AI hype is everywhere in the tech landscape today, and there are many rumors and falsehoods about it's value. It feels like everybody from large corporations to aspiring startups are lunging at the opportunity to insert AI into their tools and products to capture their share of the tech angel investing budget.

Personally, I think that AI is a crucial tool, but like any tool, it has its good use cases and then use cases that it just doesn't excel at. Maybe this statement will age like milk in the future, but I'm fairly confident that AI in March 2025 is a glorified text generation tool. However, like any tool, I do realize that my own bias comes from the bad anecdotes I've seen in person and read online. I don't actually understand how AI works behind the scenes, I just see the final "products," even if they aren't necessarily applied to the correct or appropriate use cases. So, I set aside some time this spring to truly sit down with a good friend of mine and genuine learn what AI has to offer and how it works at a lower level.

But first, let's check out some final graphs showing the data + context I used to keep everyone engaged. This same context eventually is fed into the ML training loop and used to train the AI.

#ai #alpaca #analysis

TL;DR: I setup my home networking with virtualized Opnsense and piHole. Yes, it is overly complex, but I kept my networking knowledge somewhat sharp.

I've always been curious about networking infrustructure, ever since the early days of my prepubescent childhood. I remember when I first got my xbox 360 around my 6th grade birthday, I immediately was curious on how it connected to the internet, how it connected to xbox's servers, and how hostbooters were able to find my "address" called an ip address and kick me offline. For those who don't know, "hostbooting" is gamer slang for a DoS attack on a client's public ip address. Essentially flooding their home network with packets to disconnect them from online gaming services. People would disconnect players on the other team for an easy win.

Anyway, that passion always carried itself with my all the way until my first intership at Datto, where I was pulnged head first into the world of networking. I remember going into the job thinking: I've been programming for over 3 years at this point. I'm pretty comfortable with computers, and have programmed a few things into my raspberry pi. I can handle this internship.