The conversation about AI and creativity isn't going anywhere, and it was front and centre at Frontify's recent Paradigms conference in Morocco. Jonas Hegi, co-founder and executive creative director of Builders Club, leads one of the most forward-thinking creative studios operating today, blending film, design, and emerging technology for clients like Apple, Nike, OpenAI, and Beats. At Paradigms, Jonas' talk explored what it means to stay experimental, human and craft-driven in a future increasingly shaped by machines.
I trained a Google Gemini model on my most effective emails, giving it a large sample of my writing and Devpost context. When drafting important messages, I collaborate with the model to ensure I'm expressing myself as I intend. It's still my tone and ideas, but the model helps me deliver consistently strong communication. I also built a Google Gemini CLI "Executive Assistant" to replace my visual Kanban board with a markdown-based, conversational task manager.
Gartner's study pours cold water on the current state of the industry, however, noting that the "mass proliferation" of agentic tools "far exceeds the present demand".
With so much AI-generated content flooding the internet, a new question has surfaced: Does authenticity still matter? On The Intersect with Cory Corrine, host Cory Corrine digs into this exact topic with Caroline Giegerich, the vice president of AI at the Interactive Advertising Bureau. From AI-generated billboards that leave people unsettled to synthetic influencers gaining millions of followers, the line between what's real and what's not is getting harder to see. But as Giegerich points out, that very confusion might be what makes authentic, human-driven creativity even more valuable than ever.
The easy answer is we have seen this movie before. Structured credit isn't fundamentally dangerous. But it does distribute risk throughout the system in a way that makes it harder to see and track and understand. And yes, that does worry me. It makes the job harder for investors, regulators, journalists, and others who act as a natural counterbalance against excess.
Others are digging deeper into what makes them human - voice, vulnerability and imperfection. For now, both are probably right. But the split is getting sharper. The recent arrivals of Meta's Vibes tab and OpenAI's Sora app are the reason. Meta because it's building a scrollable stream of AI-created video. OpenAI for taking that one step further, making it possible for anyone to generate AI video on demand, no camera required.
It's not just the civilian corporate executives and white-collar workers who are leaning into the generative AI boom at work. Military leaders are diving in too. The top US Army commander in South Korea shared that he is experimenting with generative AI chatbots to sharpen his decision-making, not in the field, but in command and daily work. He said "Chat and I" have become "really close lately."
Based on OpenAI's Sora 2 model, the Sora app and site devise videos in a few seconds based on your text descriptions. You can add audio to your video with both sound effects and dialog that sync up with people speaking. You can also choose the style -- anything from animated to photorealistic to surreal. Also: There's a new OpenAI app in town - here's what to know about Sora for iOS
That's the term data scientists from Stanford's Social Media Lab and BetterUp, an online coaching platform, recently coined to describe "AI-generated work content that masquerades as good work, but lacks the substance to meaningfully advance a given task." It's the workplace equivalent of the cutesy videos and obviously fake photos filling up your social feeds, which have become known as AI "slop."
It appears that AI-ready datacenters will be growing at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 33 percent per year between today and 2030. That's a heck of a lot more datacenters, which, in turn, means a hell of a lot more power consumption. Why? Well, AI sucks so much power down because training and operating modern models, especially generative AI, requires extremely intensive computational resources and vast amounts of data processed in parallel across large clusters of high-performance GPUs and TPUs.
"Suppose you want to do one thing that would really kneecap a country that would really mean that in 20 years' time, that country is going to be behind instead of ahead," Hinton told Stewart when pressed on why he thinks the US will lose its AI advantage. "The one thing you should do is mess with the funding of basic science, attack the research universities, remove grants for basic science in the long run. That's a complete disaster."
Google has released the Genkit Extension for Gemini CLI, a specialized plugin that brings deep, framework-aware AI assistance directly to the terminal, aiming to streamline the development and debugging of Genkit-based applications.The extension's primary function is to streamline Genkit-based application development by surfacing essential information like flows, traces, and documentation without requiring the developer to leave the command line. Genkit is Google's open-source framework for building and orchestrating generative AI applications.
In July 2006, I accepted a job offer at Google that brought me into tech after an arts and humanities education. I climbed the ladder at Google to found Google's Open Research Group, working on issues related to measurement, privacy, and AI. In 2016, I cofounded the AI Now Research Institute at NYU, the first university-based research institute to examine broader social and political economic considerations surrounding AI.
Earlier this week, Zelda Williams - daughter of Robin Williams - took to Instagram to ask fans of her father to stop sending her AI-generated videos of him. "[P}lease, if you've got any decency, just stop doing this to him and to me, to everyone even, full stop," she wrote, according to the BBC. "It's dumb, it's a waste of time and energy, and believe me, it's NOT what he'd want."
They want specific phone number, they want a price for something, they want to get directions they want to find a you know payment web page for their taxes like every possible thing you can imagine. I think the vastness of that is underappreciated by many people and what we see is that doesn't it's not changing like AI hasn't really changed those foundational needs in many ways.
Normally, when you say artificial intelligence, it would typically conjure images of sleek servers and lightning-fast processing. But designer Max Park has taken a radically different approach. His project "Prompting Nowhere" transforms a vintage Singer treadle sewing machine into a thought-provoking AI system that challenges our assumptions about technology, labor, and human values. The project draws its name and inspiration from William Morris's 1890 utopian novel "News from Nowhere," which envisioned an anti-industrialist society where craft and art formed the backbone of civilization .
Martinet keeps her eyes peeled for candidates who go beyond listing their AI skills on their resume-she actually loves it when talent uses it in the hiring process. During interview rounds when applicants showcase their skills through mini projects or tests, the executive values prospective hires who enhance their assignments with the tools. Leveraging AI in tandem with their human capabilities feeds back into the killer combination the software giant, which has a market cap of $141 billion, is looking for.
ChatGPT, for example, came back with what felt like a movie script. Tunis started with a sunrise walk through Sidi Bou Saïd, pastries and mint tea in hand, followed by a whirlwind through the Medina and a dramatic half-day at the ruins of Carthage. Then, in Tozeur, it pulled the cinematic card with "Star Wars" filming sets in the desert, and camel rides across dunes at sunset.
Musk's tunneling and infrastructure firm The Boring Companyis accused of nearly 800 violations by Nevada regulators, including digging without approval, dumping untreated water onto city streets, failing to install silt fences, and tracking dirt from construction sites onto nearby roadways, a ProPublica investigation discovered. Then there is Tesla, which was hit with an enforcement action by California's Department of Insurance for routinely denying or delaying customer claims despite years of warnings from the state regulator.
A new survey found that nearly one in five high schoolers in the US - 19 percent - say that they or a friend have used AI to have a romantic relationship, an alarming figure that will surely raise new concerns over how the tech's adoption among kids and teenagers may be impacting their mental health. The findings were published in a new report from the Center for Democracy and Technology, which surveyed 1,000 high school students, 1,000 parents, and around 800 sixth through 12th grade public school teachers.