Silicon ChipWe both have truths, are mine the same as yours? - September 2023 SILICON CHIP
  1. Outer Front Cover
  2. Contents
  3. Subscriptions: PE Subscription
  4. Subscriptions
  5. Back Issues: Hare & Forbes Machineryhouse
  6. Publisher's Letter: Super-accurate analogue clock
  7. Feature: We both have truths, are mine the same as yours? by Max the Magnificent
  8. Feature: The Fox Report by Barry Fox
  9. Feature: Net Work by Alan Winstanley
  10. Project: GPS-Synchronised Analogue Clock by Geoff Graham
  11. Project: MINI LEDRIVER by Tim Blythman
  12. Project: Wide-Range OHMMETER by Phil Prosser
  13. Feature: Make it with Micromite by Phil Boyce
  14. Feature: Max’s Cool Beans by Max the Magnificent
  15. Feature: AUDIO OUT by Jake Rothman
  16. Feature: Circuit Surgery by Ian Bell
  17. Feature: Electronic Building Blocks by Julian Edgar
  18. PCB Order Form
  19. Advertising Index

This is only a preview of the September 2023 issue of Practical Electronics.

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Articles in this series:
  • (November 2020)
  • Techno Talk (December 2020)
  • Techno Talk (January 2021)
  • Techno Talk (February 2021)
  • Techno Talk (March 2021)
  • Techno Talk (April 2021)
  • Techno Talk (May 2021)
  • Techno Talk (June 2021)
  • Techno Talk (July 2021)
  • Techno Talk (August 2021)
  • Techno Talk (September 2021)
  • Techno Talk (October 2021)
  • Techno Talk (November 2021)
  • Techno Talk (December 2021)
  • Communing with nature (January 2022)
  • Should we be worried? (February 2022)
  • How resilient is your lifeline? (March 2022)
  • Go eco, get ethical! (April 2022)
  • From nano to bio (May 2022)
  • Positivity follows the gloom (June 2022)
  • Mixed menu (July 2022)
  • Time for a total rethink? (August 2022)
  • What’s in a name? (September 2022)
  • Forget leaves on the line! (October 2022)
  • Giant Boost for Batteries (December 2022)
  • Raudive Voices Revisited (January 2023)
  • A thousand words (February 2023)
  • It’s handover time (March 2023)
  • AI, Robots, Horticulture and Agriculture (April 2023)
  • Prophecy can be perplexing (May 2023)
  • Technology comes in different shapes and sizes (June 2023)
  • AI and robots – what could possibly go wrong? (July 2023)
  • How long until we’re all out of work? (August 2023)
  • We both have truths, are mine the same as yours? (September 2023)
  • Holy Spheres, Batman! (October 2023)
  • Where’s my pneumatic car? (November 2023)
  • Good grief! (December 2023)
  • Cheeky chiplets (January 2024)
  • Cheeky chiplets (February 2024)
  • The Wibbly-Wobbly World of Quantum (March 2024)
  • Techno Talk - Wait! What? Really? (April 2024)
  • Techno Talk - One step closer to a dystopian abyss? (May 2024)
  • Techno Talk - Program that! (June 2024)
  • Techno Talk (July 2024)
  • Techno Talk - That makes so much sense! (August 2024)
  • Techno Talk - I don’t want to be a Norbert... (September 2024)
  • Techno Talk - Sticking the landing (October 2024)
  • Techno Talk (November 2024)
  • Techno Talk (December 2024)
  • Techno Talk (January 2025)
  • Techno Talk (February 2025)
  • Techno Talk (March 2025)
  • Techno Talk (April 2025)
  • Techno Talk (May 2025)
  • Techno Talk (June 2025)
Techno Talk We both have truths, are mine the same as yours? Max the Magnificent We live in interesting times. Not so long ago, everyone living somewhere like the UK was exposed to the same sources of news, and those sources did their best to maintain the integrity of their content. If only we could say the same today. T here’s an old expression that ‘History is written by the victors.’ This means that, although certain things may or may not have happened, the eventual record of what occurred is documented by people with power and influence who at best were there and saw it (if we’re lucky) or who just heard or read about it (if we’re not). Either way, they cast their own interpretation of what happened under the influence of social, political and personal considerations. There’s also the fact that most of us don’t have great memories to begin with. Actually, that’s not strictly true because my dear old mother’s mind is so sharp that she sometimes remembers things that haven’t even happened yet. Be that as it may, in many respects the way our biological memory systems work is awesome overall, it’s just that most of us aren’t tremendously talented with respect to remembering specific happenings. Things are further complicated by the fact that our memories are coloured by our emotional state at the time an event takes place. And none of this is aided by the fact that the way our minds work means that every time we recall something, we inadvertently tweak that memory and end up storing a slightly revised version. As a result, since the dawn of time, people who experience the same event may recall it in very different ways. I offer myself as living proof. Whenever I do anything with my wife (Gina the Gorgeous), sometime later, when she tells the tale of our adventure to a third party – like her mother, for example – it’s as though I attended a completely different event (usually one for which my presence was surplus to requirements). That may be one of the reasons people were so excited by the advent of photography, as epitomised by the oldest surviving photograph of an image formed in a camera, which was created by the French inventor Joseph Nicéphore Niépce circa 1827. By the 1850s, printed photographs were starting to become available to the general public. At that time, most people assumed that a photograph offered a faithful depiction of a 8 scene, which led to sayings like, ‘The camera never lies’. As we now know, of course, the camera rarely tells the truth. Some people lay the blame on the creators of digital image editing applications like PhotoShop. In response, I would suggest that these simple souls search for ‘Cottingley Fairies’ on Google. Dire doings being done Most of the time, photos are altered for artistic or commercial effect. It’s unfortunate that some nefarious scoundrels modify media with maleficent motives. All of which leads us inexorably to the topic of deepfakes (a portmanteau of ‘deep learning’ and ‘fake’). This involves using artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) to manipulate or generate synthetic media in the form of audio and visual content. For example, take a tool like Lyrebird – https://bit.ly/3NGDpYr – which can listen to someone talking, or a recording of someone talking for a couple of minutes and extract a ‘digital signature’ of that voice. Later, using a text-tospeech mode, it’s possible to create a recording of that person apparently saying whatever you want them to say. I’m sure this capability will come in handy for all sorts of legitimate purposes. What could possibly go wrong? Where things start to get really scary is when an AI is used to analyse videos of someone talking. Using natural language processing (NLP) to understand what’s being said (one part of understanding the emotional content of the message), the AI can analyse the video frame by frame and associate phonemes (units of sound that distinguish one word from another) with lip movements and other facial phenomena (blinking, squinting, grinning, grimacing…). Later, if presented with an audio recording (a recording that could be generated by a tool like Lyrebird), the AI can generate a frame-by-frame photorealistic video of that person saying whatever you want them to (appear to) be saying. Fake news! One of the things I didn’t fully appreciate when I lived in England was the quality of the news. After spending the past 33 years of my life listening to the drivel they call news here in the US, hearing the dulcet tones of a BBC news announcer explaining what’s actually happening without offering their personal interpretation brings a little tear to my eye. The news channels over here are so far apart, and some are so divorced from reality, that reports of the same happening suggest the events they describe occurred on different planets. The same thing happens with newspapers. I know that the tabloids in the UK tend to lean one way or the other politically speaking. As I recall, however, at least you used to get the impression they were reporting the same thing, albeit from their own perspective (I hope this is still the case). Once again, things are more dire here in the US. And then there’s the fact that many people now obtain their news from social media channels whose algorithms are tuned to keep on feeding each viewer more of what they like, which boils down to them only seeing things that reinforce what they already believe to be true. Things are further confused by the advent of generative AIs like ChatGPT, whose models are trained on opensource material that may have inbuilt biases and inaccuracies. As Pontius Pilate says (well, warbles) to Jesus in Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Jesus Christ Superstar, ‘And what is ‘truth’? Is truth unchanging law? We both have truths. Are mine the same as yours?’ Is there an answer to all this? Personally, I’m longing for the day when my AI-powered augmented reality (AR) glasses highlight misinformation in text (with associated links to validated sources), they add pop-up information bubbles to correct misrepresentations on television, and they pre-emptively whisper ‘they’re lying’ in my ear whenever a politician opens his or her mouth. (What? Cynical? Moi?) Practical Electronics | September | 2023