top of page

Testing Gemini Nano. She passed!

Updated: 2 days ago

I didn’t plan to turn my life into a comic book at 70… but here we are.

Over the past year I’ve been buried in code, quantum entropy, and molecular docking—building QuantumCURE Pro, my “one-man drug discovery factory.”


Somewhere between late-night bug fixes and IC₅₀ curves, I thought: I’ve lived a weird arc from wiring TV stations for live tornado coverage, to chasing storms in a yellow Hummer, to now chasing cancer cells on a laptop. That’s a story.


So I decided to tell it visually. I opened up Gemini, treated it like a storyboard artist, and started feeding it prompts:


First the cozy, chaotic office where I’m building a molecular docking system while my wife Linda tells me to go to bed. Then we rolled the clock back twenty years to the VideoMover days—TV studios, storm chasers, H2 on giant wheels, Gary England on air. From there, we jumped forward again to investor meetings, citizen-scientist kids running simulations for me, GPU racks humming like a small army, and finally a flash-forward where “QuantumCURE hit #37” ends up in a real vial in a real lab.


These panels aren’t just cute illustrations. They’re my attempt to compress decades of obsession—broadcast tech, severe-weather safety, quantum randomness, and cancer drug discovery—into something anyone can scroll through and get in a few seconds. Gemini handled the visuals; I provided the scars, the sleepless nights, and the stubborn belief that a retired engineer in Oklahoma can still move the needle for real patients.


In this post, I’ll walk through how I used AI to storyboard my journey, from storms to cells, and why I think tools like this are going to change how founders, scientists, and citizen-scientists explain what they’re building to the world. I highly recommend using Gemini Nano. It is awesome story teller!


ree
ree
ree
ree
ree
ree

 
 
 

Comments


©2026 by Quantum Blogger by QuantumLaso - 2021-2022-2023-2024-2025-2026

bottom of page