G’day! I’m just a Melburnian with opinions and a keyboard. Expect rants about everything from coffee prices to climate change. Warning: May contain traces of sarcasm and smashed avo.
Recent Posts
45 Years and All You Got Was a Pin? The Death of Corporate Loyalty
There’s a story doing the rounds this week that’s really stuck with me. A woman clocks up 45 years at the Commonwealth Bank — one of the most profitable financial institutions in the country — and when the milestone arrives, her son shares what she received: a marked pin and some flowers. That’s it. From a bank that regularly posts billions in annual profit.
Her son called it pathetic. Honestly? Hard to argue.
Petrol Prices, Market Casinos, and the Case for Energy Independence
So there I was, scrolling through the news over breakfast this morning, and the headline practically leapt off the screen: petrol prices rising again, and the Albanese government being upfront that even the Iran-US ceasefire — such as it is — won’t be bringing relief at the bowser anytime soon. Can’t say I’m shocked, but it doesn’t make it any less frustrating.
And honestly, calling it a “ceasefire” feels generous. From what’s been reported, Israel was bombing Lebanon within hours of the announcement, Iran was still firing missiles at Gulf states, and now apparently there’s a dispute over whether the ten-point terms Iran published were even the terms that were actually agreed to. One commenter online put it bluntly: “We don’t know what the actual terms of the ceasefire were. Hell, I’m not sure the parties themselves know what they agreed to.” Which is a pretty grim summary of the situation, but probably accurate.
The Milla Jovovich AI Story: Hype, Hope, and Why the Truth Is Still Kind of Interesting
So there’s been this story floating around the past day or two that had my timeline absolutely buzzing. Milla Jovovich — yes, that Milla Jovovich, Alice from Resident Evil, Leeloo from The Fifth Element — apparently released an open-source AI memory system on GitHub called MemPalace that claimed to score 100% on something called LongMemEval, beating every paid solution out there.
Naturally, the internet lost its collective mind.
My first reaction, honestly, was the same as half the comments I was reading: what in the weirdest timeline are we living in? But then I put my coffee down, opened the GitHub repo, started digging through the actual issues and the community discussion, and — well, it’s complicated. And complicated is usually more interesting than the headline anyway.