Tag: TechNews


  • Popular Tech Myths That Still Mislead People

    Technology moves fast. Unfortunately, misinformation about technology moves even faster. Despite living in an era defined by smartphones, cloud computing, and artificial intelligence, many people—founders, professionals, and even decision-makers—still operate under outdated or flat-out wrong assumptions about how technology works. These myths don’t just confuse; they actively shape bad choices, wasted budgets, and unrealistic expectations.…

  • AI Won’t Take All Jobs — But Work Will Never Be the Same

    Artificial Intelligence has become the ultimate workplace Rorschach test. To some, it signals mass unemployment and economic upheaval. To others, it promises liberation from drudgery and a productivity renaissance. The truth, as usual, sits uncomfortably in between. AI won’t take all jobs—but it will permanently reshape what work looks like, how it’s valued, and who…

  • Can Artificial Intelligence Really Be Fair?

    Artificial Intelligence—once the stuff of science fiction—now quietly shapes decisions that matter profoundly in people’s lives: who gets a job interview, whether a loan is approved, how healthcare is administered, and even the length of a prison sentence. The promise of AI has always been seductive: a future where decisions are swift, data-driven, and, above…

  • Why Businesses Are Racing to Adopt AI

    Every company says it’s “exploring AI.”Many claim they’re already “AI-powered.”Very few are honest about why they’re rushing in — or what happens if they don’t. Artificial intelligence has moved from the periphery of business strategy to its core with remarkable speed. In boardrooms, earnings calls, and internal roadmaps, AI is no longer framed as an…

  • The Limits of Artificial Intelligence Nobody Talks About

    Artificial intelligence has become very good at looking confident. It writes fluid prose, produces convincing images, generates code that mostly works, and offers answers with an authority that feels—at first glance—earned. In demos and dashboards, AI appears tireless, precise, and increasingly autonomous. Yet talk to the people who deploy these systems at scale—engineers, editors, policy…

  • Interactive Media Is Redefining Entertainment

    Entertainment used to move in one direction. A screen lit up. A story unfolded. An audience watched. That model held for decades—through cinema, television, radio, and even early streaming. But somewhere between live-stream chats, open-world games, and algorithm-driven platforms, the boundary between creator and consumer began to erode. What replaced it wasn’t just a new…

  • Gaming Is Becoming Big Business

    For decades, video games lived on the margins of “serious” business. Hollywood scoffed. Wall Street hesitated. Governments barely noticed. Yet somewhere between the rise of online multiplayer worlds and billion-dollar mobile titles, the centre of gravity shifted. Today, gaming is no longer a niche—it’s an industry that rivals film, music, and sports combined. More importantly,…

  • It started as a necessity. Zoom calls replaced office meetings. Slack channels replaced watercooler chats. Laptops became the new headquarters. What began as a pandemic-driven adaptation has now matured into a deliberate strategy. Companies that embrace remote-first operations are scaling faster, hiring globally, and reducing overhead — all while challenging traditional assumptions about productivity, culture,…

  • What Successful Startup Founders Do Differently

    It starts with a pattern few outsiders notice. Late nights in co-working spaces. Early-morning calls across time zones. Relentless prioritisation of tasks that feel small but compound massively over months. These are not glamorous. They are invisible. Yet these small, disciplined behaviours separate founders who succeed from those whose startups fade quietly into obscurity. Successful…

  • The Cybersecurity Mistakes Too Many People Still Make

    In early December, a senior analyst at a midsize tech firm found himself staring at a string of logins that didn’t make sense. They weren’t sophisticated exploits — just a familiar email address, an old password, and a location halfway around the globe. Yet within minutes, his company’s internal tools and client dashboards were exposed.…