artificial intelligence
The future of artificial intelligence.
Samsung’s Freestyle+ adds AI power to portable screens
Samsung has officially announced The Freestyle+, the company's new AI-powered portable projector ahead of CES 2026 in Las Vegas (6-9 January). Whilst it looks familiar at first glance, the Freestyle+ represents something more significant than just an incremental hardware update. The device builds on the playful, flexible design of the original Freestyle, but adds a layer of intelligence that reflects where consumer displays are heading: adaptive, AI-driven, and increasingly untethered from fixed spaces. This is a clear example of how AI is reshaping consumer displays, making them more adaptive, more personal, and far less dependent on fixed spaces.
By Susan Fourtané about a month ago in Futurism
About Binding Prometheus. Top Story - January 2026.
I want to start actively advocating on behalf of my own work, and the most valuable part of my canon is, without a doubt, Binding Prometheus, the play I have been working on since 2019 and only finished in 2023 as part of my MA. The play itself is an amalgamation of a million different inspirations. On one end, it evokes the Ancient Greek myth-play, deriving its own title from the earliest extant work of Western drama we have, Aeschylus’s Prometheus Bound. On the other end, it borrows significantly from the sci-fi bulwarks from over the years, namely Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein and Karel Capek’s Rossum’s Universal Robots. The play could be an episode of Black Mirror, I fear. I don’t know. I’ve only ever seen one episode of Black Mirror.
By Steven Christopher McKnightabout a month ago in Futurism
Why Do Daily Love Horoscopes Feel So Personal?. AI-Generated.
There is a familiar moment many people experience. You open your phone or browser, scroll to your horoscope, and begin reading. Within a few lines, something shifts. The words feel uncannily close to your own thoughts. The emotions described mirror what you are feeling. The advice feels relevant, timely, almost intimate.
By Amber Christina Lohan2 months ago in Futurism
If This Is the Future, We’re F**ked: When AI Decides Reality Is Wrong
“ChatGPT can make mistakes. Check important info.” - Warning below ChatGPT’s prompt This was the first time I knowingly entered an exchange with a machine—and realized it could not tell fact from fiction.
By Carl J. Petersen2 months ago in Futurism
White Label SEO Metrics That Predict Client Growth in 2026
I’ve been in enough reporting calls to know this pattern by heart. Rankings look fine. Traffic charts slope upward. Everyone nods. Then, three months later, the client pauses, asks a careful question, and the relationship starts to wobble.
By Jane Smith2 months ago in Futurism
Why Technology Feels Like Freedom and a Cage at the Same Time
Technology was supposed to liberate us. It promised speed, convenience, connection, and choice. With a device in our pocket, we gained access to the world’s knowledge, instant communication, and opportunities that once required wealth, geography, or privilege. And yet, alongside this unprecedented freedom, many of us feel strangely trapped—overstimulated, dependent, and unable to disconnect.
By noor ul amin2 months ago in Futurism
How Artificial Intelligence Is Quietly Reshaping the Nursing Profession
Nursing is a profession built on compassion, critical thinking, and a distinctly human touch. The idea of introducing Artificial Intelligence—a world of algorithms, data sets, and machine learning—into this familiar space can feel jarring, even threatening. Yet, a quiet revolution is already underway.
By andrewdeen142 months ago in Futurism
2026 and the Digital Mindset Shift
Are we finally learning how to live with technology—without letting it control us? As 2026 unfolds, one thing is becoming increasingly clear: our relationship with the digital world is changing. Not through dramatic revolutions or sudden bans on screens, but through a quiet, collective mindset shift. People are no longer asking, “How fast can technology move?” Instead, they’re asking, “How intentionally can we use it?”
By John Smith2 months ago in Futurism











