AI Dynamics

Global AI News Aggregator

EDUCATION

  • Cognitive Augmentation Reshapes Employee Learning Approaches
    Cognitive Augmentation Reshapes Employee Learning Approaches

    Does cognitive augmentation reshape how employees learn? by @antgrasso #DigitalTransformation #Technology #Innovation #EmergingTech #TechForGood

    → View original post on X — @ronald_vanloon, 2026-04-08 05:50 UTC

  • Gifted Kids Lack Humanities Programs Leading to Intellectual Decline

    The only problem is that there are no humanities programs for gifted kids. The next generation of humanities teacher and profs were the results of grooming intellectually mediocre normies, so the humanities are basically dead now

    → View original post on X — @plinz,

  • 10 Machine Learning Algorithms for Beginners Guide
    10 Machine Learning Algorithms for Beginners Guide

    10 #MachineLearning #Algorithms for Beginners by @PythonPr #AI #ArtificialIntelligence #ML #DL

    → View original post on X — @ronald_vanloon, 2026-04-08 04:13 UTC

  • AI Awakening Class Kickoff with Steve Jurvetson at Stanford
    AI Awakening Class Kickoff with Steve Jurvetson at Stanford

    What an awesome way to start my AI Awakening class at Stanford! The legendary @FutureJurvetson has a knack for seeing around corners thanks to his deep technical knowledge. I can't wait to see the projects the students deliver in 10 weeks. Steve Jurvetson (@FutureJurvetson) 🤖 Just did the kickoff guest lecture at Stanford Business School for "The AI Awakening" — a new class cross-listed with CS where the students will use agentic AI to forge new businesses in 3-person teams. So I vibe coded a rocket launch tracking calendar app that integrates launches big and small (from SpaceX to the local LUNAR rocketry club). It took 4 minutes for me + 30 minutes of compute: rocklaunch-rptzu8y3.manus.sp… We discussed many topics, including the new "society of thought" paper that dropped 40 years after Minsky's Society of Mind, and five years after Hawkins' memory-prediction framework in A Thousand Brains: science.org/doi/10.1126/scie… — https://nitter.net/FutureJurvetson/status/2041693675877756999#m

    → View original post on X — @ceobillionaire, 2026-04-08 02:57 UTC

  • Abstract ideas and higher education accessibility concerns

    Most people don't benefit very much from engaging with abstract ideas. Unfortunately, they need to go somewhere, because they are expected to have a degree certificate, so they squat in the humanities. It's not their fault

    → View original post on X — @plinz,

  • Apple blocks Anything app despite serving millions of vibe coders
    Apple blocks Anything app despite serving millions of vibe coders

    .@Apple will literally approve 50 identical 'Chat with AI Waifu' scam apps before noon.. .. but they block a cool vibe-coding tool that actually teaches kids how to code. Make it make sense. Anything (@anything) Guideline 2.5.2 – Gatekeeping – Vibes denied we haven't talked about this publicly for months we tried to resolve it privately with emails, calls, appeals, and four technical rewrites to comply with whatever Apple wanted here's our truth, unfiltered on March 26th, Apple removed Anything from the App Store then they brought us back now they removed us again and I think it's time to say something, because this isn't really about us. It's about who gets to build software, and who gets to decide for most of the history of computing, making an app required years of specialized training. You either knew how to code or you didn't, and if you didn't, your idea stayed in your head forever. that barrier is falling right now. Millions of people are discovering they can describe what they want and get a working app they call themselves vibe coders and they are the most exciting audience in technology they're building things nobody else would have built because nobody else had their problems a firefighter in Northern California used Anything to build an emergency incident response app he never wrote a line of code. Did hundreds of iterations, testing each one on his iPad through our mobile preview app got it into the App Store. Now he's selling it to fire departments across the state. it would have cost him over a hundred thousand dollars to hire engineers He spent a few hundred bucks. That guy is why we exist. Not the technology. Him. And the millions of people like him. our mobile app did one thing for people like him it let them preview what they were building with Anything on their own phone. GPS, camera, notifications, things you can only test on a real device with native code They'd iterate, try it, tweak it, try again. When they were happy, they'd submit to the App Store through the normal process Apple reviewed it like any other app. Our mobile app got approved last year. We didn't hear a word of concern. then in December, they started blocking our updates, citing the infamous Guideline 2.5.2 the rule designed to prevent malicious apps from downloading code to change their behavior after review We understood the concern, even if we disagree it applies to us. We tried to fix it. Four different technical approaches, each one specifically designed to address what they told us. Each one rejected. we didn't go public we didn't tweet we kept trying then they pulled us from the App Store. We still didn't say anything. We worked with them, got reinstated, believed we'd found a path forward Then they pulled us again. at some point silence stops being patience and starts being complicity. We have builders who depend on us. They deserve to know what's happening and why. Guideline 2.5.2 is a good rule. apps shouldn't be able to pass review and then become something else. But that's not us. We help people preview their own work on their own device Expo Go has done the exact same thing for professional developers for years and is on the App Store right now, today! the only difference is our users aren't professional developers they're the firefighter they're the teacher building a classroom app they're the person who discovered last week that they could build software at all that's who Apple is locking out. Not us. Them. and here's what I need Apple to understand these people are the future of the App Store. Not a sideshow. The future. The number of people who can build apps is about to go from millions to hundreds of millions to eventually everyone the platforms and tools that serve those people will determine where they build every vibe coder who ships through Anything is a new developer in Apple's ecosystem who didn't exist a year ago They want to build web apps, Android apps, and yes iOS apps we help them add in-app purchases. We help them make their apps secure and scale. We catch rejection issues early. We are a feeder system for the App Store The safety argument is hollow. Preview apps only run on the builder's own device. They're sandboxed in the Anything mobile app. Want anyone else to use it? You still submit to the App Store. Apple still reviews every line. We're not bypassing review. We're a dress rehearsal for it. but none of that matters when a reviewer sees "downloads executable code" on a checklist and reaches for reject without asking what the code is, how it actually works, or who it's for. we're not waiting we launched text-to-app. Text us and we'll build your iOS app in the cloud We're shipping a desktop companion for on-device previews next. We'll find a way to serve our builders We always do. but I'm done being quiet about why we have to the people we serve, the ones crazy enough to start their own thing, building apps for their fire departments and their classrooms and their small businesses they deserve to test what they're making on the device it's made for that's not a loophole that's how building works – Apple can be the platform where the next hundred million builders get started – or they can keep banning the tools those people depend on and watch it happen somewhere else we all know which one the firefighter will choose — https://nitter.net/anything/status/2041599393237774507#m

    → View original post on X — @datachaz, 2026-04-07 22:44 UTC

  • Users Discover Non-Chat AI Interface Beyond Original Learning Tool Purpose

    I'm blown away at what ppl are using this for!! I built it as a learning tool. But people seem to really love using it as an AI interface that isn't chat that can work in their program of choice. Examples of usage so far: – A Mom building her first app on Lovable – A dentist debugging his OpenClaw setup – A photographer getting feedback in Lightroom – A person learning to animate SVGs in Framer – Founders keeping track of their todos. – Designers getting feedback in Figma – A student outlining her thesis in G-Docs – Traders analyzing live stock charts And A LOT of people using it to advise them on how to best reply to messages in Slack/Email. Super cool. The people yearn for a non-chat interface haha. Also, it's kinda crazy how as the founder you really don't know what the product is until you put it in the hands of users. The minute it's in the hands of others, it's theirs now! And that's really where you find out what it is. Farza 🇵🇰🇺🇸 (@FarzaTV) I built this thing called Clicky. It's an AI teacher that lives as a buddy next to your cursor. It can see your screen, talk to you, and even point at stuff, kinda like having a real teacher next to you. I've been using it the past few days to learn Davinci Resolve, 10/10. — https://nitter.net/FarzaTV/status/2041314633978659092#m

    → View original post on X — @scobleizer, 2026-04-07 22:08 UTC

  • Stanford Seminar: How People Use ChatGPT with Zoë Hitzig

    Here's a terrific seminar by @zhitzig at the Stanford @DigEconLab Stanford Digital Economy Lab (@DigEconLab) For those that missed Zoë Hitzig's visit to our Seminar Series, it's now available on YouTube! Watch "How People Use ChatGPT," moderated by Director @erikbryn, here: piped.video/czrKIiuHZ-U — https://nitter.net/DigEconLab/status/2041601680345854260#m

    → View original post on X — @erikbryn, 2026-04-07 19:53 UTC

  • 20 Most Important AI Concepts Explained
    20 Most Important AI Concepts Explained

    20 Most Important AI Concepts Explained! #BigData #Analytics #DataScience #AI #MachineLearning #NLProc #LLM #IoT #IIoT #PyTorch #Python #RStats #TensorFlow #Java #JavaScript #ReactJS #GoLang #CloudComputing #Serverless #DataScientist #Linux #Programming #Coding #Books #100DaysofCode geni.us/20-Concepts-Xplained

    → View original post on X — @gp_pulipaka, 2026-04-07 14:26 UTC

  • Harvard Opens More Free Online Courses in AI and Data Science
    Harvard Opens More Free Online Courses in AI and Data Science

    Harvard Opens More Free Online Courses in AI, Data Science! #BigData #Analytics #AI #MachineLearning #DataScience #IoT #IIoT #Python #RStats #TensorFlow #JavaScript #ReactJS #CloudComputing #Serverless #DataScientist #Linux #Programming #Coding #100DaysofCode geni.us/Harvard-Courses-AI

    → View original post on X — @gp_pulipaka, 2026-04-07 14:26 UTC