Claude and OpenAI are incredible tools — I use them every day. But when a non-technical person asks them to build a website, the AI gives them a developer’s roadmap. It tells them to sign up for Vercel. Set up a Supabase database. Create a GitHub account. Install Node, configure an API, deploy via CLI.
To you and me? That’s just a random Tuesday. To a 75-year-old who just wants a landing page? That is an absolute brick wall.
AI models used to help diagnose medical conditions have a problem: They’re ready and willing to identify patients whose data was used to train them.
"The cleanest form of AI use is no use," Kaveh Madani, a water scientist and director of the United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health in Canada. "So when you could avoid using AI, don't use it."And don't say "Thank You" or "Please" to your LLM. They don't care and it just wastes tokens, right?
Don't use it for simple things. Don't use it for calculations, directions, store hours, recipes or shopping lists, which are all searches people used to do without AI, but now do it with AI and waste power and water, Luccioni said.
"Yeah, it's great. You can generate a chocolate chip cookie recipe with Claude, or you can open a damn book. Like, those still exist. You really don't need Claude."
of Startups 2026. Everybody uses LLMs to code. As long as you know what the LLM has done, I say it's fine.
Nvidia Touts ‘100% Reduction in Water Use’ With New Data Center Design. Yes, evaporative cooling is becoming obsolete, being replaced by dry (chilled air) cooling, dielectric (immersion) cooling and closed-loop systems. The water-propylene glycol solution mentioned in the article is part of a closed-loop system. This answers one objection. The other is energy. Here's an interesting dialog:
The other Portland’5 theaters have all had steep dropoffs. Attendance at the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall last year was down by 28% from its peak seven years earlier. The 300-seat Winningstad Theatre is drawing half as many people as it did in 2018.
“People are willing to come back and see commercial shows,” Lembo said. “They’re less willing, for whatever reason, to come back and hear the symphony.”
The same goes for other nonprofit arts organizations. The Oregon Children’s Theatre shut down operations last year as attendance fell and it lost the support of the Kaiser Permanente Educational Theatre program. That left a big hole in the Portland’5 schedule that Lembo said it’s still working to fill.
These were corrected for the difference in cost of living, and the CPI(2025)/CPI(2000) is about 1.87.Median usual weekly earnings of workers with a high school degree only:
2000: $968
2025: $980
Median usual weekly earnings of workers with a bachelor degree only:
2000: $1,587
2025: $1,580
Median usual weekly earnings of people with a bachelor’s degree or higher:
2000: $1,705
2025: $1,747
According to data from Retraction Watch, papers by published by Chinese authors between 1996 and 2025 were around six times more likely to be retracted than those by American or British ones. Before the Chinese government banned the practices in 2020, universities often gave researchers publication quotas or paid them bonuses for publication. Authorities have also tried to tackle the problem by cracking down on paper mills and reforming academic evaluation. But reputations take time to repair.Fool me twice, shame on me.
Today, on my final day as Director of National Intelligence, I’m releasing never-before-seen communications and documents exposing how Dr. Fauci provided millions in US taxpayer dollars to fund dangerous gain-of-function research at the Wuhan lab, worked with politicized elements within the Intelligence Community to suppress the truth about his actions and hide the virus’ lab-leak origins, and lied to Congress while under oath in 2024. It’s time you know the truth.
While the initial budget pitched by Mayor Keith Wilson proposed cuts to Portland Police, Portland Fire & Rescue and Portland parks, councilors were able to include $3 million for urban forestry, and save some police support staff positions and a Portland fire engine.
They also restored $2.5 million to Portland Street Response, Project Ceasefire, and summer Free for All programs.
In this way, the emergence of today’s AI health products remind me of the rise, in the 2010s, of ride-sharing services such as Uber and Lyft. The taxi industry is heavily regulated, making it difficult for new players to enter the market. Yet by skirting and at times ignoring those rules, ride-sharing companies were able to acquire a critical mass of users in a short period of time. Pretty soon, governments had little choice but to adjust their laws to match what had by then become the status quo. The same pattern could end up playing out in medicine. Will regulations meant to ensure that medical products are safe and effective remain in force? Or will they instead be weakened or removed to clear the path for tools that everyone is already using?