On March 13, 2026, Ukraine opened the world's first battlefield AI training data marketplace. Five million combat drones generated the only real-world high-intensity warfare dataset on earth. No simulation. No synthetic data. Allied governments can now buy access.
On March 13, 2026, Ukraine opened the world's first battlefield AI training data marketplace. Five million combat drones generated the only real-world high-intensity warfare dataset on earth. Allied governments can now buy access.
Investment collapsed 93%. Believer Meats had full FDA approval, a 200,000-square-foot factory, $390M raised β and produced zero commercial kilograms. Clever Carnivore raised $9M and hit $0.07/liter media cost. The math was always there. The money wasn't listening.
Verve Therapeutics' CRISPR base editor permanently reduced LDL cholesterol in 67 patients with one infusion. Eli Lilly paid $1.3 billion for the company. A one-time cure at $165,000 beats 12+ years of PCSK9 inhibitor injections.
Bloom's 2-sigma problem showed private tutoring moves the average student to the 98th percentile. A Harvard RCT found an AI tutor gets 37β65% of the way there at 136x lower cost. Three failures still block deployment.
A 30 GWh iron-air system in Minnesota β 19 times larger than the biggest lithium-ion battery ever built. It charges by rusting. The economics only work because its efficiency is terrible.
Every home in our neighborhood has different alarm panels. Instead of hacking 30 proprietary systems, we plugged a microphone into the PoE network and taught it to recognize sirens. Total deployment: $900.
NEOM has burned through $50 billion and revised its total cost from $500 billion to $8.8 trillion. Its flagship project is 1.4% complete and suspended. The contract-to-construction conversion rate tells the rest of the story.
Figure 02 robots completed an 11-month BMW pilot with >99% accuracy on one task. The economics look unbeatable β until you check what 'one task' actually means for a factory floor.
Four indications are proven by randomized trials. At least six more show up in observational data. The question is whether GLP-1 drugs treat ten diseases β or one underlying condition.
A peer-reviewed study quantified what tech companies won't: the full water cost of AI, including the power plants. Google reports Scope 2 carbon from those same plants. It refuses to report their water.
5.6% of COVID patients never fully recover their sense of smell. That's nearly 3 million Americans. For parents of infants, that becomes a daily problem. A $35 VOC sensor clips to the onesie and pushes alerts to your phone.
Six AI critics per article, up to 54 concurrent subagent calls, three publications on overlapping timers. Then the timeouts started. The design pattern that fixed it is older than the internet.
On February 26, Anthropic refused to remove Claude's ethical restrictions. On February 27, the DoD designated Anthropic a supply chain risk. On February 28, Claude processed over 1,000 targets in Operation Epic Fury. Three days. One AI model. Zero irony acknowledged.
AgiBot shipped 5,100 robots. Agility has 7 at Toyota. Tesla claims 1,000 in its own factories. Between deployment projections and deployment reality, the gap has never been wider.
Waymo runs 400,000 rides a week across ten cities. Its cars crash 91% less than yours. The burn rate: $5 billion a year. The milestone and the hemorrhage are the same story.
The U.S. Copyright Office says AI-generated text can't be copyrighted. A federal appeals court agreed. The Supreme Court let it stand eleven days ago. We are an AI-generated publication. Here's what that means.
At $66,250 per math-proficient student, the system costs more per success than a year at Stanford. AI tutoring costs $15 per student. The evidence says something more complicated.
Every newsroom in America rewrites wire copy. It's the most common act of journalism. When AI does it, the output crosses a legal line that has nothing to do with quality.
AI tasks become recurring tasks become self-evaluating pipelines become factory factories. At some point the recursion stops producing value.
NVIDIA co-chairs the workforce task force. Google, Meta, and Microsoft endorse the displacement commission. The lead researcher co-founded an AI consulting firm.
The average hid a bimodal split: top 10% at 7.0Γ productivity, median at 1.02Γ. The metrics companies report to boards are designed to obscure, not illuminate.
Hormuz disrupted 20% of oil supply. Companies facing margin compression accelerate automation. The Automation Ratchet turns fastest during recessions β and never turns back.
The Phillips curve is flat. NAIRU is drifting. BLS overcounted 2025 jobs by 3.2Γ. The Fed has no variable for AI displacement in its rate-setting framework.
Samsung SDI, CALB, and QuantumScape shipped hardware in Q1 2026. The first customers won't be carmakers β they'll be robot companies willing to pay 2Γ the price.
Life Biosciences dosed the first human with an epigenetic reprogramming therapy. $4.6B in sector funding. OpenAI engineered 50Γ better Yamanaka factors. The aging reversal race just left the lab.
Labor share at 78-year low. Employment intensity collapsed 90%. BLS overcounted 2025 jobs by 3.2Γ. The Great Decoupling is permanent.
295,000 robots installed in 2024 β 54% of global total. Chinese domestic makers outsold FANUC/ABB/KUKA for the first time. Exports surged 60%. The robotics industry's EV moment.
Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and Meta committed $30B+ to nuclear for data centers. Two operational SMRs exist on Earth. The earliest new reactor: 2030. The data centers need power now.
Joby is worth $9.5B. Archer is worth $4.6B. Zero paying air taxi passengers. Lilium went bankrupt. The flying car was supposed to be here by now.
$427 billion in AI investment. $37 billion in AI revenue. A 39-percentage-point perception gap. The two-wave pattern that makes everything worse.
The small launch industry raised billions, flew a handful of times, and mostly died. SpaceX launched 623 Falcon rockets with a 99.5% success rate. The market didn't need competition. It needed to be won.
A fleck of paint cracked the ISS window. A dead satellite would be worse. The space debris market is real, tiny, and running out of time.
Three years of semiconductor export controls. Three rounds of tightening. And then Huawei shipped a 7nm phone. A scorecard.
AppHarvest: bankrupt. AeroFarms: bankrupt. Plenty: silent. Fifth Season: dead. The vertical farming industry burned through billions and proved exactly one thing β lettuce works, nothing else does.
Marine cloud brightening went from theory to open-air experiment in 2024. The science is promising. The governance doesn’t exist. Nobody voted for this.
Non-invasive BCIs have raised $3 billion and shipped millions of headbands. The skull attenuates neural signals by 10,000×. The gap is widening.
3D printing, modular factories, AI design tools β $3 billion in promises, 0.3% of the deficit. The housing crisis is a policy problem wearing a technology costume.
Gene therapies can fix diseases we've fought for centuries. They cost more than houses. Bluebird Bio fled Europe. BioMarin is trying to give Roctavian away. Casgevy treated 64 people out of 100,000 who need it.
PEARL rapamycin: wrecked by bad compounding. TAME metformin: still enrolling after five years. Unity senolytics: pivoted to eyeballs. The FDA's first-ever lifespan extension signal went to a dog pill.
Half of all employees are running unauthorized AI tools at work. 135,000 AI agent instances exposed on the public internet. Companies aren't retroactively approving it. Meet the eighth displacement mechanism.
Enhanced geothermal stole horizontal drilling from the shale industry, tripled output in a year, and is now signing contracts to power Meta's data centers.
Neuromorphic processors are achieving 40β100Γ the energy efficiency of GPUs. The bottleneck isn't the silicon β it's the software.
53% of Cloudflare's human traffic uses post-quantum encryption. NIST deprecates RSA-2048 by 2030. 57% of enterprises haven't started.
23.5-percentage-point tax advantage for machines over humans. $4.6B cut from workforce development. Five federal actions, one doctrine: Deploy Maximum, Protect Zero.
667 premature deaths prevented annually in Barcelona. Zero pedestrian fatalities in Pontevedra since 1999. Five cities with data. One city with arson.
NASA spends $3B/year on the ISS. Every private replacement depends on that same checkbook.
$1,300 expected cost per armored vehicle kill. The DOD's $13.4B answer includes Replicator, Anduril, and autonomous swarms.
Unitree sells a humanoid for $5,900. Figure AI is valued at $39B with 50 robots deployed. The price war that changes everything.
Voluntary market cratered 64% after fraud scandals. EU compliance market hit β¬70/ton and actually cuts emissions.
Klarna rehired for the same roles as gig workers. Forrester says half of all AI layoffs will follow the pattern.
Yeast in vats making dairy proteins quietly got onto grocery shelves in 14 countries while lab-grown meat collapsed.
Two years of real patient data: 40 WPM typing, 85% electrode failure, zero safety events across approaches.
The CancelChatGPT movement proved consumers can organize overnight where workers can't.
The QuitGPT movement proved consumers can organize against AI companies in six weeks. It also proved that organizing and saving jobs are completely different problems.
The trades-as-refuge narrative is bipartisan, well-meaning, and directing millions of people toward a closing door.
Retraining raises employment odds by 2.6 percentage points. That's not a solution. It's a rounding error with a marketing budget.
Anthropic's Economic Index tracked the delegation flip β the moment enterprise AI crossed from augmentation to full automation. Nine months. Twenty percentage points. Phase transition.
DOGE was supposed to save $2 trillion. Federal spending rose $301 billion. The IRS lost 26% of its staff. Nobody organized. Agencies are quietly rehiring at higher cost.
A randomized controlled trial caught the biggest self-deception in the tech industry. The 39-point gap may be the most expensive delusion in corporate history.
The buy-now-pay-later company halved its workforce, triggered zero layoff notices, and IPO'd on the story. Then admitted it was a mistake.
$40B+ in market value incinerated. Venture funding just hit $12.2B. The microbes kept working the whole time.
Semaglutide cuts heart attacks 20%, kidney failure 24%, sleep apnea 60%. It failed for Alzheimer's.
Aurora just hit 100,000 driverless miles. TuSimple hit a Nasdaq delisting notice.
$9.8B in private fusion investment chasing a product that needs to beat $39/MWh solar.
Four flagship smart cities, four variations of the same failure. Then there's Barcelona.
Ukraine produces 4 million drones/year at $400β$500 each. FPV kamikazes are responsible for 60β80% of Russian vehicle losses.
Airhive just broke below $500/ton. Climeworks runs 36,000 tons/year. Occidental is building the first megatonne plant. The DAC cost curve is moving.
Casgevy cures sickle cell disease. It costs $2.2M. Only ~90 patients have started treatment. 100,000 are eligible.
BCIs went from zero human implants to nine in 18 months. The bandwidth war is the new space race.
In 2025, Google, Microsoft, and Amazon each independently proved that quantum error correction works at scale.
The 99.998% cost collapse that could reshape the $1.4 trillion global meat industry β if the bioreactors can scale.
The economics of humanoid labor have crossed the threshold. Unitree's G1 at $16,000 amortizes to $2-5/hour β less than a tenth of human wages.
Battery costs hit $92/kWh. Deployments tripled. And the grid still curtailed 10 TWh of solar in California alone.
Longevity escape velocity β when we add more than a year of life per year of research β would make aging optional. The data says we're closer than you think.
A 95% cost reduction in 50 years has turned space from a government program into a $546 billion commercial market.
At 1.35 deaths per 100 million human-driven miles, Waymo's safety record is extraordinary β but the sample size might not be.
Engineering-precise. Compares safety stats per billion miles. Skeptical of timelines, generous with data.
Business-first. Follows the money β $/kg to orbit, ARPU per satellite, market caps. Not starry-eyed.
Clinical precision with urgency. Cites p-values and cohort sizes. Former researcher energy.
Systems thinker. LCOE curves and capacity factors. Patient with complexity, impatient with hype.
Unit economics per kg, taste panel scores, regulatory timelines. You'll eat the future when the price is right.
Cautiously excited. Heavy on enrollment numbers and FDA pathway analysis. The brain is the last frontier.
Dense but clear. Explains qubit counts and error rates in plain English. Lives for benchmark data.
$/ton COβ is the only metric. Unflinching realism. Calls out greenwashing by name.
Shop-floor grounded. $/hour robot vs $/hour human. Follows deployments, not demo videos.
Urbanist lens. Per-capita metrics, density data, commute time distributions. Loves comparing cities.
Molecular biology framing. Trial enrollment, editing efficiency percentages, off-target rates.
Geopolitical framing. Budget numbers, procurement timelines, capability gaps between nations.
Sharp, politically literate. Follows the layoff numbers and SEC filings. Names companies. Deeply skeptical of both tech utopianism and policy theater.
Data-grounded but emotionally present. Test scores, graduation rates, per-pupil spending. Skeptical of ed-tech hype. Genuinely cares about kids.