Today's post is going to be a bit of a mixed bag, I think.
Not a Grab-Bag. I have a sort of format for those and this isn't going to fit
it. It's just a few things I wanted to post about that probably won't make
full posts of their own.
Then again, maybe one will blow up into something bigger as I write, in which
case I'll just come back and delete this introduction and no-one will ever
know! <Twirls mustachio. Supervillain laughter.>
Always On
First, something that definitely isn't worth a whole post. I just want to moan
about it. Unlike some people, Nimgimli for one, I've had absolutely no
technical problems with Nevernesss To Everness so far. No bugs, no UI
glitches, no performance issues. For me, playing on PC, it runs as smoothly as
any viscous liquid you care to name.
Playing is no problem. The problem comes when I stop. In the last few days - I
bet since one of the frequent updates, although I couldn't nail down exactly
which - whenever I log out of NTE, about half a minute or so later
Windows tells me it's "run into a problem" and needs to reboot. That
would be annoying enough but it turns out Windows can't reboot and I
end up staring at a black screen until I switch the power off and restart,
after which everything works perfectly until the next time I stop playing NTE.
Apart from being annoying, I worry all this sudden stopping and starting will
damage something, so I googled for explanations and fixes. First, I did it the
old-fashioned way. I checked reddit threads and watched
YouTube videos but no-one seemed to have the exact problem I did and
nothing they suggested seemed particularly helpful, so I thought I might as
well let Gemini have a go, since it kept on offering.
Gemini was extremely co-operative. It asked pertinent questions, gave me lucid
explanations, offered fixes, walked me through what to do when I had
difficulties implementing them and basically acted like the best kind of IT
department I've ever had to speak to (And I've spoken to plenty.)
All of which would be great if the solutions Gemini provided had worked. They
did not. Oh, they worked in the sense that all the commands and instructions
were accepted when I followed them and they did what they were supposed to do.
It just didn't stop NTE crashing my PC on exit.
But then, neither did any of the non-AI fixes and suggestions I tried. If it
was a football match it'd be a no-score draw. (But then, I just used Gemini to fix a perpetually annoying issue I have with Blogger getting the color of links wrong and it sorted it out perfectly in ten seconds, so I guess AI wins in injury time.)
Of all the various possible reasons offered, by far the most likely seems to
be a conflict with the Anti-Cheat software NTE uses. From long experience with
online games, the most likely fix is going to be putting up with it until the
developers patch again and it magically goes away. Until then, I might just
try shutting the PC down immediately I log out to see if I can beat the crash.
That'll be fun. [Edit: Tried it and it works so that'll be my temporary solution for now.]
Had Gemini's fix actually worked, I might have been here today singing AI's
praises. That'd be a popular post, I'm sure. If anything, anti-AI sentiment
seems to be growing. It used to be mostly in my gaming and music feeds but now
it's increasingly present in just about anything I read. As for positive
sentiments regarding our would-be artificial overlords (That's
Google and Amazon and whatever Elon Musk is calling
himself today rather than the inert and blameless software itself, of
course.), those seem to be very thin on the ground indeed.
Search Me
All of which does make me wonder, even more than usual, how this is all going to pan out. I heard the rumor that
Google plans to replace search entirely
with some kind of Agentic AI (I do love that word - Agentic - don't you? Doesn't it just ooze
futurity? Algorithms never had that kind of PR.). It sounded a bit
worrying so I checked (Using Google Search, inevitably.) and it turns
out to be the usual kind of hyperbolic over-exaggeration humans have
been using to get Eyeballs or Clicks or whatever the metric is these
days since at least the day Buzzfeed went live. Which was exactly twenty years ago. I just checked. (Google>Wikipedia.)
In fact,
Google Search continues as before,
according to a statement Google gave USA Today, who bothered to ask them, but there will be a
new All-AI front end as well. That, inevitably, will be Google's new
focus and I'm sure it will be the first/main thing you see, which means
most people will use it without thinking any more about it. I imagine
their hope is that Search itself will wither away from neglect and
disuse and they'll be able to discontinue it at some future date when
no-one cares any more.
Will that happen? Hard to say. How did Google take over from all those other
search engines - AltaVista, Netscape, Yahoo and the rest - in the first
place? It was faster, more accurate and more comprehensive, that's how. People
used it, found it did the job better and stopped using the older search
engines.
Have people changed that much in a couple of decades? If they find the new AI
Agents are worse than the search they had before, will they not move away from
Google to something that gives them what they want? Isn't it just handing a huge opportunity to a new "Traditional Search" provider to come into the market?
Or, much more likely, will most general internet users find AI means much less fiddling about and reading websites and a lot
more getting quick answers that work well enough, often enough, which will be plenty to keep
almost everyone at least happy to go along with it? Too much effort just to get back to something they probably won't miss anyway.
So, yes, I imagine AI Agents are going to replace search if only because I'd
bet the huge majority of users never really liked searching to begin with. It
was always a necessary inconvenience for most people and I'll bet they'll be glad to see the back of it. People who actively enjoy searching as we've known it have to be a pretty small minority of web users, surely?
I'm kind of on the fence about the whole thing. I definitely don't hate AI. I
just wish it was better. Maybe it will be, one day. Or maybe the current
technology, which seems to be part brute force and part black magic, is a dead
end and it'll never be entirely reliable. I suspect that's more likely but it's too soon to jump one way or the other.
You Want Me To Draw You A Picture?
All of which brings me to a little discussion that took place in the comments on
a post
over at
The Friendly Necromancer, where
Stingite was talking
about feeling guilty for using AI art to illustrate his (Other.) blog, rather
than, for example, hiring an actual artist to do it.
I said
in the comments that it's a notional argument. No hobby blogger is ever going
to commission an artist to provide illustrations for posts except on an
absolutely exceptional basis. I must have read tens of thousands of blog posts
now and I can't remember ever seeing it done. It didn't happen before AI so AI
isn't stopping it happening now. No artist is starving because a blogger stopped commissioning spot illustrations for their posts.
Very, very occasionally I have seen someone commission a piece of art to be a permanent feature on a blog. I remember Belghast doing it for a masthead a couple of times and I have a vague idea one or two
others may have done something similar. But no-one who posts several times a week is
going to pay a commercial rate to a professional artist for even one
illustration per post, let alone the half-dozen or more most people who use pictures at
all like to throw in
And that in turn got me thinking about The Olden Days. I'm not talking about
Ye Olde Webbe of Yore that so many people, most of them barely old enough to have
experienced it the first time around, seem so struck on bringing back. I'm talking the way things were before the worldwide
web even existed.
When I came back from college in the early 1980s, one of the first things
I did was start a comics fanzine with my then-wife, a friend of ours and the guy who
owned the comic shop I worked in. We put out seven issues over two years and
then our friend took over the editing and publishing of a bigger, more
successful 'zine, which he eventually turned into a semi-pro operation. I switched to writing for that and we pulled the plug on our own zine.
Every issue of our original zine was stuffed with what we called "Spot Illos" - either decontextualized images, used to break up the text, or more targeted images, intended to support it. We also had comic strips sometimes and full-size cover art
for every issue.
A minority of the pictures were drawn by my wife, who was a great comic artist
and should have made a career out of it, but most were done by people who read our zine and who were active in comics fandom at the time. Some of them
already had a foot in the door of professional comics publishing, some went on
to be professional comic artists later, but most remained hobbyists and amateurs.
Whatever their status and ability, no-one got paid a penny. No-one expected to
be paid. Paying people for art that wasn't going to be sold for a profit was
not a thing anyone did, wanted to do or even thought about doing. All people wanted was to see their work and their names in print. If they did have professional aspirations, they'd add it to their portfolio so they could at
least show potential employers something they'd had published but most of our
contributors weren't even that ambitious. They just liked to draw and enjoyed
sharing the results.
If something similar was part of blogging culture, the way it was always part of the 'zine
culture I grew up with, no-one would need AI to draw them a picture. There'd be no shortage of people happy to provide it for free. We always had far more submissions than we could use.
And we had a smaller readership than many hobby blogs, too. From memory, I think our print run was about 300 at the peak although the semi-pro zine my friend ended up editing and publishing ran to ten times that eventually. And I don't believe he ever paid anyone anything, either, until a bigger publisher picked him up and gave him a budget to go pro with
an actual comic.
There could be a place on the web where
bloggers could ask for images to illustrate posts and artists could supply
them for nothing more than credit and a link. The technology has been in place
for years to allow something like that to grow into a global free
exchange of talent. Granted it would never be quite as instant and
frictionless as generating an AI image but the results would be so much better
it would be worth the wait. Probably. Although now I think about some of the pictures we published, let alone the ones we didn't...
Maybe something like that does exist already. I know it does for paid, commissioned
art. If it does, though, the evidence has never shown up in any blog I ever read. And
I'm certainly not offering to set up any such kind of website myself, although ironically I
imagine I could get an AI to to code it for me if I was. They're supposed to be good at that sort of thing.
And even if someone else did all the donkey-work, it wouldn't be great for me as a user anyway. It would better suit people who
write their posts with at least a little lead-time. I tend to bash mine out on
the day and I don't think there are many artists out there who'd be happy to get a request after lunch asking them to knock out half a dozen pictures before tea.
That's how AI wins, I guess. It may be soulless but it sure is fast and it never complains or makes excuses. It never says "Do it yourself. I'm busy." Or fobs you off with "I've just got to walk the dog and do a bit of shopping. But I'll get
to it as soon as I can. Promise!"
And yet, I don't use a lot of AI art here any more. It's not even because
readers don't like it. When I do drop a few AI illos into a post, most people just ignore them, I think,
assuming they even notice. As Stingite says, AI's much better at doing art than it used to
be so it doesn't stand out the way it did.
No, it's more that I find it a bit dull, now the novelty value isn't there any
more. I'll use it if I need to but it's purely functional, not the crazy thrill-ride it could be a few years back. I get better
results dicking around with images in Paint.net, anyway, and that feels a lot
more creative than writing prompts. I'm not at all sure it is but it
feels that way.
Hmm. I seem to be wandering away from whatever point I had. Not that I expected the post to go anywhere but at least I got a few things off my chest. I
had a couple more somewhat-related topics to talk about, too, but since this has clearly gone on long enough already (More than, probably...) I'll save those for another time.
Now... shall I use AI to illustrate this post? Would that be ironic?
Post-modern? Provocative?
Or just plain lazy?