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
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.
The Quiet Voice: What Happens When We Let AI Do Our Thinking
There’s a post doing the rounds that I keep coming back to, written by someone with eleven years of coding experience who had a genuinely unsettling moment last month. They hit an intermittent network timeout bug — the classic kind, only appearing in production, exactly the sort of thing you’d expect a seasoned developer to chew through methodically — and found themselves completely lost without AI to guide them. Not just slower. Actually lost. The internal voice that used to generate hypotheses had gone quiet.
Boring Leadership Is Exactly What Australia Needs Right Now
I’ve been following the Hormuz situation pretty closely over the past few weeks, and honestly, the more I read about it, the more I find myself thinking about leadership — specifically what good leadership actually looks like when things get genuinely difficult.
The news that Japan is going to maintain normal fuel supply to Australia, and that Prime Minister Takaichi is potentially visiting, is quietly significant. It doesn’t have the drama of a military announcement or the viral punch of a political brawl, but it matters. A lot. And the way it came together — through methodical diplomatic legwork with Japan, South Korea, and Singapore — is the kind of thing that rarely gets the credit it deserves because it doesn’t make for exciting television.