Why I hate A.I., but I don’t?

We’re all seeing it, AI getting throw into everything and shoved up in our faces.
Whether we want it or not.

If you ask me generally if I like AI, I don’t have a solid answer, but I lean towards no.
And it’s not because I don’t like the technology.
I think it’s amazing and has great potential.
It’s the excessive reliance on it, the excessive force of which it’s being forced on us.

I would love to use it to help improve my work and my life.

Since I work in IT you’d think it would be really useful.

Not so much for me.
Most of my tickets are what you would call Level 2/3, or projects like email migrations, server upgrades, network implementations.

When I’ve tried to see how AI would’ve handled something I did, it gave answers no better than 30 seconds of consulting Google/Reddit for results.
In fact, often times it gave worse answers. Most likely because it’s missing a ton of context, and I don’t know how to do that without releasing too much client info.
Am I using it wrong? Maybe. I’m open to learn it better, so if you’re gnashing your teeth at me using it wrong, use the contact page to educate me!

Getting back to the point, it’s not the tech that bothers me, it’s the “tech bros” claiming it will save so much time, money, effort, etc., but rarely deliver.
Or in the case of the arts, people who can’t draw a sketch, or don’t know a chord, claim to be artists.

I’m also seeing it used in computer code. With people who don’t know how to convert a series of “if, then, else’s” into a switch case, even worse, people who don’t know what any of what I just said even means!

AI can be a great tool to assist us in many tasks.
My clients have told me great stories of how it has shaved weeks of yearly tasks, or other processes.

And that’s just it, it’s a tool.

These so called “tech gurus” are trying to sell us a hammer saying it can build a house by itself, or all you need to do is provide the right prompts to do so.

You’ve seen it already.

You call in, or try to use chat to get help with something, and you get a chat bot running you in circles.
And I’m going on the record and NOT blaming AI for this.
I think AI could do the basics very well.
It’s how it’s made, and equally important, how it’s not improved.
If they aren’t feeding previous chat logs indicating satisfaction levels, and CONTINUOUSLY updating it, it’s going to be awful.
I see it with some of our vendors:

  • I submit a ticket
  • Get AI chat-bot
  • Get miffed at the bad results
  • Get transferred to real person
  • Issue resolved quickly

I open a similar ticket a few months later, and it’s a repeat of my experience.
Even if it’s not 100% correct, it SHOULD be taking that previous example and using it for the next chat, and yet it’s like a new employee that’s never trained and never learns.
AND keep this in mind, it’s not talking to your average consumer or end user. It’s only accessible by someone like me who should be trusted to know more, and not told “Have you tried rebooting?”.
Yes, I reboot, I reboot all the time, to the point my clients get annoyed at me, and yet it still resolves 50% of issues in 3 minutes. Don’t argue, just do it!

We need to demand more of the people making AI, the companies using AI, and even of ourselves.
We can’t relay on it to do everything for us, we still need to be cognizant of what we’re trying to do.
We need to hold those using it to account.
We especially need those making it held to generally accepted ethical standards.

Unfortunately, an executive order in the US was issued that essentially says only the federal government can make laws for AI, instead of the states deciding.
And even then, it’s a relatively small “task force”
This greatly limits guardrails from being put in and allowing companies to run wild as our slow-as-molasses federal government struggles to understand this technology, let alone regulate it.
This also allows the AI industry to lobby a single source, instead of having to be careful of what it designs and implements.
AI, like any tool, can be used for good or bad, restricting the regulation to just a small group of people is never a good thing.

Now, I’m not some deep insider or advanced technology person.
I’m just a damned good technician/engineer for small/medium business IT needs.
I’m closer to the end user this will affect the most, rather than the CEOs of these big AI firms.

Take from this what you will.


Not happy with the direction of Windows?

Odds are you can and could’ve been doing something about it, and have been opting out this whole time.

Back when Windows 8 came out I was still working retail and attended a demo and training seminar from Microsoft.

As part of this training, they explained a lot of their decisions as to why they moved to the “Metro UI”, which I kinda liked after a while.

During the years leading up to Windows 8, people using Windows 7 were invited to participate in the CEIP or Customer Experience Improvement Program.

As part of the CEIP Microsoft kept track of how people started their apps and found the of those participating, almost everyone had stopped using the start menu and launched from desktop shortcuts or the pinned apps in their taskbar.

As we now know people lost their ever loving minds and demanded the return of the start menu. I guess being stuck on something from 1995 even in 2012 was a form of a comfort?

The interesting thing about the CEIP was that it was offered to almost everyone, but so few people opted in. I have a strong reason to believe it was because of so many blogs and forums telling people that they should never opt in to these things.

Lots of claims of privacy invasion but I don’t recall anyone pointing out anything of concern in the privacy policy.

Regardless, I’m wondering how they expect companies like Microsoft to improve their product if the general public refuses to give them useful data or feedback?

On that same thought, I do understand many companies, Microsoft included are abusing their data collection and using it beyond improving their products and using it for targeted ads and such.

I’d like for more companies to collect anonymous data on how people use their products in ways that won’t allow them to link it to individuals.

I’d also like for influencers and the general public to understand that nothing will get better if they stay quiet and withhold any feedback in any form.

New to tech and some vets are complaining you have it easy?

Well, you do have it easier, kinda. And I couldn’t be happier!

A lot of older techs will complain about how things were harder and how new techs are constantly using Google for answers.
Or they say how YouTube gives out too much information to the non-technical.

Honestly, I think they’re just jealous. There’s just too much these days to know how to do or fix everything. And yeah, doing something like upgrading a hard drive is plug and play nowadays. What feels like an eternity ago you had to add the drive and it’s attributes (cylinders, heads, sectors) into the bios before it could work. Don’t forget those jumps! Are you lazy for not having to do that? Hell no!

Doing anything shouldn’t be complex if it doesn’t have to be. When the old techs complain it’s because you don’t have to suffer like they did. Your time is more valuable in understanding your systems and resolving issues than it is making sure all your SCSI connections are numbered properly and have terminations.

I remember when something as simple as connecting a monitor required drivers, knowing the resolutions and frequencies each could run at! When monitors could relay this info directly to Windows I was ecstatic! And now realistically we only deal with a handful of resolutions and refresh rates, it’s even better!

I’m glad the the new techs I’m working with don’t even know what an IRQ is. They don’t need to, and unless Word starts requiring set IRQs it’s just mean to criticize them for not knowing.

If you’re new to tech and you’re curious about how things used to run, you should feel comfortable asking. If they start faulting you for not doing things the old ways because they had to suffer, just walk away.

You’re a tech in a great time. You should be spending your time learning and growing. Not grinding at menial procedures that should be automated away.

Sonicwall Mobile Connect on Mac with 4433 open

Ran into a funky issue today. And yes I’m aware of the large risk, but like every rule there’s an exception.

Client has a Sonicwall with SSL VPN enabled on 443, and management port open on 4433.
It would appear that the Mac Mobile Connect client has a hard coded check for port 4433, as the VPN client kept asking for wrong certificate.
Setting the :443 port on the server name resulted in the client asking to redirect to port 4433, default port for SSL VPN.

On a hunch I changed the management port and now it’s working perfectly.

It would seem the Mac version is hard coded to check and try port 4433, as NetExtender and the Windows Mobile Connect didn’t have a problem.

Correlation does not equal causation

What does that mean?

To be blunt, when you get a flat tire because of a nail in the road and your cell phone stops working the next day, do you blame the nail?

This is a common connection that people do when it comes to technology. And while many things are interconnected these days. They don’t always have an impact on each other.

So before you go blaming that tech that touched your PC last week for a website not working, please slow down and approach this as separate. Connecting dots that don’t need to be can take a simple issue and make it far more complex.

Always be truthful and relay as much info as possible. It’s one thing to forget or miss something, we’re all human. When you mislead, we go down the longer or flat out wrong path because you gave bad directions.

Farewell Windows 7

I started writing this long ago but I still want to say goodbye.

A bittersweet era has arrived.
We say goodbye to another beloved version of Windows.
Climbing to the ranks of XP levels of stability and adoption, it has reached the day of retirement well earned. Read More

Contact form

Sorry my contact form is broken. Been too busy to fix it. It’s on my list!

And we’re back!

Feels good to be alive again, prepare for content!

*Cough*

Whoah, getting dusty again.

Well, more like Sandy…