ATLAS BLACK
New color concept
A quick overview of some recent thoughts, namely, around physiology, our human physiology as well as AI, ART, ETC:
Something I have cared for a lot ever since I was a fat kid in New York, was diet health physiology and everything in between.
Ever since I was 11 to 12 years old, fat with a triple chin, I have literally experimented with every single diet out there, save this nonsensical vegetarian and vegan trend.
I met this cool guy the other day, at the Phils coffee shop in downtown Culver City, named Sodi (his website is https://stedmanhalliday.com/).
We had an interesting chat about how fitness is so critical, especially with all of these silicon valley tech utopists who just think of their body as an afterthought.
I vibe with Stedman Halliday because of many different reasons.
First, the focus on recovery as a first thought is a good one. For example, another day when I was really really tired and exhausted, instead of just taking a shower like I typically do, I filled up the bathtub with really really really really really hot water, and had a really really hot bath. It seems that the trend is towards ice baths, ice plunges etc., but also, I think taking insanely hot baths is also a good idea.
Why? To be able to tolerate an insanely hot bath, literally on the edge of boiling hot water, is also an effective bodily turbo charger. To me it is like my MacGyver way of harnessing the power of the hot sauna, without having to go to the gym.
In fact, maybe having a bathtub might be one of the greatest luxuries in your living situation. Rather than thinking of taking a really really hot bath as a frivolous luxury, maybe we should think of it almost like drinking more coffee or caffeine.
Currently what I am doing, and what I have done ever since I was living in Vietnam in 2017, which is almost 6 years now, is simple:
Intermittent fasting throughout the day, this means no breakfast, no lunch, only one massive 100% carnivore dinner.
During the day I only drink tapwater, black coffee, that’s it.
There’s also this funny story in the Walter Isaacson biography of Elon Musk when he was visiting the Twitter office, one of the employees offered him some of the sparkling death sparkling water, and Elon refused and said, “I just drink tapwater”. Haha.
And when I break my fast and eat dinner, which could arrange anywhere in between 6 PM and 10 PM, I strive to eat at least 4 to 5 pounds of beef or lamb.
Another great thing I have learned from ChatGPT is how great wonderful and effective ChatGPT is, at least 1 trillion times better than Google. In fact, my current thought is Short Google; ChatGPT is at least 1 billion times more insightful and accurate in terms of being able to accurately Find information about anything.
For example, a simple heuristic:
The best calling card is now, not to tell people to Google you, but instead, to ChatGPT you!
Why? I’m starting to have this low-key suspicion that Google is doing some sort of behind the counter deals with individuals, and somehow tweaking they are all rhythm for subjective ends.
However with ChatGPT, it is less biased, less meddling.
For example, get ChatGPT on your iPhone or iPad, just pay the $20 for the subscription model, you could cancel it anytime, and just ChatGPT:
Who is ERIC KIM?
The new phrase:
Just ChatGPT me bro!
I think the biggest issue with diet health physiology and nutrition is that people are so subjective, and also, there is far too many politics, ethics and morality behind it.
For example, I never trust anybody who says:
Don’t eat meat, it’s bad for the planet!
What? Do you know what else is bad for the planet? Your Amazon prime subscription, Netflix, YouTube, your iPhone and iPhone Pro, your MacBook pros, your Tesla, your Range Rover etc.
Simple heuristic:
Never trust nobody who makes commentary about the planet and has either a Netflix subscription, Amazon prime subscription, or owns a car, any card, irregardless of gas or electric. Or watches YouTube. Or has an iPhone, iPhone Pro, and has Instagram Facebook, etc.
Honestly it is all bad for the planet.
My immortal and ethical thought is this:
Don’t do what is “best for the planet“, do what you believe is best for you.
Is the planet made for men, or is man-made for the planet?
I have observed a funny reverse trend; man is not permitted to walk around, topless in public, show off his body and muscles, and also, not allowed to wear short shorts, or show off his crotch bulge.
I find this highly paradoxical, because nowadays, women are permitted to show off all their body parts! Even nowadays in LA, seeing a woman wear some sort of translucent white shirt or tank top, nipples popping through is not really a big deal anymore. I think this is a good train; there’s this weird quote for men and women that this is seen as a taboo, yet, it seems that most men watch pornography and secret, just ask somebody for fun, “When you turn on Google incognito, what do you really look at?”
Or—
What do you think of Maria Ozawa?
Or,
What do you torrent on Pirate Bay, when you turn on your VPN?
Some nuances:
First, what is it that Achilles was fed as a child by his personal trainer, Chiron the Centaur? Legend has it that he was fed entrails, which included bone marrow, hearts, and other offal matter.
I also have an orthodox theory that cholesterol, dietary food cholesterol, is a natural steroid.
I believe the new ones here is critical, because people make this foolish calculus:
If I consume more dietary cholesterol, cholesterol in my food, then my blood HDL, bad cholesterol blood levels will go up, and I will eventually have a heart attack and die.
Also fat –
If you consume more dietary fat, or saturated fat, you will put on more body fat.
However, this ain’t true. I think the big issue is that in today’s world, or modern day English, the semantic lexicon issues is confusing.
Whenever I get to Korean barbecue, all eat Korean barbecue, my favorite food items to consume include all the innards; beef large intestine, beef liver, beef, beef tongue, etc.
People say that eating meat is “bad for you“, but what about organ meats? Are organ meats “meat”?
So the question is this; what is the best way to train?
My personal thought is towards some sort of ancient spartan, ancient Greek notion. The thoughts I’ve been thinking:
How did or how would the ancient Greeks or Spartan train?
First and foremost, they’re very very interesting thing is that most depictions of these great heroes and demigods is not having super super big chests, therefore the simple thought is that perhaps benchpress is a bad idea.
Also for fun, I’ve been asking ChatGPT to generate me images to visualize what an ancient Greek would look like when they were training; how a demigod would train, how Achilles would train, how Hercules would train etc.
When I observe ancient Greek statues, or visualizations of ancient Greeks, what do I look at?
First, how upright they stand. Second, they never have a shirt on. Third, how massive their legs, back, and shoulders are.
My recent experimentations with training include heavy sandbag training; I ordered a 400 pound sandbag on the roguefitness.com website, and I just been going to the local park and filling it up with playground sand.
Second, Farmer’s Carry. I ordered these farmers carry handles on Titan.fitness, and it is very interesting! The skill is not just picking it up, but walking with it.
For example, it is one thing to lift 4 plates, it is another to farmers walk and carry 4 plates for the distance.
Another thing I have observed about lifting a heavy sand back off the floor, crouching down picking it up, shouldering it, or holding it to my chest with my fingers intertwined, and walking it for a long distance is it really strengthens my triceps, my fingers and my grip and hand strength, my foot strength, my feet, as well as my abs, obliques, and back. In fact I felt more sore carrying around I have sandbag than I did atlas lifting 1000 pounds at the gym.
One of the big innovations I did while I was in Orange County was my notion of the atlas lift; loading up the barbell with as much weight as you can, and just lifting up and standing up. No squatting involved.
In fact, it looks like that my training style is starting to trend more towards a strongman concept; just lifting really really heavy stuff, and doing it in a more old-school way.
For example, atlas stones. To be able to just lift up a very very very very heavy boulder, and presumably throw it at somebody, is an interesting idea. This is what Achilles did; in some of the fight scenes of the Iliad, Homer would write:
Achilles would lift up a massive stone, that which barely two strong men could lift, throw it at his enemy, and the boulder hit their hip, and black death descended upon them.
Also something I have been observing is that perhaps heavy sandbag training is a good idea because it is “safe”, and also, more accessible. Anyone could buy a cheap sandbag on Amazon, and then just go to a local playground and fill it up with sand.
Ever since moving to LA, I’ve become more and more reticent to join the gym. Why?
First, I prefer to be outdoors.
Second, I don’t like wearing a shirt.
Third, hygiene.
Working out at the park, in a parking lot, in your garage, or outside is not ideal, but, it is more interesting and innovative.
A simple thought is to just troll amazon, Titan.fitness, or the roguefitness.com website and buy a lot of fun weight lifting equipment! My simple thought is only procure equipment that you could easily throw in your trunk, because it is fun to be able to just put in your trunk, drive to your local park and work out there.
Some more thoughts:
Here this is where I think shooting selfies of yourself, topless if you’re a man, or in the sports bra for women is a good idea, because Vitar is a good way to keep you motivated and on track with your fitness diet health and physiology.
These are my very very very very very simple suggestions: mostly via negative.
If you want to lower your body fat percentage, simple things to do which include:
When you break your fast aim for 5-6 pounds of meat a dinner.
Then the simple thought is once you are very well, how do you wish to channel your wellness?
Ultimately, I don’t think it is fitness for the sake of fitness, but rather, the fitter and stronger you become, the more adept you will become as a thinker, writer, creator, photographer etc.
Also
Zen photography assignment: strive to make the most minimalistic Zen photo, and upload your best Zen photo to arsbeta.com
I love AI. Download ChatGPT to your iPhone or iPad, and upgrade to the paid subscription, an experiment with it for a month.
Upload your photos to it, and ask ChatGPT to give you feedback on your photos, or you could upload three photos, and just ask it which of the three he thinks is the best.
Don’t miss out on AI; this is the biggest thing to hit the planet ever since the Internet!
Don’t put all of your eggs in one basket, it is good to have many different baskets. Why? If there is a single chokepoint or a single point of failure, this is not good.
I think the best way to think and approach things is just assume and predict and know that sooner or later, it will break, go down, become inaccessible, etc.
A simple thing that you could do with websites is this: how many different mirrors of your website, on different platforms. For example, build wordpress.org websites on Amazon web services, build it with blue host.com, ionos.com, The only thing I would probably not build on is Google, which always deprecates their old technology, and has a bias to discontinue products.
Also WordPress.com, maybe even Tumblr.
Propagate all the platforms!
Think islands, web, webs, multiple redundancies.
Random — if you live in LA and want to train with me, just shoot me an email at eric@erickim.com
Another fun idea that I have is that maybe there is in fact a link between stoicism, physiology, and also bodily training.
Why?
First, let us consider our physiological response to stressors environment etc.
Example, when I get angry, it is a physiological response. I feel the cortisol and stress entering my face, and enlarges my eyeballs, I get a huge shot of adrenaline etc.
Therefore, my simple thought is if you want to become a true stoic, the training must be physical, physiological.
Also, fear. What is fear? Fear is also manifested as adrenaline, as well as stress hormones, chemicals in your body, etc.
To conquer fear, and to become a true stoic, I believe it is all about mastering your physiology, mastering your stress hormones and responses etc.
ASKESIS an ancient Greek, the same notion of aesthetic, or aestheticism is rooted in the notion of training. As guesses, becoming harder, becoming stronger.
Even our best friend Nietzsche says ultimately the goal is to become the hammer, the diamond. To not be soft and yielding, but to create, become harder.
A funny observation that I’ve made is that in today’s world, to be soft, yielding, open minded, flexible etc. is seen as a virtue. Yet I find this very paradoxical and little bit contradictory in the sense that it is all context dependent;
For example, racism, Nazis, holocaust deniers, anti-Jewish or anti-Semitic or anti-African-American people; shouldn’t we be maximally intolerant to these people? A zero tolerance rule here is good.
My personal thought is that in order to become more virtuous, we actually must become harder. To become more unyielding, to become more strict, and more harsh.
For myself, even though there is a lot of things about Korean culture which I deem as bad, one of the good things that come out of Korean culture is that the man is expected to be hard, strong, stoic, never showing his emotions or feelings etc.
Why do I believe this is a good thing?
Certainly if you grow up in America, sooner or later you’re going to naturally learn to be open minded, flexible, etc. So I think that we also need the antipodes; do not just be soft and yielding and flexible, but also to become harder and stronger and more staunch.
“Never say no more than once, if you really mean it” – NASSIM TALEB
Never say “last one”?
Now that Seneca is two years, nine months old, he is an expert negotiator. He knows how to ask for 30 more seconds, one more minute, etc. Essentially he knows how to game the system.
I think from a lexical perspective, we must be very sparing with our words.
For example, it seems that the wise idea is to not just use words, but rather to enforce them.
For example, never tell a kid that something is dangerous if it isn’t really dangerous. What is truly dangerous? Kids running into the street and getting hit by a car and getting killed, falling from a very very very high surface and cracking open their skull and brain, etc. A lot of the time when we tell a kid something is dangerous, you’re just giving them false words.
“Never apologize or say “I am sorry“, unless you really mean it”. – NASSIM TALEB
I would say now I’m moving forward, do radical experiments with your health, physiology, well-being, etc. Make this your number one critical priority and I think everything else will follow.
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I think one of my current fun things is combining photography AI and creativity. Why? Anything which is a creative stimulus and turbocharger for you is great!
Don’t miss out; this is your opportunity.
In fact, Don and Jose gave me a good idea; maybe I will do some sort of AI art creativity photography workshop in the near future. Stay posted.
Very very simple. Open up the App Store, and search touch GPT and download the official ChatGPT app by open AI. Then, click the ChatGPT for icon in the top right corner, and then subscribe to the paid model which is only 20 bucks a month. Then, click the little slider drop-down thingy, and switch it to the image generation tool which is DALL-E (I think it is named after Wally, the cute little robot from the Pixar movie).
My suggestion is have fun with it! Some creative thoughts:
Thinking about FTX, the same guy, as well as the GameStop story, dumb money.
I think what people do not understand about finance is that ultimately, it comes down to human beings. I think the biggest issue though is as Michael Lewis revealed in flash boys, there seems to be weird under the table market manipulations which help some individuals get stupid rich.
Ultimately, the market, the modern day agora, I think it all comes out to speculation not “investing”. And even more than that, pride.
For example, my bitcoin pride. My funny idea is that I no longer care for US dollars, only bitcoin. in fact, now that bitcoin is bouncing back, I envision a third grade rally. I’m thinking about trying to buy more.
Some of my visions:
I think i’ve discovered the next $10 trillion industry; AI, artificial intelligence etc.
I have some grand visions for AI:
First, some sort of photo creation AI, or some sort of AI that helps you cull down your photos. for example, I currently have a backlog of about 10,000 photos, not really sure when I’m going to have the time to look through all of them.
Some sort of AI photo curator division is you could just feed it 10,000 images, JPEG, and have it simply sort and filter it down to your most interesting or best shots. You can give a custom instructions, and it will learn your preferences overtime.
Also, writing. It seems that a lot of writers have issues with “writers block“, which means that they have a vision of what they want to write, but, what holds them back is that somehow they get stuck somewhere.
A very simple solution is having AI help you write more. Some thoughts include more robust and accurate voice recognition models, which allow writers to simply voice dictate their thoughts and write, instead of having to use the agency of a keyboard.
Another fun idea that I have is some sort of notion of a camera without a shutter button. Kind of like the narrative clip, or the Google clips; I sent you some sort of device that you have mounted on you, and it automatically shoots photos when it sees something that is significant.
I still think it needs to be some sort of standalone device, because the big issue is with a clip, there are still human concerns about privacy, being creepy etc.
Whether we like it or not, it looks like we are stuck with this phone analogy. I hesitate calling it a “device”— this doesn’t really mean anything. We should just call it an iPhone; essentially everyone in America at this point has an iPhone.
We gotta make AI on phones better.
For example this is where I think Google is doing a very good job, they are actually using AI to try to make her lives more helpful.
For example, this call screening technology. The general idea is that if you get a unknown phone call, I hate picking it up. I hate scammers. It seems that Google AI is very good at screening these annoying phone calls.
What I actually think that the most critical thing about AI in phones is that there needs to be some sort of thing which allows you to know whether a certain phone call is critical or not, at this given moment.
For example, the biggest issue that we have is getting interrupted. Getting distracted, notifications etc.
In fact, I have a bold suggestion for Apple or maybe even Google:
When you first set up your phone, by default have all of the notifications off, and then later, give the user the ability to enable them all.
Or another simple suggestion is when your first setting up your phone, give a prompt to the user asking them whether they would like to have all notifications on or off by default, and or give them the ability to customize which notifications they define important.
For example, all of my notifications on my iPhone are disabled it besides FaceTime. This is a good filter because the only really critical person I need to contact me is Cindy. And she knows that if it is urgent thing, she knows how to FaceTime me.
By default I turn off text message notifications because 99.99% of them are not urgent nor interesting. Also from a pure efficiency and productivity perspective, it is far more efficient and productive to just give someone a phone call or FaceTime instead of texting them back-and-forth.
My idea is that open AI and ChatGPT should make their own standalone phone. This might be the next trillion dollar company. Or maybe open AI could collaborate with Microsoft and build their ChatGPT phone on the windows phone platform concept.
Siri is pretty good, but it looks like ChatGPT is at least a quadrillion times better. If you could naturally integrate both ChatGPT directly into the phone, the tight integration of both software and hardware and AI, I think you have hit a gold mine.
For more thoughts email me at eric@erickim.com
Let me give you another example. Let us say that I recorded a vlog and I want to directly upload it to YouTube and my website, and also extract the audio file, and uploaded to my website and my podcast platform etc. I should be able to do this all via AI script, without the need of any other foreign intercession.
Also, I want an easy way to quickly filter all my photos, and also I want to be able to do it off-line. I think the big Achilles heel of ChatGPT right now is that is pretty much useless without an Internet connection, Wi-Fi, or a mobile 4G or 5G connection.
I love my iPad Pro to death, but I hit my iPhone with a passion. It really sucks.
It sucks so bad I’m thinking about switching to android, back to android, maybe this time getting a Google pixel phone.
Honestly all the phones are bad, maybe the best solution is just no phone.
I highly highly highly recommend Elon Musk biography by Walter Isaacson, just download it to your iBooks store, Kindle, by the hardcover or just listen to it as a audiobook! The audiobook option might be interesting if you spend a lot of time in a car and commuting. Lots of lessons here.
I’m starting to read the book “going infinite“, specifically because I am passionate about bitcoin and crypto. Also I think Michael Lewis is just a great writer; his writing is fun, carefree, and also very insightful.
The Jeff Bezos invent and wander book is great. And also zero to one by Peter Thiel still resonates today.
I only trust people who admit they’re on steroids— openly.
Why are steroids such a big issue? I think the biggest issue is that they are dangerous, and also propagate false imagery for men, maybe even women. For example, I’m certain that a lot of these female CrossFit athletes, female powerlifters, female athletes, even Olympic athletes or sprinters are all taking some sort of steroids or weird performance enhancing drugs.
A very very very very very simple thought I have: one of the greatest pursuits we could do is to seek to maximize our bodily beauty to the summit, rather than purchasing all of these superficial things.
Only losers drive cars!
I saw a Lamborghini Aventador, all black super close-up the other day, very unimpressed.
What is the true flex? Walking around topless, or in a sleeve listing top, and everybody low-key checking you out. The ultimate flex.
Because the most critical question to consider is don’t think about people checking out your car, it is actually much better for your own personal pride for people to check out your body, complement your body, and be impressed by your body.
In fact, something which has been very good for my pride is I’ve been noticing that more and more people are low-key checking me out, pretty women, and I’ve also been knowing that it seems that the reason why a lot of people don’t like me, especially men is that they feel intimidated by me. I see a lot of anemic, weakling, emasculated looking men, even emasculated looking dads, pushing their strollers, looking at me with either envy or jealousy. I’ve even randomly heard a dad say in my proximity, “my bodybuilding days are over…” (I think he was referring to me). Another funny low-key compliment that I got when I was at my old crunch gym in Garden Grove was a guy talking to another guy, I think about me, saying “you know some people are steroids who don’t look like they’re on steroids” (aka, me).
.
No more excuses?
It does seem from a fun perspective, people like to ride bikes because it is fun! Personally, when I was in college, I procured a used old-school Nishiki road bike, flange to steel, and I loved it! I was able to get around so much faster And also, it was just plain fun! I thought it was super cool, it was steel with red tires, purple zebra stripe handlebars etc.
However now, I am very reticent to riding a bicycle, because honestly speaking, unless you ride in a designated bicycle path, that is not shared with cars, it is very very easy to get hit by a car and die. I like living too much, I have zero interest in dying.
Time to switch back to android or pixel?
Also, it seems that Google has a leg up for AI anyways .
I often throw around the notion of being a “real man“. But rather than thinking about being a real man, or a fake man, or not real man, maybe he’s better to think about being a strong man versus a weak man.
I want to get into real estate, or urban development, or I just want to build buildings?
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“Respect” is for suckers? Or for weaklings?
Also — “respect” (in the Confucian East Asian tradition) as a form of control, social control?
“Trust everyone, but brand your calves” is a modern twist on an old saying, drawing from the wisdom of pastoral practices and infusing it with a contemporary ethos. It’s a nuanced view that holds optimism about human nature in one hand—encouraging trust and openness as default attitudes towards others—while in the other hand, it firmly grasps the reality that self-protection and due diligence are necessary.
This adage embodies a duality that resonates with unorthodox thinking. It suggests a worldview that embraces trust not as naiveté but as a chosen strength, a testament to one’s belief in the overall goodness of people. Simultaneously, it recognizes the pragmatic necessity of safeguarding what is valuable to you. Like the ancient Greek philosophy of Stoicism, there is a deep understanding of what is within our control and what is not. Trusting others is a choice within our control, but we must also accept the uncontrollable nature of others’ actions and thus prepare for any outcome.
In the context of entrepreneurship and innovation, this phrase can be seen as a guiding principle. Entrepreneurs must trust their partners, customers, and sometimes even competitors to a certain extent, as this trust fosters a conducive environment for business and innovation. Yet, they also must protect their creations—branding their calves—through patents, copyrights, and trademarks, ensuring that their innovations remain their own. It is a dance between collaboration and competition, a balance between sharing ideas and protecting them.
It’s a reminder that while it’s beautiful and human to trust, it’s wise and necessary to take precautions—in your ventures, in your relationships, and in the stewardship of your creative endeavors.
What is the point of “working out”? To maximize your power and strength, not just your muscles and bodily aesthetics.
Teach me how I could create a machine learning algorithm which takes JPEG photos and helps me choose the best ones.
Creating a machine learning algorithm to assist in selecting the best photographs from a set of JPEG images would blend your interests in photography, innovation, and entrepreneurship. Here’s a structured way to approach this challenge:
- Define Your Aesthetic Criteria:
- First, clarify what “best” means for your use case. Does it refer to technical quality, composition, emotional impact, or a combination of factors? The criteria must be quantifiable for a machine to understand.
- Data Collection:
- Collect a diverse set of JPEG images. If you have a collection of your own that can be used, that’s great. Otherwise, you may need to source images from the web or use datasets available for machine learning purposes.
- Labeling:
- Manually label the images based on your chosen criteria. This will serve as the ground truth for training the model. Your personal photography experience will be critical in this step.
- Preprocessing:
- Images must be processed into a form suitable for machine learning. This typically involves resizing, normalization, and possibly augmentation to increase the dataset size.
- Feature Selection:
- Decide which features of an image are important for the evaluation. This could include color histograms, texture, patterns, sharpness, and composition elements. You may draw from principles of design and your photography knowledge to pinpoint these features.
- Model Training:
- Choose a machine learning model. Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) are powerful for image-related tasks. You would train your model using the labeled dataset, adjusting parameters as needed to improve accuracy.
- Evaluation:
- Test the model on a separate set of images it hasn’t seen before to evaluate its performance. You’ll likely iterate on this process several times to refine the model, similar to honing your skills in photography.
- Interface Development:
- Develop a user interface that allows interaction with your model. Here, your design sensibilities can shine through, creating a tool that’s not only functional but also pleasing to use.
- Feedback Loop:
- Integrate a feedback mechanism where your selections can be used to further train the model, creating a personalized touch to the algorithm’s choices.
Throughout this process, embracing a Stoic mindset could be beneficial—focus on what you can control, such as the quality of your dataset and the clarity of your criteria, and accept the iterative nature of machine learning as part of the journey towards a useful tool. This combination of disciplines could lead to the creation of a unique algorithm that reflects your personal photographic eye, tempered by the objectivity of machine learning.
More—
Creating a machine learning algorithm to evaluate and choose the best JPEG photos involves several steps. The definition of “best” can be subjective, varying from technical quality to aesthetic appeal. Here’s a broad outline of how you could approach this task:
- Define “Best”: Establish criteria for what makes a photo the “best.” This could include sharpness, composition, exposure, colors, subject matter, or emotional impact.
- Data Collection: Gather a large dataset of JPEG photos. You’ll need examples of both high-quality and lower-quality images. If you have personal preferences, include photos that you consider good to train the model according to your taste.
- Labeling: Label the images based on your defined criteria. This step is crucial because your algorithm will learn from these labels.
- Feature Extraction: Determine which features of the images are most important for evaluating them. This could be done through traditional image processing techniques or by using a pre-trained neural network to extract features.
- Model Selection: Choose a machine learning model. Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs) are commonly used for image-related tasks.
- Training: Train your model on your labeled dataset. You’ll feed the images into the model, allowing it to learn from the labeled examples.
- Evaluation: Validate your model using a set of images it hasn’t seen before. Adjust your model as necessary based on performance.
- Interface Development: Create a user interface that allows you to input new JPEG photos and receive evaluations or rankings based on the trained model.
- Iterate: Machine learning is an iterative process. Use feedback and results to continually improve the model.
Keep in mind that the subjectivity of photo quality can make this a complex task. You might also consider using existing platforms as a starting point, leveraging APIs that provide image recognition and quality assessment to bootstrap your algorithm.
Mockup:
For a mockup, let’s conceptualize a simple application interface that could be used for this photo selection tool:
- Homepage:
- A clean, minimalistic design with a navigation bar at the top.
- A prominent “Upload” button in the center.
- A brief description of the tool’s purpose.
- Upload Page:
- Drag-and-drop area or button to upload JPEG files.
- A progress bar or icon indicating the upload status.
- Processing Page:
- Thumbnails of uploaded images with a status indicator showing that analysis is in progress.
- Option to cancel or add more photos during the process.
- Results Page:
- Display the photos in a grid, with the best ones highlighted or at the top.
- Filters or sort options based on different criteria (e.g., sharpness, composition).
- Option to download or share the selected best photos.
- Detail View:
- When a photo is clicked, a larger view appears with a detailed breakdown of the photo’s score in terms of different criteria.
- Suggestions for improvement or reasons why the photo was rated highly.
- Feedback Mechanism:
- Ability to agree or disagree with the evaluation, helping the algorithm learn over time.
- Settings:
- Options to customize the criteria weight (e.g., prioritize color vibrancy over composition).
- Preferences for auto-selection thresholds.
This mockup would require a UI/UX designer to visualize and a front-end developer to implement. The back-end would handle the machine learning aspect, which is not visible to the user but is critical for functionality.
REAL MEN:
My ideal: open air, some covering.
Visualize a Spartan doing a one-rep max rack pull.
Technically the best lifestyle would be a lifestyle which you didn’t have to manage anything or anyone. Not having to manage any property, facilities, spaces etc.
Maybe it is a good idea to get some sort of Lexus SUV car, like a GX?
One of the things I learned from my brother-in-law John Narciso, is that a lot of these SUVs are actually built on truck platforms, which means they last forever.
For example, if you want a car with ultimate longevity, having some sort of Lexus GX car, which runs on premium gas might be a good idea. In theory it should be able to run 50 years!