Here’s to a very large order of AI Ordite

The title of the grand order is on the short side of Trump: “Launching the Genesis Mission.”
Read in part:
In this exciting time, the challenges we face require a historic national effort, compared to the prominence of the Manhattan project that would have known our victory in the Department of Age and was the foundation of the Department of Energy (DoE) and its national laboratories.
According to Michael Kratsios, scientific adviser to the President, the comparison of the Manhattan project is just the beginning. The Genesis Mission is also, we are told, “The largest launch of scientific instruments since the Apollo program.”
Then again, the Trump Administration said things. The President said nuclear tests would begin “immediately,” and that was almost a month ago.
But consulting I.gov, Trump’s special fan page for showing his love for AI, I find that the President has high orders for the foundation of AI, and with topics like American Ai Technology, “and” to prevent the submission of ai to the Federal Government. “
None of them are audible probably as haunicaciously as the “Genesis Mission.” What is the president’s favorite AI so far?
What “Genesis Mission” really means
We are being promised a kind of AI and automation super-platform for the federal government. Based on my reading of this arrangement, the secretary of the Energy-Fracking Mogul Chris Wright – should unite all the Department of Information and All Federal agencies, and then use those to create “models of the Science Foundation.” Presumably that means that the government’s own LLMs, or some LXMs are used for scientific research.
Then our Federal Government will use its new AI models to create programs that will automate the evolution of the research work, and accelerate the success of science. ” We get set-and-forget Federal science, in other words. AI does the research, and one can even come up with the creaks like ice cream from a bucket of milk.
According to Politics, Wright says it will be “an incredible increase in the pace of scientific discovery and innovation.” They’re looking at nuclear fusion, alternative energy sources, pharmaceuticals, protein folding – all areas of science and research that pair well with AI hype.
And what exactly does the program include?
A large order does, in all fairness, explain what is done in the next year (and beyond) to some degree.
At the 60-day mark: list.
America receives a document that identifies 20 Core Science “Challenges” that the Genesis Mission can solve.
At the 90-day mark: Creativity.
America has a gift for creating policy tools that the Genesis Mission can use to build its plan.
At the 120-day mark: the plan.
At this point, the mission should have its data optimized and in place to train the models.
At the 240 day mark: another inventory.
Wright should see where the robot-driven, automated robots are headed. As funny as it may sound, here’s what the order says exactly:
“Within 240 days of the date of this order, the Secretary will review the international capabilities of the Doe National Laboratories and other Federal Repecial Facilities for manufacturing capabilities, including automated workflows and technology-related performance standards and performance-related performance standards.”
At the 270 day mark: Demo.
We get a kind of proof of concept for the Genesis Mission platform, which focuses on one of the 20 challenges mentioned above.
Within one year (and every year from now on): Examination.
Were good results achieved? Did the Genesis Mission make a scientific discovery? How did it all happen? Everything will be an annual report.
And the Genesis Mission had a better job, because on the other side of this effort is a bunch of scientific funding cuts. This regulation sought to cancel federal funding for (and subscriptions to) scientific journals. It wanted to cut $783 million in health research funding — cuts that, it turns out, will actually work. Funding should be cut to less than 100 climate change studies. Cut spending on research and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration by $100 million, and on and on.
The cuts may have had many purposes, at least one of which was to stop Dei (remember when people used to talk about Dei?). One, it seems, is to turn science into a place of automation, before there are enough AI systems to determine whether such a thing is possible.
So buckle up for automated, reduced science outbreaks, everyone! They will be here soon, thanks to Chris Wright and the Genesis Mission. Alternatively, some of those grant recipients may begin to look a little quieter in retrospect.


