Another Day, Another Hype Cycle: Meet Your Child’s New Digital Best Friend I’ve been doing this long enough to know when a trend isn’t just a trend. Sometimes, it’s a reckoning. Read More
The Unregulated Frontier of Childhood AI Pixar, bless their hearts, just unveiled their next big villain for Toy Story 5: a green, frog-shaped kids’ tablet named Lilypad. A genius move, tapping into that universal parental dread Read More
The Allure of the Artificially Intelligent Playmate Let’s be honest, Pixar’s ‘Lilypad’ villain, the genius green frog tablet from Toy Story 5, is a fascinating concept. A smart toy gone rogue. But if Pixar Read More
Beyond the Pixar Parody: AI Comes for Playtime There’s a new villain in the latest Toy Story movie, I hear. A green, frog-shaped kids’ tablet named Lilypad. It’s a genius stroke of satire, Read More
The Trojan Horse in the Playroom: AI’s New Frontier The latest Pixar villain isn’t some repurposed toy or a forgotten antagonist from the back of the closet. In my head, the real villain Read More
The Quantum Conundrum: When Building a Computer Isn’t Enough I’ve watched quantum computing for two decades now. Longer, if you count the theoretical musings that predated the actual lab work. And every time Read More
The Relentless Pursuit of a Usable Qubit There’s a persistent, almost philosophical problem at the heart of quantum computing, one that I’ve watched brilliant minds wrestle with for decades: how do you get Read More
The Quantum Conundrum: Too Few, Too Fickle For more than a decade, I’ve watched the quantum computing narrative ebb and flow. We’ve seen the breathless headlines about breakthroughs, followed by the quiet reality Read More
The Quantum Conundrum: More Hype, Fewer Qubits I’ve been writing about computing for a long time. Long enough to remember when ‘neural networks’ were a research curiosity, not the bedrock of multi-trillion-dollar companies. So Read More
The Endless Search for a Better Qubit I’ve been covering tech for a long time. Long enough to remember when ‘dot-com’ wasn’t a bust, but a promise. And if there’s one constant Read More