Michael A. Covington      Michael A. Covington, Ph.D.
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Ichthys

Daily Notebook

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Windows 11 file right-click menu
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Shadow transit of Titan on Saturn
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2025
September
26

AI slop and the meaning of a song

The business world is now awash in "AI slop," low-quality, inaccurate, uninformative text produced by generative AI systems and wasting the time of the people who read it. Now it's infecting the World Wide Web.

The other day I heard an old, humorous song by Loggins and Messina ("Holiday Hotel," 1972) and wondered if I could find out more about what it meant. (Lyrics here.)

I knew that another somewhat puzzling song of theirs had been a warning to musicians not to play soft rock at "The Whiskey" in Hollywood, and it had taken me a while to find that out. Maybe this had a similar back story.

So... Did the songwriters ever say anything about what "Holiday Hotel" meant? Did it refer to something that other people recognized even though I didn't? Did the fans at the time know something I don't?

I used a search engine to try to find out. Note that I was using a plain search engine, not asking a generative AI system.

What I got was this piece of AI slop:

https://www.songtell.com/loggins-messina/holiday-hotel

It assures me the song is about a married man being tempted to infidelity. Well, maybe. Any song about a married man traveling could be about that. But the interpretation does not point to anything in the song to substantiate that, nor any outside information. It's just a guess.

At least that interpretation admits to being AI-generated. Someone on LinkedIn helpfully put the same question to a different AI system and got an intepretation that says it's about a financial disappointment, getting stuck with someone else's bill (which prima facie fits the lyrics better). But why should I believe either one?

The thing is, I wanted information, not guesses. Did the songwriter or his associates or early, well-informed fans ever say anything that would shed light on this? Not that I can tell.

A deeper question is what it means to ask what a song means. Surely "The song means X" should mean more than "I made up X while listening to the song." This is a perennial issue in the history of the arts and literature — can you back up your interpretation of someone else's work? Or is it just something you make up?

2025
September
23

Windows 11 file right-click menu

Here's how to rid Windows 11 of an annoying misfeature.

Back in Windows 10, you could right-click on a file or folder and get a menu of all the applicable options — copy, delete, open with various pieces of software. In Windows 11, you get a partial menu instead, like this:

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Then you have to click on "Show more options" to get to whatever you actually wanted, such as Open with Code. Now that I am using Visual Studio Code more and more, this is annoying.

Well, it turns out you can go back to the old way — the full menu opening at once, Windows 10 style — by making a registry setting. After finding the setting on a web page and correcting it, I've made a pair of command files, one to make the setting and one to remove it. Click here to get them (in a ZIP). To execute either one, right-click on it and choose Run As Administrator.

By the way, .cmd files are the same as .bat files. We've had that option for many years.

2025
September
22

Martin Volk, computational linguist

Word has reached me, without details, of the death of my very first graduate student, Prof. Dr. Martin Volk of the University of Zürich, who was the very first graduate of the University of Georgia's M.S. program in Artificial Intelligence. He leaves behind a large body of very solid work. I remember Martin as a man of outstanding intelligence and character. May his memory be eternal.

2025
September
20

Transit and shadow transit of Titan on Saturn

Last night I stayed up past 2 a.m. and viewed and photographed the passage of Titan in front of Saturn, with its shadow falling on the planet. These were taken with my Celestron 8 EdgeHD, ToupTek 678 color camera, and 2× focal extender. Each is a stack of the best 50% of about 10,000 video frames, wavelet-sharpened with PixInsight.

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All images: Copyright 2025 Michael A. Covington.

With the cataracts, and then the cataract surgery, I had not done any astrophotography since mid-May! That is probably the longest hiatus in decades.



"Homeward Bound" goes smoke-free

The lyrics of "Homeward Bound" have been emended, and Paul Simon, the composer, was in on it.

That song has always been one of my favorites, except for one phrase: "Every day's an endless stream of cigarettes and magazines." That is of course a perfectly apt description of the life of a 1960s musician on the road, but to me, violently allergic to smoke, it called up memories of foul smells and choking.

Well, I'm apparently not the only one. When Paul Simon performed it with Sabrina Carpenter recently, the phrase had turned into, "Every day's an endless stream, airport lounges, magazines..." What bothered me must have bothered someone else, maybe even the man himself!

Since the song starts out in a railway station, "airport lounges" might not be the best possible emendation, but I welcome the change. I can't find any other performance of it with that word altered (not even other performances by Paul Simon himself in recent years), but if any of you know of one, please let me know.

(There is another song called "Homeward Bound," a.k.a. "In the Quiet Misty Morning," by Marta Keen; nice song, but not the one I'm talking about.)

2025
September
9

Cloudscape

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I often see dramatically lit clouds while taking my evening walk. This is from yesterday (September 8). (iPhone photo, cropped.)



Science and the paranormal

Yesterday I read much of George Abell and Barry Singer's 1981 book Science and the Paranormal. It takes on many of the strange ideas that were fashionable at the end of the 1970s, some of which are older and are still with us. The book is vaguely skeptical of religion, but only vaguely; they do not attack serious theology, only haphazard beliefs in the supernatural.

The book has contributions by many authors. Some tidbits:

Carl Sagan's dissection of Velikovsky's cosmology is worth reading. Velikovsky's astrophysics is complete nonsense. His ancient history is also very dubious. In addition to the false physics, Sagan focuses on errors of logic, such as conflating events that must have happened many thousands of years apart.

Most of the Bermuda Triangle incidents of disappearing ships seem to have been fictitious.

Parapsychology (ESP) was, in retrospect, made almost entirely of biased observations, or so it seems. The authors tried hard to find some solid evidence, and it wasn't there.

Biorhythms are so silly that I'm amazed they ever had a following. Why should the human body's natural rhythms be absolutely fixed, the same for everyone, not disrupted even in infancy or severe illness? That's an objection I was already raising back then.

When Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto were discovered, astrologers (horoscope fortunetellers) added them to their system, giving them "influences" based on the Greek gods they were named after, even though those names had been chosen in modern times by people who did not believe in any such "influences." If that doesn't show that horoscopes are a pretending game, I don't know what does.

There's an article by Philip Klass taking apart UFOs in his Klass-ic way. (See my earlier Notebook entry about him.)

There's some good philosophy of science in the book (as befits Abell, who was strong on that); at least one of the contributors points out that being too skeptical can itself lead you to false conclusions.

On the whole, logic and openmindedness win. The book is worth reading, at least if you were exposed to 1970s silliness.



Cataract report

This is day 27 for the right eye, which has basically settled down, and day 12 for the left eye, whose refraction is still fluctuating — the left eye is currently about -1.00 myopic due to corneal swelling.

A couple of weeks ago, when the right eye was in that state and I was wearing glasses that did not correct my (unoperated) left eye at all, Melody took me to Costco and I found it rather frightening to be walking around with that degree of nearsightedness. I could see everything necessary; I wasn't about to lose my way; but it was disconcerting.

Fortunately now I have one really good eye (on the right) while the other settles down. I should add that there is nothing wrong with its vision except this fluctuating nearsightedness. I am enjoying being able to see so well.

Unfortunately, my right eye has gotten some kind of eyelid infection or possibly rosacea, which is annoying. It is not related to my cataract surgery and is not a threat to my vision, just a bother.

I should add that everything looks about 15% bigger because I am no longer wearing strong concave glasses. My eyes also look bigger as seen through my glasses; I need to get a new portrait taken for this web page and other purposes.



How far we've come

The other day I read a Reddit story about a young man who ditched a woman midway through their first date because she wanted to smoke a cigarette in his car.

I don't know if the story is true; the point is, it circulates in our time, and the audience isn't supposed to think it's crazy.

Contrast how that story would have been received in the 1960s or early 1970s. Back then, smokers were superior; they claimed the privilege of making everyone else breathe secondhand smoke; and if you objected, you were considered rude.

How did civilized people ever sink that low? I can only surmise that their thoughts were twisted by a strongly addictive drug.

It has been a third of a century since indoor air commonly became smoke-free. I credit this largely to studies showing that secondhand smoke is a health hazard and to liability insurance companies that noticed this.

But, also, smoking was already going out of fashion among high-achieving people even before the Surgeon General's 1964 report. General Eisenhower quit smoking in 1949 as a demonstration of his self-control. John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Kennedy smoked but wouldn't let the public see them doing it. Thinking back to the neighborhood I lived in as a child, although my parents smoked, the bulk of the other adults did not — far less than the national average of 60%. It was very noticeable, even in the mid-1960s, that more-educated, higher-achieving people were distinctly less likely to smoke, though it wasn't absolute.

I am an asthma sufferer whose parents smoked. My asthma wasn't diagnosed until they had both already died (at regrettably early ages). They were willing to respect my dislike for breathing smoke, but they thought it was an idiosyncratic habit of mine — neither they nor I realized that the choking that I felt around secondhand smoke was different from other people's experience.

One last item. In a social media conversation a few years ago, someone asked about the smoking areas that high schools used to have in the 1960s and early 1970s. (I saw one at Valdosta High School, and I was at the meeting where a student committee at Valwood recommended against having one, which marked us as some kind of newfangled radicals in 1971.)

Well, what came out, in this large conversation, was that several of us remembered seeing the smoking areas, but we had not used them and weren't able to answer questions about how they were managed.

After a while we figured it out — the people who has been using the smoking areas in the mid-1960s were dead! They would be in their mid-70s now, or older, and smokers simply don't live that long! A 15-year difference in lifespan is not happy news for smokers.

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