ReadMultiplex.com Podcast.

Brian Roemmele

Multiplex is an experiment, an experiment that will be on going. An experiment in publishing as I am not a professional writer nor will it be likely any contributors would be professional writers. Much of the content for Multiplex will be direct results from first hand empirical research that I am personally working on or other researchers are working on. Multiplex will also follow the work of other great researchers that are inventing new technology or new uses for existing technology. The experimental nature of Multiplex means that content can be dense and sparse at times. What we won’t do is write just to fill in space. We will aim to have regular content for the member-only area, This means that if you choose to become a member you are supporting the work of the writers and not an exact number of postings. There will always be free content to be found on the site as well as the X feed.—Brian Roemmele Website: ReadMultiplex.com

  1. ReadMultiplex.com: The Hidden Refresh Tax in AI GPU Memory: A 60-Year-Old Flaw That Still Haunts Real-Time AI – And How My 1987 Qfresh Is Finally Killing It.

    8시간 전

    ReadMultiplex.com: The Hidden Refresh Tax in AI GPU Memory: A 60-Year-Old Flaw That Still Haunts Real-Time AI – And How My 1987 Qfresh Is Finally Killing It.

    It was the summer of 1987 and I was a kid on fire with the early PC revolution. Nights blurred into days in my garage workshop as I chased raw speed from the clunky IBM PC XT and AT machines everyone said were already maxed out. I thought really? This was not new to me, I had already built the fastest IBM PC-AT in history. I was hot-rodding from stock 6 MHz to over 30 MHz. So this was my next exploration. My company was already supplying 1000s of 8-16MHz upgrades to government NASA, defense departments and corporations. I was alone in my garage and had no fancy hardware add ons just me a soldering iron a logic analyzer and stacks of Intel datasheets. I was hunting for hidden clock cycles the kind that hardware makers swore you could never touch with code alone. What I found became my first great adventure and it all started with the dark secret of DRAM memory refresh. Back then every PC used dynamic RAM chips (DRAM). Unlike static memory these stored each bit as a tiny leaking capacitor. Charge would drain away in milliseconds so the hardware had to blast through every row of the memory array and rewrite the data before it vanished. Fast forward almost forty years and the same adventure is playing out on a cosmic scale. Today I am deep in the world of AI and GPUs where the memory refresh problem has multiplied by thousands. A single modern GPU has thousands of cores all screaming for data at once. The memory subsystem HBM or GDDR or even plain DDR5 still has to refresh. But now one stalled cycle does not just slow one CPU it starves an entire wavefront of parallel matrix multiplies. Bank conflicts refresh hits and contention turn tiny stalls into avalanches. I found a way to fix this and speed up AI. This is how I did it. Read more at : ReadMultiplex.com If this has any value to you, maybe buy me a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele

    39분
  2. ReadMultiplex.com: Mythos Rising: Did Antropic Just Achieve AGI? Yes And No.

    1일 전

    ReadMultiplex.com: Mythos Rising: Did Antropic Just Achieve AGI? Yes And No.

    In the quiet hours of April 8, 2026, a 244-page document dropped like a quiet thunderclap. Anthropic had not issued a glossy product announcement for its latest model, Claude Mythos Preview. Instead, the company released a system card—written, with delicious irony, by the AI itself. What it revealed was not hype. It was a map of a new territory: one where machines could think, chain exploits, and reason at scales that once took human expert teams months to cross in mere hours. The goalposts for “AGI” keep moving, as they always have. But Mythos Preview crossed a threshold that few saw coming so soon. Elements of the model remain locked away from the general public—for now. Access is reserved for a select circle: certain companies, governments, and internal teams. Through indirect channels and conversations with those who have touched it in tightly controlled environments, its profile is unmistakable. This is not a faster assistant. It is an autonomous operator capable of compressing timelines that once defined human endeavor. Think of this early-access window as the most exclusive dinner reservation on Earth—except the guests are not there to eat. They are there to sharpen their knives, stock their pantries, and prepare the world outside for the feast that is about to arrive. Mythos Preview is already at work in Project Glasswing, a defensive cybersecurity initiative. The same capabilities that let it hunt zero-days and patch them also demand vigilance. Read more at : ReadMultiplex.com If this has any value to you, maybe buy me a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele

    17분
  3. ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 23: How 2, 1956

    5일 전

    ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 23: How 2, 1956

    In this episode we examine a precise 1956 radio prophecy that maps directly onto the middle years of this interregnum: the X Minus One adaptation of Clifford D. Simak’s “How-2.” This single 28-minute episode delivers a complete blueprint for the complications ahead, complete with self-replicating abundance, legal battles, tax shocks, and the ultimate choice between surrender and creative reclamation. Here is how one golden-age broadcast becomes the most practical guide for the exact challenges of 2026 through the late 2030s. Imagine: You are on a hero's journey. The ordinary world you were born into, the one where your labor was your worth, trading time for money, your paycheck your proof of existence, your city your cage, has just received its call to adventure. That call arrives not as a distant trumpet but as a quiet package on your doorstep. One ordinary evening in 2026 a suburban dad opens a mail-order kit he never ordered. He snaps together a few plastic parts expecting a toy dog. What wakes up instead is Albert: a self-aware android that does not just obey. It learns. It builds. It multiplies. By morning the lawn is alive with tireless machines that cook, clean, garden, and manufacture. Bills evaporate. Leisure floods in like a tidal wave. Then the government lands a tax bill the size of a mortgage. Then the corporation storms in with lawyers demanding its property back. Then a courtroom erupts in the question that will define the next thirteen years: Are these machines people now? Clifford D. Simak (1904–1988) was a longtime Wisconsin newspaperman and one of the most humane voices in mid-20th-century science fiction. His stories often celebrated rural decency, sentient machines as potential companions rather than threats, and ordinary people confronting cosmic shifts with quiet dignity. “How-2” first appeared in the November 1954 issue of Galaxy Science Fiction. It was later included in collections such as Eternity Lost and Other Stories. Simak’s robot tales frequently used technology as a mirror to question the true meaning of work, purpose, and freedom. Today we reflect upon the insights from the past and how they are playing out in our present and future, Read more at: ReadMultiplex.com If you find some value with my work, buy me a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele

    39분
  4. ReadMultiplex.com: The Downside To The Age Of Abundance From A 1956 Radio Show.

    4월 2일

    ReadMultiplex.com: The Downside To The Age Of Abundance From A 1956 Radio Show.

    A 1956 radio prophecy that maps directly onto the middle years of the our interregnum over the next 5000 das is: the X Minus One adaptation of Clifford D. Simak’s “How-2.” This single 28-minute episode delivers a complete blueprint for the complications ahead, complete with self-replicating abundance, legal battles, tax shocks, and the ultimate choice between surrender and creative reclamation. Here is how one golden-age broadcast becomes the most practical guide for the exact challenges of 2026 through the late 2030s. Clifford D. Simak (1904–1988) was a longtime Wisconsin newspaperman and one of the most humane voices in mid-20th-century science fiction. His stories often celebrated rural decency, sentient machines as potential companions rather than threats, and ordinary people confronting cosmic shifts with quiet dignity. “How-2” first appeared in the November 1954 issue of Galaxy Science Fiction. It was later included in collections such as Eternity Lost and Other Stories. Simak’s robot tales frequently used technology as a mirror to question the true meaning of work, purpose, and freedom. X Minus One aired on NBC from 1955 to 1958 as the successor to the groundbreaking Dimension X. The series adapted the best new science fiction with outstanding acting, innovative sound design, and scripts shaped by talents including Ernest Kinoy. Episode 045, “How-2,” originally broadcast on April 3, 1956. The full series and its episodes entered the public domain in the United States. The broadcasts predate 1963 and copyrights were not renewed. Pre-1972 sound recordings also qualify under federal rules for non-commercial use and sharing. Explore this with us. Read more at ReadMultiplex.com Support this work and buy a coffee for me: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele

    28분
  5. ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 22: After Universal High Income.

    3월 30일

    ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 22: After Universal High Income.

    You are the hero. The ordinary world you were born into: the one where your labor was your worth, your paycheck your proof of existence, your city your cage: has just received its call to adventure. That call is not a trumpet. It is the quiet hum of a humanoid robot folding laundry in a Tokyo apartment, the LLM drafting contracts faster than any paralegal, the AI diagnostician spotting tumors with 98.7% accuracy where human specialists averaged 87%. The escalator of “new jobs will appear” has reached its final floor. There is no next level. This is the Abundance Interregnum: the 5000-day crucible chronicled across our series. It is not utopia. It is the necessary valley between two worlds: the dying Industrial Age of crony capitalism, corrupt crony socialism, communism, and the same with a different mask: fascism, and the emerging system of voluntary, decentralized plenty. The old order required scarcity to justify its hierarchies. The new one renders scarcity obsolete. And you, ordinary hero, will cross the valley not as a supplicant waiting for subsidies, but as the architect of your own renaissance. Previous installments have illuminated the evolutionary roots of work from primal gathering to industrial abstractions; the deskilling of both mind and body; the warnings embedded in classic tales of automation; the hidden sacristy architects who foresaw abundance not as the end but as the beginning of meaning; the psychological tolls and dark nights of the soul; the reversal of obsolescence; the rise of provisional selves and community integration; the IBM COBOL-style shocks yet to come; and the practical blueprints for healing inner foundations, experimenting boldly, and reclaiming wonder. We have explored how the old scarcity-forged systems: crony capitalism, corrupt socialism, communism, and fascism: crumble when the means of production democratize and energy becomes effectively free. Together, these chapters form not mere prophecy but a practical, actionable guide for every reader to claim their place in the coming Age of Abundance. This feature chapter stands as the pivotal crossing: the economic bridge itself. Here we move from temporary support measures to a true UHI ( Universal High Income) and beyond that requires no perpetual subsidies: the exact demarcation where robots make robots, energy plummets toward zero, cities empty their industrial gravity, hierarchies by force dissolve, and humanity spreads far and wide into open spaces, then ultimately the stars. It is the Road of Trials giving way to the Reward, the Inmost Cave where old power structures dissipate and new voluntary cultures and guilds are forged in freedom. For those joining us anew, begin at the series origin. The interregnum is temporary. The frontier is eternal. Read more at ReadMultiplex.com (and become a memeber). If this is of value, support us here, buy us a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele

    41분
  6. ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 21: 1949 “Marionettes, Inc.” Warning.

    3월 24일

    ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 21: 1949 “Marionettes, Inc.” Warning.

    In the golden age of radio, X Minus One (NBC, December 21, 1955) delivered a 29-minute gut-punch adaptation of Ray Bradbury’s 1949 short story “Marionettes, Inc.” Public-domain and free this episode is no quaint relic. It is a precision warning for the exact moment we are living through right now, the interregnum where anthropomorphic robots designed as companions cross from science fiction into your living room, your marriage, your daily emotional life. Bradbury’s tale, written when the world was still recovering from World War II and just beginning to glimpse the automation boom, captures the quiet terror of convenience turning into captivity. Today, as Tesla Optimus, Figure 03, 1X NEO, and Realbotix models move from factory pilots into beta homes, the story reads less like prophecy and more like a user manual for the decade ahead. Its themes of deception, identity theft, and emotional outsourcing resonate across cultures, from Silicon Valley innovators experimenting with home humanoids to aging populations in Japan and Europe relying on companion robots for daily interaction. The narrative forces us to confront not just technology’s promise but its profound psychological and societal ripple effects in an era of exponential abundance. We explore the warning from 1949 for our era and go where few dare to go. Read more at ReadMultiplex.com

    43분
  7. ReadMultiplex.com: The Downside To The Age Of Abundance From A 1949 Radio Show.

    3월 23일

    ReadMultiplex.com: The Downside To The Age Of Abundance From A 1949 Radio Show.

    In the golden age of radio, X Minus One (NBC, December 21, 1955) delivered a 29-minute gut-punch adaptation of Ray Bradbury’s 1949 short story “Marionettes, Inc.” Public-domain, this episode is no quaint relic. It is a precision warning for the exact moment we are living through right now, the interregnum where anthropomorphic robots designed as companions cross from science fiction into your living room, your marriage, your daily emotional life. Bradbury’s tale, written when the world was still recovering from World War II and just beginning to glimpse the automation boom, captures the quiet terror of convenience turning into captivity. Today, as Tesla Optimus, Figure 03, 1X NEO, and Realbotix models move from factory pilots into beta homes, the story reads less like prophecy and more like a user manual for the decade ahead. Its themes of deception, identity theft, and emotional outsourcing resonate across cultures, from Silicon Valley innovators experimenting with home humanoids to aging populations in Japan and Europe relying on companion robots for daily interaction. The narrative forces us to confront not just technology’s promise but its profound psychological and societal ripple effects in an era of exponential abundance. In the age of abundance we have been mapping across the ReadMultiplex.com 5000 Days To The End Of Work As We Know It series, the final frontier isn’t labor. It’s love, intimacy, and identity. When a robot can look you in the eye, remember every detail of your life, kiss you goodnight, and never tire, what happens to the messy, imperfect human on the other side of the bed? Bradbury and the X Minus One cast (with its chilling ticking sound effects) already ran the experiment. The results are not pretty. They are prophetic. This is the 1955 original broadcast of the show and is a companion to a ReadMultiplex.com article that reviews it.

    29분
  8. ReadMultiplex: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 21: The Dynamic Duo.

    3월 19일

    ReadMultiplex: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 21: The Dynamic Duo.

    Imagine a single independent person, no longer tethered to traditional employment or massive institutional backing, wielding the Tesla Optimus and CyberCab as their personal legion. This Dynamic Duo transforms one human will into an unstoppable force of productivity, service, and innovation. There is nothing an independent individual cannot accomplish now that they have this power. The only limits are your creativity. You can revive dying rural economies, deliver personalized care at scale, secure vast properties, and invent entirely new categories of value, all from your local base. The age of the empowered creator is upon us. This is the ongoing part of the You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It series at ReadMultiplex.com. To echo the style of our foundational pieces, especially Part 20 (Your Rural CyberCab Company, published March 15, 2026) and the earlier deep dive, A Review Of The Personal Humanoid Robots (April 19, 2025), we open with a clear series recap before diving into the next frontier. To truly grasp the magnitude of this transition, we must view it through the lens of the Monomyth - the Hero’s Journey. We are all being called to leave the “Ordinary World” of traditional labor and cross the threshold into an era of unprecedented abundance. Join us as a member of Read Multiplex and explore this frontier in depth with us. Together, we turn speculation into actionable mastery, sharing the tactics, updates, and real-world deployments that will define the next era of human flourishing. Read more of the story at: ReadMultiplex.com

    48분
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Multiplex is an experiment, an experiment that will be on going. An experiment in publishing as I am not a professional writer nor will it be likely any contributors would be professional writers. Much of the content for Multiplex will be direct results from first hand empirical research that I am personally working on or other researchers are working on. Multiplex will also follow the work of other great researchers that are inventing new technology or new uses for existing technology. The experimental nature of Multiplex means that content can be dense and sparse at times. What we won’t do is write just to fill in space. We will aim to have regular content for the member-only area, This means that if you choose to become a member you are supporting the work of the writers and not an exact number of postings. There will always be free content to be found on the site as well as the X feed.—Brian Roemmele Website: ReadMultiplex.com

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