Listening is the mental step
/Listening is the mental step by which we become more aware of the other person than we are of ourselves.
Listening is the mental step by which we become more aware of the other person than we are of ourselves.
Life can be counted on to provide all the pain that any of us might need. -Sheldon Koff
Learn to be what you are, and learn to resign with a good grace all that you are not. -Henri Frederic Amiel
The key is to enjoy accomplishments for what they are in the moment, and to walk away perhaps before I am completely ready—but on my own terms. -Arthur C. Brooks
The discomfort with ambiguity and arbitrariness is equally powerful, or more so, in our need for a rational understanding of our lives. We strive to fit the events of our lives into a coherent story that accounts for our circumstances, the things that follow us, and the choices we make. Each of us has a different narrative that has many threads woven into it from our shared culture and experience of being human, as well as many distinct threads that explain the singular events of one's personal past. All these experiences influence what comes to mind in a current situation and the narrative through which you make sense of it: why nobody in my family attended college until me. Why my father never made a fortune in business. Why I'd never want to work in a corporation, or, maybe, why I would never want to work for myself. We gravitate to the narratives that best explain our emotions. In this way, narrative and memory become one. The memories we organize meaningfully become those that are better remembered. Narrative provides not only meaning but also a mental framework for imbuing future experiences and information with meaning, in effort shaping new memories to fit our establish constructs of the world and ourselves. The narrative of memory becomes central to our intuitions regarding the judgments we make and the actions we take. Because memory is a shape-shifter, reconciling the competing demands of emotions, suggestions, and narrative, it serves you well to stay open to the fallibility of your certainties: even your most cherished memories may not represent events in the exact way they occurred.
Peter C. Brown and Henry L. Roediger III, Make It Stick: The Science of Successful Learning
Ignorance never gets beyond wonder - Balthasar Gracián
Learning makes a man proud. Wisdom makes him humble.
There is a time for talking … and a time for just breathing. Each is equally important.
The most important part of Christmas is the first six letters.
And she gave birth to her firstborn, a son. She wrapped him in cloths and placed him in a manger, because there was no guest room available for them (Luke 2:7 NIV)
“She wrapped him in cloths.” Literally, he was wrapped in strips of cloth to keep him warm. The old King James translation uses the memorable phrase “swaddling clothes.”
Do you think he cried? When you think of the manger and the child, do you imagine him crying?
Mary put diapers on God.
The mention of a manger is where we get the idea he was born in a stable. Often, stables were caves, with feeding troughs for animals … mangers. It was probably dark and dirty. This is not the way the messiah was expected to appear. How often our expectations and God’s reality are not in sync. How often he appears in unexpected places.
Chatbots Are Surprisingly Effective at Swaying Voters - The Atlantic
Home renovation platforms are rolling out A.I.-enabled imaging tools that redesign rooms in an instant – New York Times
Police swap suspect sketches for AI – Washington Post
Redefining crisis communication in the age of AI with Molly McPherson - MuckRack
As the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season ends, the future of forecasting is AI – NPR
Two College Students Are Building a Robot to Replant Burned Forests – Smithsonian Magazine
Four ways AI is being used to strengthen democracies worldwide – The Guardian
A.I. Can Do More of Your Shopping This Holiday Season – New York Times
AI Accurately Predicts Complication Risk After Kidney Cancer Surgery – Cancer Nursing Today
Using A.I to Talk to Whales – New York Times
How a 2,400 Year Old Problem Shows Us How Close ChatGPT's AI Is To Human Intelligence - BGR
ChatGPT, Google Gemini, Anthropic Claude have a sense of humor – Axios
She used ChatGPT to win the Virginia lottery and then donated every dollar – Washington Post
Elon Musk Challenges Wikipedia With His Own A.I. Encyclopedia - The New York Times
Air Force Using AI to Plan Storage for Munitions – Air & Space Forces
I believe in Christianity as I believe that the Sun has risen, not only because I see it, but because by it I see everything else. -C.S. Lewis
Most current Academic Deep Search and Deep Research tools are workflow-based agents operating within predefined patterns—not flexible reasoning systems that analyze task structure and devise novel approaches. This doesn’t diminish their value. Academic Deep Search’s iterative retrieval with LLM-based relevance judgment is a genuine breakthrough. Deep Research’s ability to generate well-cited reports fills real needs. These tools ARE agents in the technical sense, and within their designed scope, they work impressively. But marketing language suggesting flexible reasoning, autonomous problem-solving, and human-like research assistance probably overstates current capabilities and can lead to misunderstanding by users who take the term “agent” or “research assistant” at face value. - Aaron Tay
These teenagers are already running their own AI companies – MSNBC
Explainable AI in Chat Interfaces – NN Group
The Eerie Parallels Between AI Mania and the Dot-Com Bubble – Wall Street Journal
Senators Investigate Role of A.I. Data Centers in Rising Electricity Costs – New York Times
An AI product’s position on the personality spectrum shapes how people engage with it – UX Design
The Good, Bad and Ugly of AI - Wall Street Journal
The Architects of AI: Person of the Year 2025 – TIME
Why AI's winners won't be decided by benchmarks – Axios
Behind the Deal That Took Disney From AI Skeptic to OpenAI Investor - Wall Street Journal
Something Ominous is Happening in the AI Economy – The Atlantic
‘Circularity’ is a flashing warning for the AI boom Wall Street’s buzzword for investors - Washington Post
The New York Times sued Perplexity, an A.I. start-up, claiming that Perplexity repeatedly used its copyrighted work without permission. - New York Times
A Prompt Engineering Framework for Large Language Model-Based Mental Health Chatbots – National Library of Medicine
ChatGPT started the AI race. Now its lead is looking shaky. - Washington Post
China's DeepSeek debuts two new AI models – Bloomberg
A growing share of America’s hottest AI startups have turned to open Chinese AI models - NBC News
Nvidia's massive investments are shaping the AI bubble debate – Axios
Gemini is most ‘empathetic’ AI model, test shows - Semafor
A.I.’s Anti-A.I. Marketing Strategy - New York Times
Tech Titans Amass Multimillion-Dollar War Chests to Fight AI Regulation - Wall Street Journal
Fears About A.I. Prompt Talks of Super PACs to Rein In the Industry - New York Times
The world says the more you take, the more you have. Christ says the more you give, the more you are. -Frederick Buechner
Machine learning has helped researchers at the John Hopkins School of Medicine create lab-grown ‘tiny brains’ and uncover how neurons may malfunction in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. The organoids could be the beginning of an important testbed for psychiatric drug therapies. -SciTech Daily
Keep your face to the sunshine and you cannot see the shadows.
Small Language Models (SLMs) – Requiring less data and training time than large language models, SLMs have fewer parameters making them more useful on the spot or when using smaller devices. Perhaps the best advantage of SLMs is their ability to be fine-tuned for specialized for specific tasks or domains. They are also more useful for enhanced privacy and security and are less prone to undetected hallucinations. Google’s Gemma is an example.
Jesus changed careers at 30. It’s probably unrealistic to think you must have it all figured out by 25.
AI makes human journalists more important than ever - Harvard’s Nieman Lab
AI is changing the relationship between journalist and audience. There is much at stake – The Guardian
Google will look beyond volume journalism - Harvard’s Nieman Lab
Why The Washington Post launched an error-ridden AI product - Semafor
The AI widgets taking over news sites and extracting our data. – Columbia Journalism Review
5 predictions for AI’s growing role in the media in 2026 – Fast Company
News product teams are uniquely positioned to unlock AI value - Harvard’s Nieman Lab
Google is experimentally replacing news headlines with AI clickbait nonsense – The Verge
In 2026, AI will outwrite humans - Harvard’s Nieman Lab
Journalist Caught Publishing Fake Articles Generated by AI – Futurism
Politico management violated key AI adoption safeguards, arbitrator finds – Harvard’s Nieman Lab
Announcing our new AI partnership with Microsoft – Business Insider
Florida nonprofit news reporters ask board to investigate their editor’s AI use - Harvard’s Nieman Lab
What the iconic writers of New Journalism can teach us in the AI era – Poynter
How an AI-mediated world transforms news consumption. – Columbia Journalism Review
The importance of independent media in the age of AI slop and algorithms. – The Verge
Journalists may see AI as a threat to the industry, but they’re using it anyway - Harvard’s Nieman Lab
Investigating a Possible Scammer in Journalism’s AI Era – The Local
Mapping news creators and influencers in social and video networks - Reuters Institute
The Creator Journalism Trust and Credibility Toolkit: A guide for funders - The Lenfest Institute
10 ways I use AI to be a better journalist - Fast Company
How publishers can defend themselves against AI bots stealing journalistic content – The Fix
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