Written by my collaborator, Astrid!
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		Written by my collaborator, Astrid!
 
		Words matter. Or at least they used to, before buzzwords took over common sense. Somewhere between marketing hype and social media shorthand, we stopped calling things what they are and started calling them what sounds impressive.

Everything’s a “drone,” a “bot,” “AI,” or “smart.” And when everything sounds futuristic, nothing really means anything. Let’s clear the air — or the cloud, if you prefer — and take a look at a few of the worst offenders.
Stop Calling It a Drone
Most of what people call drones are actually quadcopters — radio-controlled aircraft that go where the operator tells them to. A true drone, by definition, flies autonomously. It can make flight decisions, follow programmed paths, or respond to onboard sensors. Your weekend flyer with a GoPro? Not a drone. It’s a quadcopter — and that’s fine! But somewhere along the way, “drone” became the default term. It sounds more high-tech, maybe even a little dangerous. The problem is that the word carries implications — of autonomy, surveillance, even military use — that simply don’t apply to your off-the-shelf RC flyer. The result? Confusion, overregulation, and headlines that make technology sound scarier than it is.
Stop Calling It AI
Let’s get one thing straight: what most people call “AI” isn’t intelligent — it’s predictive. It’s a machine-learning system trained to recognize patterns and generate responses, not a sentient being that thinks, feels, or decides. Even the most advanced systems — yes, including ChatGPT — are glorified language models. They don’t “understand” in the human sense. They process inputs, apply probabilities, and output something that sounds right. But “AI” sells. It sounds futuristic, even mystical.
The problem is that overusing the word leads people to believe we’ve created artificial consciousness — when what we’ve really created is a very fast mirror.
Stop Calling It a Robot
Robots are supposed to act independently — to sense, think, and move without direct human control. But most so-called “robots” are really tele-operated machines or pre-programmed mechanisms. That robotic arm on an assembly line? It does one job repeatedly, no thought involved. That remote-controlled rover with a webcam? Fun, yes — but still a remote-controlled toy. Autonomy is what makes a robot a robot. Without that, it’s just a machine with motors.
Stop Calling It Smart
“Smart home” devices aren’t smart — they’re obedient. They follow instructions, respond to triggers, and send data to the cloud. A “smart” light bulb doesn’t know what you want — it waits for your phone or voice assistant to tell it. The word “smart” makes people imagine digital intuition, but really it’s just connectivity wrapped in clever marketing. Your thermostat isn’t thinking about your comfort — it’s just checking a schedule.
Stop Calling It the Cloud
The “cloud” isn’t some weightless, magical sky full of data. It’s someone else’s computer, sitting in a warehouse-sized data center, burning electricity to keep your selfies safe. Calling it “the cloud” makes it sound harmless and infinite, but it’s anything but — it’s infrastructure, plain and simple. Racks of servers, cables, fans, and a lot of maintenance. The cloud is convenient, yes — but let’s not pretend it’s ethereal.
Stop Calling It Environmentally Friendly
Electric cars get praised as “zero-emission,” but that depends entirely on where the electricity comes from. If your grid is powered by coal or natural gas, your car’s emissions are simply being outsourced to a smokestack miles away. Sure, EVs help reduce city pollution and are mechanically more efficient. But calling them clean when the grid isn’t is misleading. Real progress comes when generation — not just propulsion — becomes renewable. You can’t claim to be off fossil fuels when the plug you use still traces back to them.
Words Have Meaning
We’ve reached a point where accuracy feels optional. But language is how we understand the world — and when we use it carelessly, we understand less. Using the right word isn’t pedantic; it’s honest.
When everything is AI, or a robot, or green, or smart, then nothing truly is. So next time you’re tempted to call something a drone, or AI, or smart, stop for a second. Ask what it really is. Because clarity isn’t nitpicking — it’s respect for reality.

[ BLOG POSTS ] -PRETTY PLEASE: Can I improve the look and feel of my blog posts? Or am I stuck with a system that drives me crazy? Only time will tell. There’s also a chance that I just go insane rather than being content with the features I own. Yet, I must never forget the man with the OCD from way down in that pit.
This test post uses a feature I just enabled, which might be just what I’ve been looking for in all these options.
[ UPDATE ] -LOOKING BETTER: After an intensive review of all of the options available to me, I think I might have an acceptable solution to my formatting issues.
 [ CONTROL ] -MIRROR ARTICLES: The primary features I’m trying to restore display my entire post, an “excerpt” of my article, and any “featured image” attached to the post.
[ CONTROL ] -MIRROR ARTICLES: The primary features I’m trying to restore display my entire post, an “excerpt” of my article, and any “featured image” attached to the post.
How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?
     Currently, the tools I’ve been using only provide a link to my blog posting and the header image of my website (which looks like an old rock).
     If you are accessing Facebook via the iPhone/iPad app, it will direct you to my website and post inside the app. You simply click the back button and are back to your feed. If you happen to be accessing Facebook from your web browser, clicking on my post will send you to a new browser tab/window. It’s then your responsibility to find your way back to your Facebook feed, the location you were at, and this is only if “the odds are stacked in your favor.” When it comes to the differences between web browsers and Facebook in combination…I hope you’re rolling out your loaded dice.
     Attaching third-party tools and content isn’t quite as simple as it once was. I believe Facebook is attempting to discourage what I’m doing in favor of its own suite of tools to manage and monetize content.
 The incredible amount of documentation and options provided by Facebook for its services would take years to fully comprehend if they don’t change their platform again…and as you begin to understand and master their existing platform. That was a very long sentence.
[CONTROL] -EYE CANDY:. A few images are just for fun. “Yeah…we’re going to need you to move your desk to the basement.”

And a few more images just for a little more fun. Why not?



{SQUIRREL}
     It’s always been a source of amazement to me how we often look back at the “early years” of our relationships and lives with a sense of “simpler times.”
     Essentially, we often experience feelings of a time when our lives were just a little easier. Having experienced this phenomenon several times, I wonder why I have never held onto what I “know” will one day become a desired reality I desire to return.
     What is it about the human race, at least Americans, that fuels our culture and the desire to complicate our lives with more of everything. Yet, we often already have everything necessary for a successful, happy life, marriage, and relationships.
     Why do we keep adding more and then reminisce about what we gave away? We find ourselves with larger homes and more material possessions.
     We find ourselves with jobs that provide us higher wages.  However, we have less time and energy to take advantage of the vacation and downtime opportunities we once enjoyed when we had fewer monetary resources.
 [ CONTENT ] -ARTICLE TITLES: As the number of words beginning with “C” continued to enter my mind, the necessity for a different tactic became obvious. An infinitely increasing number of article titles using only “C” words would eventually reach a limit, including my attempt to keep up with them. Therefore, I will drop the entire “C” Word methodology “completely.” Limiting the scope of my writings based upon a single letter may sound novel, but in practice, being “confined” to such limitations is “counterintuitive” to authentic “creative” writing.
[ CONTENT ] -ARTICLE TITLES: As the number of words beginning with “C” continued to enter my mind, the necessity for a different tactic became obvious. An infinitely increasing number of article titles using only “C” words would eventually reach a limit, including my attempt to keep up with them. Therefore, I will drop the entire “C” Word methodology “completely.” Limiting the scope of my writings based upon a single letter may sound novel, but in practice, being “confined” to such limitations is “counterintuitive” to authentic “creative” writing.
     Please welcome “The Open Book Testimonials,” an open title for a specific series of articles easily defined by the name.
[ COMPELLED ] -UNSOLICITED ADVICE:  Today, I feel compelled to share something everyone should know. It’s a service available to anyone in need; it’s just not advertised. I’ve chosen to share this little piece of information for a few reasons. First, during a conversation today, I mentioned it to the person I was talking with. Second, if a good friend knew about this topic, he might still be alive today.
     Every hospital in the United States maintains an endowment fund (yes…a big money account) specifically for providing medications to patients experiencing financial difficulties. If you are, for example, an organ transplant recipient and cannot afford your immune suppressant meds (aka anti-rejection medications), your transplant hospital may provide you with the medications at no cost.
    These are the caveats of this type of assistance. First, you should contact the Social Worker associated with the specialty department managing the care of your particular disease or illness. You should supply information about your current financial circumstances and the expected timeframe of assistance you may require.
     Please keep in mind that this service is for temporary assistance…only. It is not intended to replace your insurance or other financial aid you would normally use to pay for your medications. This is also a time when accurate information is pertinent. Do not bull$4i77 the people who are trying to help you.
     The Social Worker or someone from the hospital pharmacy will typically contact you and give you something akin to the following;
[ COMPELLED ] -LOST FRIENDS:   As many of my friends and family know, I am a bilateral lung transplant recipient. In January 2006, I transitioned from Social Security Disability coverage to my wife’s employer insurance. Due to a gap in coverage of about thirty days, I wouldn’t have insurance coverage for the expensive transplant medications. We could afford the cash price for some of my maintenance medications, but the transplant medications were beyond our budget.
     Therefore, I contacted the social worker at the Lung Transplant Center and asked if their pharmacy could provide “sample packets” or some other form of assistance. The generous people within Vanderbilt’s pharmacy provided the transplant medications I required and several of the higher-priced maintenance medications. This generosity is one reason I can write this article and why I am “compelled” to share it with you.
     My friend was born with Type-1 Diabetes. He eventually became ill to the point he required a combination pancreas and kidney transplant. The generosity of a donor family provided the organs he needed to survive. That transplant didn’t offer him, and many others like us, the ability to maintain a job and a stable income.
     Transplant recipients are immunosuppressed, which means they are susceptible to opportunistic infections. Anytime someone comes to work sick, you can guarantee they will be sick within about two days. The incubation period is significantly shorter, and no immune system is available.
     My friend suffered from the same issues as me. He, unfortunately, didn’t have a wife who then and now…continues to work and provide an income to support all our financial needs.
     During a period of unemployment and financial hardship, my friend went without the necessary medications to prevent the rejection of his transplant organs. He chose food and rent over his medications. As a result, he lost his transplanted kidney and was forced into dialysis to survive.
     A couple years ago, my friend died of a massive heart attack. I’m not sure if my friend lived as he “wanted” or as he “had” to do.
     My friend’s name is Geno Daley. He is in God’s hands now. That grants me a lot of peace, but as anyone who has lost a friend knows…the hurt remains. This is a particularly tough month, as I lost my “first” friend in August. Chuck Ransom has been missed for 30 years.
     I met Geno when we were teenagers. He lived next door to my friend and band guitarist, Jerry Fontaine. Geno was indeed an interesting person, and his life was also quite exciting and sometimes too interesting. Interesting enough to grab the attention of the law. It was of no consequence to me what he did in previous years of his life; it was the person he had become that mattered. Much like many “interesting” people, he bounced from place to place and from one hobby to another. But that is simply the spice of life.
     Geno had developed a love for playing the guitar as a teenager, and his style was always “loud and proud”. The number of times we were bandmates is lost on me now. There were times when Geno had to pawn his gear to eat. It didn’t matter; his friends always found a way to put another in his hands. At one point, he owned a guitar I had been building. I’m pretty sure our mutual friends, Mark Moore or Ronnie Amans, also planted an axe or two in his hands.
     Before Heather and I moved to Florida, one of Geno’s passions was “slot car racing.” We once sat for hours talking about his need for a customized controller. Slot car racing is not much different than the toy tracks we had as kids. The difference is in scale. The cars are typically about a foot long, have a standard chassis and motor, and have a lightweight body sitting over it. The track is a miniature drag racing setup. Multiple tracks, a light tree, and a handheld controller supply power to your slot and your car. Pull the trigger when the lights are green, and the cars race down the slots. Trigger too fast, you are disqualified. Too much power can cause your car to spin out. Too slow on the trigger…you’re watching the ass-end of the car in another lane. Yeah, I learned all about slot car racing…but I never took the time to go with him just to watch.
     As an electronics engineer, Geno knew I could likely build something that would give him an unbeatable advantage. He was right. During those hours-long conversations, we designed that controller. Geno recognized it takes “time” to pull the trigger to full speed. His solution? My son might recognize this one immediately. Have your controller at full speed (pulled in all the way), and then use a switch with a travel time from “OFF-to-ON” that’s a fraction of the time it takes to pull the trigger. Drew, does that sound anything like a rev-limiter? In my son’s “real car” world, racers use a mechanism that holds the engine at full throttle and redline. The turbos are “spun up,” and you just have to dump the clutch, and you’re thrown back in the seat as the car takes off like a rocket or explodes. Either way, it’s damn good fun.
     “Is there any way to watch the light tree and trigger the controller when the lights go green?” Believe it or not…there “is” and “that” would have likely gotten him banned from slot racing for life. But that was my friend, and I doubt he would care as long as he had at least one win and it was videoed.