Friday, June 12, 2026

Daughter Paddleboarding In Greece -- 2026

Locator: 50968ARCHIVES. 

On sailboat / catamaran: storm coming up. 


 On YouTube, a short, just the first one: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/ZTSA2NIBzgk

Silicon Valley -- ChatGPT -- 2026

Locator: 50967SPACEX.  

Time lines:

  • from the steam engine (first commercial use) to US transcontinental railway: 1712 -- 1869;
  • Stanford University engineers enter the frontier of global electrical communications to the "internet boom" which was sparked in 1993 with the release of the first graphical web browser: 1909 -- 1993;  
  • Apple Computer start up to 2.5 billion installed active devices: 1984 -- 2026
  • Nvidia's gaming GPUs (CUDA) to Nvidia's AI (AlexNet): 2006 -- 2012  
  • SpaceX founded -- SpaceX IPO: 2002 -- 2026 

This post brought over from another blog. Needs to be formatted, edited.

Updates

Apple: 2.50 billion installed active devices as of early 2026, a new record: expanding its ecosystem by 150 million devices year-over-year. This massive install base serves as the primary driver for Apple's high-margin Services revenue. 

Original Post

Apple's active device install base surpassed 2.35 billion as of early 2025, a new record, with growth fueled by strong sales of iPhones (especially iPhone 16), Macs, and iPads, contributing significantly to their booming Services revenue and reinforcing their ecosystem's strong user loyalty. This substantial user base drives high engagement, with over a billion paid subscriptions and ongoing device additions year after year. 

THE LINEAGE: 1909 STANFORD → MODERN SILICON VALLEY


Below is the sequence in 10 steps, each linking to the next with real technical, institutional, and personnel continuity.

⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻

1. 1909 — Stanford Engineering’s Wireless Group


Key figures: Cyril Elwell, Prof. C.D. Marx
Breakthrough: Investigating the Poulsen arc (continuous-wave wireless).

Professor Charles David Marx: 

Professor Charles David (C.D.) Marx (1857–1939) was one of the original faculty members of Stanford University, joining as a founding Professor of Civil Engineering in 1891. Affectionately known as "Daddy Marx," he served at Stanford until his retirement in 1923, and was instrumental in shaping both the university and the surrounding city

Why it matters:

This is the first time Stanford engineers enter the frontier of global electrical communication. Elwell realizes that the U.S. has no CW wireless technology and that Denmark’s Poulsen arc is superior to spark-gap systems.
This is the spark.

⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻

2. 1910 — Cyril Elwell forms the Federal Telegraph Company (FTC/TFC)


Location: Palo Alto/SF Bay Area
Innovation: Imports and industrializes the Poulsen arc; builds the most powerful radio transmitters in the world.


Significance:
    •    First major wireless company on the West Coast
    •    First long-distance CW transmissions in the world (California → Hawaii)
    •    Creates a cluster of high-level radio engineers in the Bay Area

This is effectively Silicon Valley startup #1
.

⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻

3. 1911–1913 — Lee de Forest joins FTC


Why this matters:

de Forest (inventor of the Audion triode) works for FTC and realizes that continuous-wave systems require amplification. This period is where de Forest matures the vacuum tube from an oddity into a practical amplifier.
Technical leap:

CW (from Stanford) + de Forest’s triode amplifier = the foundation of all radio, broadcasting, radar, and early computing.
This is the birth of the electronics era.

⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻

4. 1915–1920 — AT&T, vacuum tubes, and long-distance telephony


AT&T sees what FTC and de Forest are doing and fully adopts the triode amplifier.

Key breakthroughs:
    •    Transcontinental voice telephony
    •    First radio telephone service
    •    Large-scale tube manufacturing
    •    Institutional research culture

This phase births Bell Labs.

The Stanford → Elwell → de Forest chain now merges into the most important research engine of the 20th century.

⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻

5. 1920s–1940s — Bell Labs builds the electronic world


Bell Labs becomes the epicenter of:
    •    Radio engineering
    •    Radar
    •    Microwave networks
    •    Early digital switching
    •    Information theory
    •    Semiconductors (intensifying in the 1930s–40s)

Hundreds of engineers trained here migrate outward — the first Bell diaspora.

This is the prehistory of Silicon Valley’s engineering culture: applied physics + corporate R&D + future orientation.



6. 1947 — Bell Labs invents the transistor


Key figures: Bardeen, Brattain, Shockley

Shockley directs the semiconductor group. This moment creates:
    •    the semiconductor industry
    •    the idea of solid-state physics as a commercial frontier
    •    the future of computing, digital logic, and integrated circuits

This invention is directly downstream of:
Stanford → Elwell → FTC → de Forest → AT&T amplifiers → Bell Labs



7. 1953–1955 — William Shockley returns to Palo Alto

Shockley leaves Bell Labs and founds Shockley Semiconductor Laboratory in Mountain View.
This is partly personal (mother in Palo Alto) but also reflects the long-standing Bay Area radio engineering environment (seeded by FTC decades earlier).

Shockley brings:
    •    transistor physics
    •    semiconductor process engineering
    •    Bell Labs culture of innovation

This is the first semiconductor lab in what becomes Silicon Valley.



8. 1957 — The Traitorous Eight leave Shockley → Fairchild Semiconductor


They bring:
    •    planar process
    •    silicon transistors
    •    the foundations of the integrated circuit
    •    the culture of spinouts

Fairchild becomes “Silicon Valley Zero.”

From Fairchild come:
    •    Intel
    •    AMD
    •    National Semiconductor
    •    dozens of spinoffs

The region transforms from radio → microwave → semiconductor → computer electronics.

⸻⸻⸻

9. 1960s–1980s — The Semiconductor Expansion


The Fairchild and Intel diaspora snowballs into:
    •    microprocessors
    •    memory chips
    •    personal computers
    •    networking equipment
    •    workstation computing
    •    graphics hardware

Stanford’s engineering school becomes deeply intertwined with local industry (Terman, HP, and federal defense funding play major roles).

This solidifies the structure of Silicon Valley as an ecosystem:
University + venture capital + small startups + engineering culture + rapid spinouts.


10. 1990s–2020s — The Modern Valley: Internet, Mobile, AI


Direct lineage:
    •    Stanford students found Yahoo, Google, Snapchat, Instagram
    •    Semiconductor and hardware heritage → Nvidia, Apple Silicon
    •    Wireless communication heritage → Qualcomm, WiFi, LTE, 5G
    •    Bell Labs ideas → digital signal processing, fiber optics, packet switching
    •    FTC’s foundational wireless ideas → modern radio, WiFi, Bluetooth, satellite internet

Everything from GPUs to cloud computing to smartphones sits downstream of the 1909 decision by a few Stanford engineers to explore wireless telegraphy.



THE CHAIN IN A SINGLE LINE


1909 Stanford wireless experiment →
Federal Telegraph Company →
de Forest + triode amplification →
AT&T long-distance networks →
Bell Labs research culture →
Transistor →
Shockley returns to Palo Alto →
Fairchild Semiconductor →
Intel + the Valley spinoff network →
Modern Silicon Valley 

**************************
Modern Silicon Valley

The valley:

  • basic research
  • applied research
  • scientific-military-industrial-political 
    • unsung heroes? Vietnamese women in US following Vietnam War
    • had the US not lost the war, it's very likely "this" would have been "offshored" to Vietnam
    • as it was, Taiwan became a perilous chokepoint in the early 2020s 
  • business
  • finance: Schwab, PayPal, Sofi, Robinhood


**************************************


AI Prompt:

In the 2023 softcover edition of Malcolm Harris' "The History of Palo Alto, p. 98, the first full paragraph (the second full paragraph in subsection called "The Age of Synergy") is the best one paragraph summary of the start of the engineering history of Stanford University and the history of wireless telegraph and telephone, Cyril Elwell, C.D. Marx, the TFC, and the first transmission between California and Hawaii. 
I had not seen this history before but it is amazing that this is where "it" all started. It could have been almost anything else but it was 1909, Stanford, and wireless telegraph, and the Pacific. 
It is an extraordinary moment once you see how all the threads line up — and it’s easy to miss because the canonical histories of Silicon Valley usually start later, with Shockley in the 1950s or the “Traitorous Eight.” 
Malcom Harris is one of the very few who pushes the origin story back to the actual hinge: 1909, Stanford’s engineering department, and a handful of people who decided to bet on wireless at exactly the right moment.

A few things that make that paragraph so unusually powerful:

1. The “accident” of timing — 1909


Marconi had just completed transatlantic signaling, Poulsen arc technology was emerging, and the U.S. still had no dominant wireless standard. Everything was up for grabs. If Stanford students and faculty had taken a different interest—hydraulics, mining, structural engineering—the future of global electrical communication might well have been shaped somewhere else entirely.  

2. Cyril Elwell as the hinge figure


Elwell is one of those “invisible founders” of Silicon Valley.
He takes a Stanford class project, hears about the Poulsen arc, sees the technical gap in American wireless, and goes to Denmark himself to examine it. That is the exact kind of technical-entrepreneurial initiative that later becomes the Silicon Valley signature.

3. Prof. C.D. Marx as technical catalyst


Marx doesn’t get enough credit. The way Harris emphasizes him is unusual in the literature: Marx is the one who recognizes the opportunity, encourages Elwell, and has the engineering gravitas to make the project credible.


4. The TFC (Federal Telegraph Company) as the first Silicon Valley-style startup


The TFC predates Hewlett-Packard by decades but has all the patterns:
    •    a Stanford technical breakthrough
    •    outside investors
    •    a technology-driven market opportunity
    •    young engineers moving fast in a new industry

They built the world’s most powerful continuous-wave transmitters and created the first large-scale American wireless network.

5. The first California–Hawaii transmission


This is where the story becomes genuinely epic.
A group of Stanford-adjacent engineers, backed by a local company, created a transmission powerful enough to reach Hawaii—the longest continuous-wave wireless link in the world at the time.

Harris is correct to treat this as the true beginning of what would become:
    •    de Forest’s adoption of continuous-wave amplification
    •    the vacuum-tube revolution
    •    AT&T’s long-distance radio telephony
    •    and ultimately the Bell Labs diaspora that shaped 20th-century electronics

It really is the “ur-moment” of Silicon Valley: a group of young engineers who believed that world-scale technical problems could be solved with local ingenuity and a little money.

Wind -- EIA Won't Give Up -- June 12, 2026

Locator: 50966WIND.  

Link here

From the link:

The SunZia Wind Project, the largest wind farm in the United States, began commercial operations this month. The wind farm, located in New Mexico, has a total net summer generating capacity of 3,650 megawatts (MW) and is composed of 916 wind turbines. SunZia’s capacity is more than three times larger than the next two largest wind farms, Alta Wind in Southern California (1,098 MW) and Great Prairie in northern Texas (1,027 MW). The SunZia Wind Project works with a high voltage transmission line to deliver the wind power generated to Arizona and California.

Pattern Energy started construction of the SunZia Wind Project in 2023, after almost two decades of permitting and planning. The wind farm spans three counties. The northern part of SunZia located in San Miguel and Lincoln counties has 242 turbines, while the southern part in Lincoln and Torrance counties has 674 turbines. By April 2026, some of the wind turbines were producing power and contributing to the grid during a testing phase.

Before the SunZia Wind Project came online, net summer wind generating capacity in New Mexico totaled 3,997 MW. The new capacity from SunZia will bring total wind capacity in New Mexico up to 7,647 MW. With this addition, wind accounts for 45% of the capacity mix in the state, followed by 19% from solar and 19% from natural gas capacity.

Most of the electricity generated at SunZia will be exported to Arizona and to Southern California. To be able to export the power generated by this project, Pattern Energy also built the SunZia Transmission Project—a 550-mile high voltage direct current transmission line that goes from the SunZia Wind Project site in central New Mexico to south-central Arizona. Of the SunZia transmission line’s 3,021 MW of power capacity, 2,131 MW will be delivered and consumed in Southern California via the Palo Verde Substation.

Generation from the SunZia Wind Project is reported by the California Independent System Operator (CAISO) in EIA's Hourly Electric Grid Monitor. On May 15, 2026, CAISO reported 7,122 MW of hourly wind generation, which is 20% higher than the previous annual record of 5,922 MW in 2024.

? -- This Was Up For Less Than One Minute -- 5:45 A.M. CT -- June 12, 2026

Locator: 50965SPCX.  

Was removed immediately. Later: 10:39 a.m. CT -- this is back up and SPCX has not yet begun trading.  Later: appears to have opened at $150. Less than what most folks hoped, I suppose, but the day is not yet over.


 

Irregular Warfare / Initiative -- Hyperwar -- June 12, 2026

Locator: 50964HELIUM.  

Link here. Archived

The Iran War: A War with or against the AI Sector? Jean-Michel Valantin Jun 12, 2026.

The 2026 Iran War marks the dawn of hyperwar, accelerating military AI integration while disrupting critical upstream supply chains like Qatari liquid helium. This dual physical and financial pressure creates a shared strategic crisis for both the U.S. and Chinese AI sectors. 

On the very first day of the Iran War, February 28, 2026, more than 1,000 Iranian targets were struck by US airstrikes. This is almost double the number of strikes carried out on the first day of the Iraq War, launched in 2003. The intensity and precision of these strikes are inextricably linked to the massive use of artificial intelligence (AI)by the American and Israeli militaries.

However, Iran is also involved in the militarization of AI, conducting drone and missile strikes in the air, while also investing heavily in cognitive warfare through the production of deepfakes on social media to destabilize public opinion among its adversaries.

But the interplay between the Iranian war and AI deepens further with Iranian strikes and Qatar's inability to export liquid helium. Liquid helium is a chemical component essential for cooling the machines and photolithography plants that print the semiconductors needed for the computers and data centers of artificial intelligence companies. And Qatar accounts for more than 38% of global helium production.

Finally, the kinetic strikes on data centers in Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates also reveal the physical vulnerability of artificial intelligence infrastructure. (This potentially includes submarine fiber optic cables, which ensure the flow of data and information between data centers in the Persian Gulf and Africa, the Middle East, and Asia).

In other words, the Iran War is evolving into a global hyperwar system, accelerating the militarization of AI while simultaneously plunging both the American and Chinese AI sectors into overlapping systems of pressure. These systems directly exploit the financial and physical vulnerabilities of AI, which has become the new engine of power.

We argue here that the Iran War is transforming into a vast system of co-integration between the artificial intelligence sector, warfare, and disruptions to the oil and gas sectors, particularly Qatari oil and gas. 
U.S. Hyperwar vs. Iranian Hyperwar AI on the Battlefield

During the first four days of the Iran War (February 28–March 3, 2026), combined US and Israeli military strikes reportedly hit over 4,000 targets in Iran. This pace appears to have continued since then. The intensity and speed of the targeting, execution, and precision of the strikes exemplify how the integration of artificial intelligence capabilities is redefining warfare.

Indeed, AI systems, such as Palantir and Claude, are coupled with machine learning systems within integrated architectures, including Project Maven. Similarly, the theater of operations is being transformed into a data matrix due to the integration of various forms of space-based observation, electronic eavesdropping, and the deployment of airborne and ground-based sensors. Nevertheless, the use of these technologies does not eliminate the risk of errors, such as what appears to have been a tragic strike on a school, which reportedly killed nearly 175 schoolgirls.

Thus, Iran is literally embedded in a “digital battlefield,” and the country is the generator of the data that feeds the AIs that generate it. This “augmentation” of military capabilities through AI is part of the history of the phases of technological modernization since World War II, including radio communications, radar, sonar, missiles, and nuclear weapons. Then, during the Cold War, computer science and space imaging became dominant, culminating in the Revolution in Military Affairs of the 1990s and the integration of digital and space capabilities to integrate the various branches of the U.S. military.
Much, much more at the link.