks... but I may be
> wrong... the parents offer/push/expose them to as much as makes sense
> in-context but tik-tok/video/"socials", etc are strong attractors of
> attention.   My own shift from written text on paper to screens and linear
> to highly non-linear and from text to audio/video-narrative follows their
> pattern with a little more plasticity/inertial resistance than they
> naturally have.  Mary's 2 (twin) grandchildren probably read more than
> their general peers (fairly screen-time restricted at 9 years old) and the
> boy, finally diagnosed Autism-Spectrum voraciously goes through topics like
> the Titanic, the Vietnam War, still illustration-heavy but concept/factiod
> dense.   His social skills are not always helped by being encyclopedic in
> his latest obsession.
>
> My dog does not read nor listen to synthesized audio nor watch TV (except
> through seideyez), although he is acutely aware of dogs barking, doorbell
> and knocking sounds coming from the TV as well as animal-shapes on TV (Dogs
> most acutely, cats sometimes, horses and other large mammals.    Mary reads
> to him sometimes and he does alert to her (tone of) voice, but I don't
> think he's processing anything beyond "emotional content".
>
> Our mothers died with unfinished novels at their bedsides and our fathers
> barely read at all (Mary's was marginally illiterate, my own never bothered
> beyond Forestry and Grazing Journals in his early career).  Our
> grandparents (except 1) might have been functionally/circumstantially
> illiterate with little time or available material to read though all
> finished 8th grade and two graduated a work-study hillbilly college in
> Geology.
>
> I discuss way too much of my reading/listening with an LLM (re Jon's
> reference) to my benefit and demise methinks.   Youse guys have to hear
> less of my reflections and observations that way, however.  Net win?
>
> Did I tell you about Daniel Boone, T.Jefferson, T. Roosevelt, G.
> Cleveland, H. Arendt, Wengrow&Graeber, Sterling&Gibson, et al?  (off my
> very recent Audio-stack).
>
> "TL;DR" is a bit too long even for a bumper sticker these days?
>
> - Steve
> On 1/26/26 5:05 pm, Jon Zingale wrote:
>
> I remember loving the book "Last love in Constantinople". It is a fiction
> book that comes with instructions suggesting that the reader pull tarot
> using just the major arcana and then read the book's chapters in the
> derived order.
>
> Lately, I almost never find the place in myself to settle into reading as
> deeply as I once enjoyed. When I would read a lot, I wouldn't stress at all
> about how I moved through or sat with a text, linear or not. Instead,
> reading itself was pure play. Much of that joy now feels alien to me, a
> faint dream.
>
> I can remember feeling the transition away from being situated in deep
> focus as normal and into something much more reactive as the new normal.
> It's almost like I expect to be smacked in the back of the head at any
> moment. I feel as if my eyes are anxious not to waste anymore time where
> they are.
>
> Occasionally, when I get a few days off from work, step away from my
> numerous obligations, get a few miles of running in, alternate between the
> sauna and the cold, I briefly find myself remembering what it was like to
> have a deeper reading practice.
>
> I delight in those rare moments where I find that I can sit with a math
> book, say, and have something I want to direct my attention toward, and I
> don't mind at all that the content undresses slowly. I don't even care that
> it would in some ways be more efficient to discuss the topic with an LLM.
>
> .- .-.. .-.. / ..-. --- --- - . .-. ... / .- .-. . / .-- .-. --- -. --. / ... 
> --- -- . / .- .-. . / ..- ... . ..-. ..- .-..
> FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
> Fridays 9a-12p Friday St. Johns Cafe   /   Thursdays 9a-12p Zoom 
> https://bit.ly/virtualfriam
> to (un)subscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com
> FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/
> archives:  5/2017 thru present 
> https://redfish.com/pipermail/friam_redfish.com/
>   1/2003 thru 6/2021  http://friam.383.s1.nabble.com/
>
> .- .-.. .-.. / ..-. --- --- - . .-. ... / .- .-. . / .-- .-. --- -. --. /
> ... --- -- . / .- .-. . / ..- ... . ..-. ..- .-..
> FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
> Fridays 9a-12p Friday St. Johns Cafe   /   Thursdays 9a-12p Zoom
> https://bit.ly/virtualfriam
> to (un)subscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com
> FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/
> archives:  5/2017 thru present
> https://redfish.com/pipermail/friam_redfish.com/
>   1/2003 thru 6/2021  http://friam.383.s1.nabble.com/
>
.- .-.. .-.. / ..-. --- --- - . .-. ... / .- .-. . / .-- .-. --- -. --. / ... 
--- -- . / .- .-. . / ..- ... . ..-. ..- .-..
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Fridays 9a-12p Friday St. Johns Cafe   /   Thursdays 9a-12p Zoom 
https://bit.ly/virtualfriam
to (un)subscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com
FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/
archives:  5/2017 thru present https://redfish.com/pipermail/friam_redfish.com/
  1/2003 thru 6/2021  http://friam.383.s1.nabble.com/

Reply via email to