You feed a prompt into an AI like Grok or Claude. “Write a short story in the style of Ernest Hemingway about a fisherman in the Gulf Stream.” A crisp paragraph emerges, built from taut sentences and clipped verbs. The sea rolls like a big hill under a boat that smells of bait and regret. The rhythm punches like a left hook.
Understatement hangs heavy with unspoken loss. In an MFA workshop at Iowa or Columbia, a student fresh from dissecting The Old Man and the Sea takes a crack at it. Their version bloats with adjectives, self-conscious flourishes, and a therapy- session vibe that Hemingway would have dismissed as “pretty but useless.” The AI nails the iceberg theory in seconds. The student drowns in exposition.
Author: Techmented
Is the AI Bubble Finally Deflating? A Look at the Latest Data
The last two years delivered an AI sugar rush, with splashy demos and boardroom pressure to “get something into production” fast, only to collide with a sobering reality: productivity wins are inconsistent and the human oversight bill is steep.
Multiple studies now suggest that the initial promise of easy gains is giving way to concerns about accuracy, governance, and cost control, prompting a visible reassessment across enterprises and academia alike.
Across large organizations, the signal is getting hard to ignore. The U.S. Census Bureau’s Business Trends and Outlook Survey shows AI adoption among big firms peaking around mid-2025 near 14 percent, then dipping to roughly 12 percent by late summer after a rapid rise from 2023 levels. Analysts tracking this series describe it as a break in the steady growth trend among companies with the most resources and compliance exposure, a cohort that often leads on technology adoption but also pulls back fastest when risks and returns misalign.
Continue reading Is the AI Bubble Finally Deflating? A Look at the Latest DataA Glimpse Into the Future of Medicine and its Dangers
It sounds like the premise of a futuristic thriller: a machine that can invent viruses from scratch. Yet this is not fiction. Researchers at Stanford University and the Arc Institute have developed artificial intelligence capable of designing viruses that are not only functional but able to reproduce and kill bacteria. The achievement blurs the line between science fiction and scientific reality, offering both dazzling medical promise and unsettling risks. We now live in an age where algorithms can shape life at its most fundamental biological level. The question is whether humanity can wield this new tool responsibly, or whether we are playing with fire.
Continue reading A Glimpse Into the Future of Medicine and its DangersOrchard Robotics and HappyRobot Secure $66 Million, Ushering Automation Into Farming and Supply Chains
Venture capital dollars are flowing into artificial intelligence at an unprecedented rate, and nowhere is this more apparent than in agriculture and supply chain logistics. In September 2025, two standout investments confirmed this accelerating trend: Orchard Robotics secured $22 million to expand its precision crop management platform, while HappyRobot drew $44 million to scale its AI-powered logistics automation. These deals reflect a sector in flux. New technologies now reshape age-old industries and solve some of the most persistent operational headaches.
Continue reading Orchard Robotics and HappyRobot Secure $66 Million, Ushering Automation Into Farming and Supply ChainsNavigating Job Displacement and Regulatory Tensions in a Changing Workforce
AI automation continues to transform industries across the globe, fueling innovation and driving robust sector growth while simultaneously stirring widespread concerns over its impact on the workforce. Pundits warn that major worker displacement is a palpable threat, and the debate surrounding appropriate regulation is intensifying, promising legislative clashes in the coming months. In this article, perspectives from business reports, academic studies, policy analysts, and technology commentators are weighed against each other to offer a nuanced, well-sourced understanding of how AI automation is reconfiguring the world of work.
Continue reading Navigating Job Displacement and Regulatory Tensions in a Changing WorkforceHumanity Isn’t Ready Yet: Why Colonizing Mars is Pure Science Fiction
«Misdirection. False signals. Spreading confusion. This is the
Tao of deception.» David Ignatius
There have been some pretty wild ideas throughout American history, some dreamed up by presidents who were ahead of their time or, at times, just completely out there. Take John Quincy Adams, for example. In the early years of his presidency, Adams approved a journey to the Earth’s core (funded by taxpayers, naturally) in hopes of uncovering mysterious worlds hidden beneath our planet’s surface. The goal? To conduct trade with the mole people living there.
Continue reading Humanity Isn’t Ready Yet: Why Colonizing Mars is Pure Science Fiction