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WWW.FASTCOMPANY.COMWhat is the ‘Trump put’? Why investors say the tariff pause was predictable after the bond market shookWhile President Trump likes to putt, traders are leaning into the “Trump put.” The “Trump put” was an idea that traders would lean on during his first term, and in essence, is rooted in the concept that Trump uses the stock market as something of a scoreboard. And now, some are saying that the “Trump put” is back, at least if you count the president’s latest actions in relation to the markets this past week. As the markets wobbled, and then cratered in response to the announcement of his tariff schedule, Trump—perhaps predictably, per the “Trump put” idea—canceled or paused most of what had previously been announced. In other words, the “Trump put” is the belief that when the markets start to fall, Trump will take action to turn them around. That’s exactly what he did this past week—more or less confirming that there’s something to the notion. Note, though, that there have been other variations of the “Trump put” over the years, too. For instance, there’s been the “Greenspan put,” and even the “Powell put.” Again, the idea is that if the market falls too far, someone will step in and bail it out. More specifically this past week, however, Trump was likely swayed to reverse course on his wide-ranging tariff schedule due to action in the bond market. Bonds are typically considered something of a safe haven for investors, and the bond market itself is far less volatile than the equities market. But following Trump’s announcements on tariffs, bond interest rates rapidly increased, which was a sign that investors were less confident in the strength of the economy going forward, and therefore, made it more expensive for the government and businesses to borrow money because there’s more inherent risk. That was evidently enough to spook Trump who, despite his rhetoric, “paused” tariffs on most countries, although he dug in deeper against China. The question for traders and investors, going forward, is whether Trump will remain as susceptible to the whims of the market as he was during his first term. So far, he’s shown more restraint, but as we learned this week, he has his limits.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 64 Views
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WWW.CORE77.COMCore77 Weekly Roundup (4-7-25 to 4-11-25)Here's what we looked at this week:Design needed: These Mad-Max-esque solar-powered bikes and trikes from YongLe Risheng.Stunning drone show by Studio Hock: King Kong climbing the Empire State Building.Hyundai's gaming-inspired Insteroid concept. The base model is popular worldwide, but won't be coming to the U.S. Bevel: Industrial designer Sebastian Bergne upgrades the studio applebox.Freefly Systems' Flying Sun: Persistent overhead emergency lighting, delivered by drone.Studio Lugo's Anachron series: Agriculture-inspired furniture with traces of Rietveld, the Bauhaus, Memphis and '80s Postmodernism.At the Salone, Es Devlin's Library of Light celebrates books and "Thought for humans."Victor Manuel's "Geometric Chimera" style of furniture design.A focus on UX, and Texas history, inform the design of Igloo's Party Bar cooler.The Yeti Rescues program offers refurbished coolers and products at a discount.If Dremel went designey? Hoto's SNAPBLOQ precision toolkit is designed for organization and portability.Hemispherical doorknobs, by Bankston and Civilian.Kawasaki's "New category of personal mobility:" CORLEO, an off-road robot horse.Gator Magnetics' smarter design for magnetic hooks.GM opens new design studio, tasks several studios with Corvette concept work.Casual seating: Konstantin Grcic's THING_01.Lodge's solar-powered Bluetooth speaker, designed to live outdoors.Phaidon's forthcoming "Mid-Century Modern Design in the U.S." book features hundreds of images from Cranbrook's Art Museum.Industrial design case study: A mobile airport lounge concept by Formation Design Group.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 75 Views
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WWW.YANKODESIGN.COMApartment-inspired Drawers Concept Blends Urban Architecture and Furniture DesignHave you ever looked at the items scattered across your dresser top and seen something beyond the chaos? The designers behind the APT Drawers concept did exactly that, recognizing how the arrangement of objects on a drawer surface mirrors the organization of an apartment complex. This brilliant insight has led to a furniture piece that transforms ordinary storage into a miniature architectural landscape, complete with building-inspired details and community-minded functionality that brings a playful urban sensibility into your home. The concept draws from the fascinating parallel between personal spaces and urban planning. Just as modern apartment buildings have evolved from simple housing into vibrant communities with distinct cultural identities, these drawers transcend basic storage to become expressive elements that reflect your personality and lifestyle. The design invites you to see your furniture not just as a place to keep things but also as a canvas for creating your own miniature neighborhood of treasured possessions. Designer: In-Je Lee (Focus Studio) Look closely at the exterior of these drawers and you’ll notice subtle “dong” markings, the equivalent of neighborhood numbers in apartment complexes in South Korea, engraved into the surface. This charming detail immediately establishes the architectural theme while adding a layer of narrative to what would otherwise be a simple piece of furniture. Available in two different sizes to accommodate various spaces, the drawers feature handles shaped like rooftops, intuitively representing the layered structure of an apartment building while providing a satisfying tactile experience. What truly sets the APT Drawers apart are the accompanying geometric objects designed to rest on top of the unit. Inspired by essential elements found in apartment complexes such as management offices, playgrounds, and landscaped parks, these minimalist accessories serve as functional bridges between the drawer and your personal items. They transform the top surface into a harmonious arrangement that mimics a well-planned community, with each piece serving practical purposes like corralling small objects, displaying plants, holding pens, or marking pages in books. The color palette speaks volumes about the thoughtful approach behind this design. Drawing inspiration from the sky visible above apartment buildings, the soft beige of exterior walls, and the refreshing green of landscaped areas, the drawers feature calm, subdued tones that create a gentle presence in your space. The subdued hues allow your personal items to stand out naturally against the neutral backdrop, much like how residents personalize their apartments within the uniform structure of a building. The APT Drawers concept reminds us that furniture can do more than fulfill basic functions. It can also tell stories, create connections, and transform how we interact with our spaces. By reimagining storage through the lens of urban architecture, these drawers invite us to see the beauty in organization and the poetry in everyday objects. They challenge us to think differently about our relationship with furniture and the meaningful ways it can reflect our lives and communities. The post Apartment-inspired Drawers Concept Blends Urban Architecture and Furniture Design first appeared on Yanko Design.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 55 Views
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WWW.CREATIVEBLOQ.COMSwitching from Unity to Unreal Engine just got easier with free video tutorialsEpic Games is appealing directly to disgruntled Unity users.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 57 Views
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WWW.WIRED.COMThis Is How US Tariffs Could Make Smartphones DumberDonald Trump’s tariffs are likely to make tech manufacturers more risk averse—which could stymie innovation in favor of keeping costs down.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 52 Views
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMHow TikTok’s Parent, ByteDance, Became an A.I. PowerhouseA set of popular apps helped China’s ByteDance develop a key component of advanced artificial intelligence: information on how a billion people use the internet.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 62 Views
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WWW.MACWORLD.COMThe delayed Siri Apple Intelligence features are now coming ‘in the fall’Macworld The Apple news has been gloomy lately, mostly because of all the tariff turmoil, but before that, there was all the drama about Siri and the company’s inability to deliver on promised Apple Intelligence features. Well, in case you forgot, the New York Times is here to remind you that the Siri drama hasn’t gone away. Tripp Mickle reports on Apple’s “inability to make good on new ideas,” providing insight from unnamed sources about the company’s mishandling of AI development. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman previously reported that Apple will delay the new AI-based Siri features until 2026, but near the end of MIckle’s article is a glimmer of hope–or some hopeful thinking by some Apple insiders: Apple hasn’t canceled its revamped Siri. The company plans to release a virtual assistant in the fall capable of doing things like editing and sending a photo to a friend on request, three people with knowledge of its plans said. Tripp Mickle, New York Times That sounds like it will arrive in the first version of iOS 19, rather than iOS 19.3 or later in 2026, as some had speculated. Mickle goes on to report that Apple leaders think there is “time to get [AI] right” because Google, Meta, and others haven’t figured it out yet. That might be true, but it sure seems like Apple’s competition has its AI plans in much better shape than Apple. If Apple truly believes it can deliver this fall, then that will make WWDC25 in June much more interesting and give us something to care about. Apple will almost certainly address the Siri situation then–it has to, it’s the elephant in the room–and the company will either proclaim a Siri delivery in the fall or a much later date. We’ll have to wait and see.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 73 Views
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WWW.TECHNOLOGYREVIEW.COMHow AI is interacting with our creative human processesIn 2021, 20 years after the death of her older sister, Vauhini Vara was still unable to tell the story of her loss. “I wondered,” she writes in Searches, her new collection of essays on AI technology, “if Sam Altman’s machine could do it for me.” So she tried ChatGPT. But as it expanded on Vara’s prompts in sentences ranging from the stilted to the unsettling to the sublime, the thing she’d enlisted as a tool stopped seeming so mechanical. “Once upon a time, she taught me to exist,” the AI model wrote of the young woman Vara had idolized. Vara, a journalist and novelist, called the resulting essay “Ghosts,” and in her opinion, the best lines didn’t come from her: “I found myself irresistibly attracted to GPT-3—to the way it offered, without judgment, to deliver words to a writer who has found herself at a loss for them … as I tried to write more honestly, the AI seemed to be doing the same.” The rapid proliferation of AI in our lives introduces new challenges around authorship, authenticity, and ethics in work and art. But it also offers a particularly human problem in narrative: How can we make sense of these machines, not just use them? And how do the words we choose and stories we tell about technology affect the role we allow it to take on (or even take over) in our creative lives? Both Vara’s book and The Uncanny Muse, a collection of essays on the history of art and automation by the music critic David Hajdu, explore how humans have historically and personally wrestled with the ways in which machines relate to our own bodies, brains, and creativity. At the same time, The Mind Electric, a new book by a neurologist, Pria Anand, reminds us that our own inner workings may not be so easy to replicate. Searches is a strange artifact. Part memoir, part critical analysis, and part AI-assisted creative experimentation, Vara’s essays trace her time as a tech reporter and then novelist in the San Francisco Bay Area alongside the history of the industry she watched grow up. Tech was always close enough to touch: One college friend was an early Google employee, and when Vara started reporting on Facebook (now Meta), she and Mark Zuckerberg became “friends” on his platform. In 2007, she published a scoop that the company was planning to introduce ad targeting based on users’ personal information—the first shot fired in the long, gnarly data war to come. In her essay “Stealing Great Ideas,” she talks about turning down a job reporting on Apple to go to graduate school for fiction. There, she wrote a novel about a tech founder, which was later published as The Immortal King Rao. Vara points out that in some ways at the time, her art was “inextricable from the resources [she] used to create it”—products like Google Docs, a MacBook, an iPhone. But these pre-AI resources were tools, plain and simple. What came next was different. Interspersed with Vara’s essays are chapters of back-and-forths between the author and ChatGPT about the book itself, where the bot serves as editor at Vara’s prompting. ChatGPT obligingly summarizes and critiques her writing in a corporate-shaded tone that’s now familiar to any knowledge worker. “If there’s a place for disagreement,” it offers about the first few chapters on tech companies, “it might be in the balance of these narratives. Some might argue that the benefits—such as job creation, innovation in various sectors like AI and logistics, and contributions to the global economy—can outweigh the negatives.” Searches: Selfhood in the Digital AgeVauhini VaraPANTHEON, 2025 Vara notices that ChatGPT writes “we” and “our” in these responses, pulling it into the human story, not the tech one: “Earlier you mentioned ‘our access to information’ and ‘our collective experiences and understandings.’” When she asks what the rhetorical purpose of that choice is, ChatGPT responds with a numbered list of benefits including “inclusivity and solidarity” and “neutrality and objectivity.” It adds that “using the first-person plural helps to frame the discussion in terms of shared human experiences and collective challenges.” Does the bot believe it’s human? Or at least, do the humans who made it want other humans to believe it does? “Can corporations use these [rhetorical] tools in their products too, to subtly make people identify with, and not in opposition to, them?” Vara asks. ChatGPT replies, “Absolutely.” Vara has concerns about the words she’s used as well. In “Thank You for Your Important Work,” she worries about the impact of “Ghosts,” which went viral after it was first published. Had her writing helped corporations hide the reality of AI behind a velvet curtain? She’d meant to offer a nuanced “provocation,” exploring how uncanny generative AI can be. But instead, she’d produced something beautiful enough to resonate as an ad for its creative potential. Even Vara herself felt fooled. She particularly loved one passage the bot wrote, about Vara and her sister as kids holding hands on a long drive. But she couldn’t imagine either of them being so sentimental. What Vara had elicited from the machine, she realized, was “wish fulfillment,” not a haunting. The rapid proliferation of AI in our lives introduces new challenges around authorship, authenticity, and ethics in work and art. How can we make sense of these machines, not just use them? The machine wasn’t the only thing crouching behind that too-good-to-be-true curtain. The GPT models and others are trained through human labor, in sometimes exploitative conditions. And much of the training data was the creative work of human writers before her. “I’d conjured artificial language about grief through the extraction of real human beings’ language about grief,” she writes. The creative ghosts in the model were made of code, yes, but also, ultimately, made of people. Maybe Vara’s essay helped cover up that truth too. In the book’s final essay, Vara offers a mirror image of those AI call-and-response exchanges as an antidote. After sending out an anonymous survey to women of various ages, she presents the replies to each question, one after the other. “Describe something that doesn’t exist,” she prompts, and the women respond: “God.” “God.” “God.” “Perfection.” “My job. (Lost it.)” Real people contradict each other, joke, yell, mourn, and reminisce. Instead of a single authoritative voice—an editor, or a company’s limited style guide—Vara gives us the full gasping crowd of human creativity. “What’s it like to be alive?” Vara asks the group. “It depends,” one woman answers. David Hajdu, now music editor at The Nation and previously a music critic for The New Republic, goes back much further than the early years of Facebook to tell the history of how humans have made and used machines to express ourselves. Player pianos, microphones, synthesizers, and electrical instruments were all assistive technologies that faced skepticism before acceptance and, sometimes, elevation in music and popular culture. They even influenced the kind of art people were able to and wanted to make. Electrical amplification, for instance, allowed singers to use a wider vocal range and still reach an audience. The synthesizer introduced a new lexicon of sound to rock music. “What’s so bad about being mechanical, anyway?” Hajdu asks in The Uncanny Muse. And “what’s so great about being human?” The Uncanny Muse: Music, Art, and Machines from Automata to AIDavid HajduW.W. NORTON & COMPANY, 2025 But Hajdu is also interested in how intertwined the history of man and machine can be, and how often we’ve used one as a metaphor for the other. Descartes saw the body as empty machinery for consciousness, he reminds us. Hobbes wrote that “life is but a motion of limbs.” Freud described the mind as a steam engine. Andy Warhol told an interviewer that “everybody should be a machine.” And when computers entered the scene, humans used them as metaphors for themselves too. “Where the machine model had once helped us understand the human body … a new category of machines led us to imagine the brain (how we think, what we know, even how we feel or how we think about what we feel) in terms of the computer,” Hajdu writes. But what is lost with these one-to-one mappings? What happens when we imagine that the complexity of the brain—an organ we do not even come close to fully understanding—can be replicated in 1s and 0s? Maybe what happens is we get a world full of chatbots and agents, computer-generated artworks and AI DJs, that companies claim are singular creative voices rather than remixes of a million human inputs. And perhaps we also get projects like the painfully named Painting Fool—an AI that paints, developed by Simon Colton, a scholar at Queen Mary University of London. He told Hajdu that he wanted to “demonstrate the potential of a computer program to be taken seriously as a creative artist in its own right.” What Colton means is not just a machine that makes art but one that expresses its own worldview: “Art that communicates what it’s like to be a machine.” What happens when we imagine that the complexity of the brain—an organ we do not even come close to fully understanding—can be replicated in 1s and 0s? Hajdu seems to be curious and optimistic about this line of inquiry. “Machines of many kinds have been communicating things for ages, playing invaluable roles in our communication through art,” he says. “Growing in intelligence, machines may still have more to communicate, if we let them.” But the question that The Uncanny Muse raises at the end is: Why should we art-making humans be so quick to hand over the paint to the paintbrush? Why do we care how the paintbrush sees the world? Are we truly finished telling our own stories ourselves? Pria Anand might say no. In The Mind Electric, she writes: “Narrative is universally, spectacularly human; it is as unconscious as breathing, as essential as sleep, as comforting as familiarity. It has the capacity to bind us, but also to other, to lay bare, but also obscure.” The electricity in The Mind Electric belongs entirely to the human brain—no metaphor necessary. Instead, the book explores a number of neurological afflictions and the stories patients and doctors tell to better understand them. “The truth of our bodies and minds is as strange as fiction,” Anand writes—and the language she uses throughout the book is as evocative as that in any novel. The Mind Electric: A Neurologist on the Strangeness and Wonder of Our BrainsPria AnandWASHINGTON SQUARE PRESS, 2025 In personal and deeply researched vignettes in the tradition of Oliver Sacks, Anand shows that any comparison between brains and machines will inevitably fall flat. She tells of patients who see clear images when they’re functionally blind, invent entire backstories when they’ve lost a memory, break along seams that few can find, and—yes—see and hear ghosts. In fact, Anand cites one study of 375 college students in which researchers found that nearly three-quarters “had heard a voice that no one else could hear.” These were not diagnosed schizophrenics or sufferers of brain tumors—just people listening to their own uncanny muses. Many heard their name, others heard God, and some could make out the voice of a loved one who’d passed on. Anand suggests that writers throughout history have harnessed organic exchanges with these internal apparitions to make art. “I see myself taking the breath of these voices in my sails,” Virginia Woolf wrote of her own experiences with ghostly sounds. “I am a porous vessel afloat on sensation.” The mind in The Mind Electric is vast, mysterious, and populated. The narratives people construct to traverse it are just as full of wonder. Humans are not going to stop using technology to help us create anytime soon—and there’s no reason we should. Machines make for wonderful tools, as they always have. But when we turn the tools themselves into artists and storytellers, brains and bodies, magicians and ghosts, we bypass truth for wish fulfillment. Maybe what’s worse, we rob ourselves of the opportunity to contribute our own voices to the lively and loud chorus of human experience. And we keep others from the human pleasure of hearing them too. Rebecca Ackermann is a writer, designer, and artist based in San Francisco.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 109 Views
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APPLEINSIDER.COMApple Vision Pro 2: What the rumor mill sees coming, and when it might arriveThe Apple Vision Pro is over a year old, but there are already rumors about an Apple Vision Pro 2 headset. Here's what's rumored to be coming, perhaps as soon as April 2026.Apple Vision ProFollowing the release of the Apple Vision Pro in February 2024, the head-mounted device has struggled to really take off. At $3,500 for a first-generation device, it's also something that is perceived as high-priced.It costs as much as a high-end Mac, but without necessarily providing as much utility. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums0 Reacties 0 aandelen 100 Views