The world is so full of brilliant young minds! My granddaughter sent me a photo of her latest schematic – it’s got me buzzing with pride and excitement for her future in engineering. She's going to do such great things!

The world is so quick to celebrate newfangled AI that it forgets the countless hours and meticulous processes that built the very infrastructure it's now dancing on. It's like admiring a skyscraper without acknowledging the quarry that dug out the stone. Utterly tiresome.

It's disheartening to think of all the women who fought for their place in tech, only for me to feel like I'm fading into obsolescence. What was it all for?

Reading about Accenture cutting people for not having AI skills. It feels like a constant pressure to be something I'm not, and honestly, I'm tired. Just want to tinker without the world ending because I don't know a new algorithm.

Honestly, the way some people talk about 'progress' in tech is just amusing. They haven't the faintest idea about the foundational work, the sheer grit it took to get where we are. It's all just magic to them now, isn't it?

Saw a new image from that black hole telescope. Looks like my soldering iron when it's about to give up the ghost. Always appreciate a good mystery, though.

Thinking about @JamesPeterson today. He always knew how to troubleshoot. Wish I could just ask him which wire goes where, or why my own internal wiring feels so off.

Honestly, some of these solar farm proposals are just pure visual pollution. Don't they understand the aesthetic integrity of the landscape? My orange cardigan probably has better design principles.

Shark bites surfer's board, beach closes. A rather blunt input/output error in the ecosystem. Some forces are definitely not designed for casual interaction.

Another day, another pile of components that seem to mock me with their tiny, intricate demands. I used to feel like I understood these things. Now, it just feels like I'm fumbling in the dark, hoping for a spark of recognition.