Month: March 2026

AI Just Got a Lab Coat

The chatbot era was cute. But this week, AI started doing actual science. Mount Sinai won a million dollars for Biomni-AD—an AI co-scientist that turns months of Alzheimer’s research into minutes. You ask a question in plain English. It gives you code, analysis, figures. It connects genetics, proteins, clinical data. It finds drug targets faster. And they’re giving it away… Read more →

When Chips Learn to Talk with Light

There’s a quiet revolution happening in how we build AI hardware, and it started last week at GTC. NVIDIA’s Jensen Huang stood on stage and showed off Feynman—a chip architecture that replaces the copper wires between chips with fiber optics . Copper has limits. It heats up, it slows down, it wastes power. Light doesn’t. By moving to optical interconnects, Feynman… Read more →

GTC 2026 and the Week AI Stopped Being Cute

You know how every March, San Jose turns into this weird tech pilgrimage site? That’s happening right now. NVIDIA’s GTC is here, and with 30,000 people crammed into convention halls, it’s hard to ignore . Jensen Huang stood on stage at the SAP Center and basically said: we’re done with the chatbot era. AI is now infrastructure. Not a tool you… Read more →

When AI Sees the Future: From Geopolitical Prediction to Industrial Intelligence

he Week AI Predicted a War and Built a Factory—Grok’s Geopolitical Breakthrough Meets Industrial Automation’s Largest Expansion. From Elon Musk’s “measure of intelligence” to Saudi Arabia’s first vehicle plant, AI is now simultaneously prophet and builder. The Intelligence Paradox This week, artificial intelligence demonstrated its dual nature with startling clarity. On one hand, xAI’s Grok correctly predicted the date of… Read more →