Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Optical Illusion Request

 Optical Illusion Request

I was thinking about the artist Escher who designed optical illusions, and wondered what AI could come up with that was new? I asked ChatGPT & Copilot to create something, and the designs were okay. Not spectacular. Both started off doing architectural images, and neither looked too original. Then I asked for the designs to not be buildings, and ChatGPT complied, but Copilot still gave me a building structure, so that was a failure even though the image wasn't too bad.

Here is the first one from ChatGPT:

Here is the first from Copilot:


After asking for the image to not be a building, here is what ChatGPT gave me:

This is what Copilot gave me:


I think both of these platforms need more work on creating this style of art. I'm just not impressed by any of the designs too much. 








Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Podcasting Tips for Beginners

 Podcasting Tips for Beginners

I have an online friend who showed an interest in starting up a podcast, and as exciting as that sounds, I wondered what tips AI could give him to make it an easier beginning. 

Here's what ChatGPT came up with:

Starting a podcast is much easier than it used to be, but the podcasts that actually grow tend to get a few key things right from the beginning. Here are the most important tips that make a real difference:

1. Pick a Specific Focus

The biggest mistake new podcasters make is being too broad.

Instead of:

  • “A podcast about life”
  • “Random conversations”
  • “News and opinions”

Try:

  • “Financial tips for women over 50”
  • “Funny stories from church musicians”
  • “Small-town gardening in hot climates”
  • “Behind-the-scenes forum and online community stories”

Specific podcasts are easier to:

  • market
  • title
  • recommend
  • grow an audience around

People subscribe when they instantly understand what they’ll get.


2. Your Audio Matters More Than Fancy Graphics

Listeners will tolerate:

  • average artwork
  • basic editing
  • simple music

They will not tolerate bad audio for long.

Good beginner setup:

  • USB microphone
  • headphones
  • quiet room with soft surfaces

Popular beginner microphones include:

  • Audio-Technica ATR2100x-USB
  • Samson Q2U
  • Blue Yeti

Avoid:

  • recording in kitchens
  • loud air conditioners
  • bare echoing rooms
  • using laptop microphones if possible

A closet full of clothes honestly sounds better than many expensive-looking rooms.


3. Consistency Beats Perfection

A decent weekly podcast will usually outperform:

  • an amazing podcast that disappears for months
  • constant rebranding
  • endlessly delayed “perfect launches”

Choose a realistic schedule:

  • weekly
  • every other week
  • monthly

…and stick to it.

Listeners build habits around consistency.


4. Plan Episodes Before You Record

Even conversational podcasts benefit from structure.

Have:

  • opening topic
  • main talking points
  • transitions
  • closing question or takeaway

Otherwise episodes can wander and lose energy.

A simple outline often sounds more natural than “winging it.”


5. Your First 10 Episodes Are Practice

Most podcasts improve dramatically after several episodes.

Early challenges:

  • talking too fast
  • saying “um” constantly
  • weak pacing
  • awkward intros
  • overexplaining

That’s normal.

Don’t quit because episode 3 sounds rough.

Many successful podcasts had awkward beginnings.


6. Keep Episodes Tighter Than You Think

New podcasters often make episodes too long.

A strong:

  • 20–40 minute episode

usually performs better than:

  • 2 hours of unfocused discussion

Leave listeners wanting another episode.


7. Learn Basic Editing

You don’t need Hollywood production.

But learning to remove:

  • long silences
  • repeated phrases
  • microphone bumps
  • excessive filler words

makes a huge difference.

Popular editing software:

  • Audacity
  • Adobe Audition
  • GarageBand

8. Titles and Thumbnails Matter A LOT

Many people decide to listen based only on:

  • episode title
  • cover art
  • short description

Weak:

  • “Episode 14”
  • “Another Chat”

Better:

  • “Why Most Online Communities Fail”
  • “The Biggest Mistakes New Gardeners Make”
  • “What Church Choir Directors Wish Beginners Knew”

Curiosity + clarity works well.


9. Don’t Depend on Friends and Family for Growth

Most podcast growth comes from:

  • search
  • clips
  • social media
  • guests
  • communities interested in your niche

A small but targeted audience is more valuable than broad uninterested listeners.


10. Guests Can Help You Grow Faster

Guests bring:

  • new perspectives
  • credibility
  • built-in audiences

But:

  • research them first
  • prepare questions
  • keep conversations moving

A good host guides the conversation without dominating it.


11. Record More Than One Episode Before Launching

Launching with 3–5 episodes helps because:

  • listeners can binge immediately
  • you appear more established
  • you reduce pressure after launch

It also gives you backup episodes if life gets busy.


12. Create Short Clips for Promotion

Short video/audio clips often grow podcasts faster than full episodes.

Great platforms for clips:

A single good 30-second clip can outperform weeks of traditional promotion.


13. Choose a Format That Fits Your Personality

Possible formats:

  • solo teaching
  • interview show
  • co-host conversations
  • storytelling
  • comedy
  • panel discussion

Some people sound fantastic with guests but awkward solo.
Others are excellent solo educators.

Choose the format that feels sustainable.


14. Don’t Obsess Over Expensive Equipment

A $400 microphone will not fix:

  • weak topics
  • boring delivery
  • inconsistent posting

Good content and personality matter far more.

Many successful podcasts began with simple setups.


15. Podcasting Is Usually Slow Growth at First

This surprises many beginners.

Most podcasts:

  • grow gradually
  • build through trust
  • improve over time

The people who succeed are often the ones who simply kept going longer than others.


16. Have a Clear “Why”

Ask yourself:

  • Are you building a business?
  • Creating community?
  • Teaching?
  • Entertaining?
  • Promoting another project?
  • Preserving stories/interviews?

Your goal changes:

  • episode style
  • marketing
  • monetization
  • pacing

A podcast with purpose usually feels more focused and memorable.


A few podcast hosting platforms beginners often use include:

And for remote interviews:


Monday, June 1, 2026

New Soda Pop for over 50 crowd

 New Soda Pop for over 50 crowd

I wondered if AI could come up with a brand new flavor of soda pop. I was disappointed by both ChatGPT's and Copilot's suggestions.

Here they are:

ChatGPT

“Golden Hour Sparkling Soda”

A soda designed specifically for adults 50+, focused on nostalgic comfort, lighter sweetness, and sophisticated flavor instead of candy-like intensity.


Flavor Profile

Honeyed Meyer Lemon + Vanilla Spice + Light Black Tea

Think of it as:

  • the comfort of an old-fashioned cream soda,
  • the brightness of fresh lemonade,
  • and the smooth finish of iced tea.

Not overly sugary. No harsh syrupy aftertaste.

Why It Fits the 50+ Crowd

Many soda brands today are aimed at teenagers or energy-drink buyers. This flavor instead appeals to:

  • nostalgia,
  • smoother flavors,
  • less sweetness,
  • and a more “relax on the porch” feeling.

It would especially resonate with people who grew up with classic fountain sodas but now want something more refined.

Taste Notes

  • Top notes: Meyer lemon zest
  • Middle: wildflower honey
  • Finish: vanilla bean, subtle cinnamon, and tea tannins

Very lightly carbonated so it doesn’t feel aggressive.

Sweetener Strategy

  • Real cane sugar in smaller amounts
  • Tiny touch of honey
  • Around half the sugar of mainstream cola

Packaging Style

The branding would avoid neon colors and extreme graphics.

Instead:

  • brushed gold accents,
  • cream-colored label,
  • vintage typography,
  • glass bottle option,
  • “small batch” aesthetic.

Possible Taglines

  • “Soda Grown Up Gracefully.”
  • “The Taste of Slow Evenings.”
  • “Classic Comfort. Modern Flavor.”
  • “A Softer Kind of Sparkle.”

Flavor Variations

If the main flavor succeeded, you could expand with:

  • Maple Cream Birch
  • Peach Ginger Tea Fizz
  • Blackberry Sage Cola
  • Orange Clove Cream
  • Cherry Almond Sparkler


Optical Illusion Request

 Optical Illusion Request I was thinking about the artist Escher who designed optical illusions, and wondered what AI could come up with tha...