"I guarantee you a lot of companies are going to go completely under."
At the #FortuneCOOSummit, Freshworks CEO Dennis Woodside argued that AI will define how business is done for the next several decades and urged leaders to focus on trusted partners that can deliver real business outcomes. https://t.co/52A5uMmLJK
BREAKING: These 15 careers will quietly dominate the next 10 years.
Most people won’t notice until it’s too late.
The people learning these skills today will be impossible to ignore by 2030
"I don't actually think a human would do much better."
At the #FortuneCOOSummit, Andon Labs cofounder and CEO Lukas Petersson described how an AI-run vending machine his team launched at Anthropic's office evolved into completely AI-run stores and cafes within a year. https://t.co/52A5uMmLJK
AI giant Anthropic confidentially files to go public, gearing up for what's expected to be one of the most anticipated market debuts in years. https://t.co/C1sKn9nUbk
The most urgent person usually wins.
The person who is desperate and needs it the most is the one that normally gets it.
—Kara Lawson, Head Coach @DukeWBB
Jensen Huang (CEO of Nvidia) : “Every engineer is going to have and manage 100s of agents”
The future of work is managing and building ai agents
This builder gave out the entire roadmap to become a 100x ai engineer in 2026
Bookmark this for the weekend
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang says AI could expand coding from 30 million programmers to 1 billion people
“The definition of coding as of today is simply specifying”
“I think we just went from 30 million to probably 1 billion”
“Every carpenter in the future will be a coder”
After a massive fundraise that values the AI company at nearly a trillion dollars, Dario and Daniela Amodei, along with their five cofounders, have seen their net worths soar.
Read more: https://t.co/zkARQPiGrf
Photo: AFP via Getty Images
Two economists just published a mathematical proof that AI will destroy the economy.
Not might. Not could. Will — if nothing changes.
The paper is called "The AI Layoff Trap." Published March 2, 2026. Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania. Boston University. Peer reviewed. Mathematically modeled.
The conclusion is one sentence.
"At the limit, firms automate their way to boundless productivity and zero demand."
An economy that produces everything. And sells it to nobody.
Here is how you get there.
A company fires 500 workers and replaces them with AI. A competitor fires 700 to keep up. Another fires 1,000. Every company is behaving rationally. Every company is following the incentives correctly. And every company is building a trap for itself.
Because the workers who were fired were also customers.
When they lose their jobs faster than the economy can absorb them, they stop spending. Consumer demand falls. Companies respond by cutting costs — which means automating more workers — which means less spending — which means more falling demand — which means more automation.
The loop has no natural exit.
The researchers tested every proposed solution. Universal basic income. Capital income taxes. Worker equity participation. Upskilling programs. Corporate coordination agreements.
Every single one failed in the model.
The only intervention that worked: a Pigouvian automation tax — a per-task levy charged every time a company replaces a human with AI, forcing them to price in the demand they are destroying before they pull the trigger.
No government has implemented this. No major economy is seriously discussing it.
Meanwhile the numbers are already tracking the curve. 100,000 tech workers laid off in 2025. 92,000 more in the first months of 2026. Jack Dorsey fired half of Block's workforce and said publicly: "Within the next year, the majority of companies will reach the same conclusion."
Nobody is doing anything wrong. Companies are following their incentives perfectly. That is exactly the problem.
Rational behavior. At scale. Simultaneously. With no mechanism to stop it.
Two economists built the math. The math leads to one place.
Source: Falk & Tsoukalas · Wharton School + Boston University ·
Sequoia founder Don Valentine: “The art of storytelling is incredibly important”
“The art of storytelling is incredibly important. And many—maybe even most of the entrepreneurs who come to talk to us can’t tell the story. Learning to tell a story is incredibly important because that’s how the money works. The money flows as a function of the stories.”
The founder of Sequoia founder explains that the story is how you explain what you want to do, how long it’s going to take, who the competition is, and how much money you need.
a16z cofounder Ben Horowitz shared a similar view in a 2014 Forbes interview:
“Storytelling is the most underrated skill… Companies that don’t have a clearly articulated story don’t have a clear and well thought-out strategy. The company story is the company strategy.”
He continues:
“The story must explain at a fundamental level why you exist. Why does the world need your company? Why do we need to be doing what we’re doing and why is it important?… You can have a great product, but a compelling story puts the company into motion. If you don’t have a great story it’s hard to get people motivated to join you, to work on the product, and to get people to invest in the product.”
This is the job of the founder and CEO:
“The CEO must be the keeper of the story. The CEO is responsible for getting the story right, that it’s up to date, compelling, and can move the hearts of men and women. That’s the fundamental responsibility of the chief executive… The mistake people make is thinking the story is just about marketing. No, the story is the strategy. If you make your story better you make the strategy better.”
Source: @StanfordGSB (Oct 2010)
Anthropic raised $65 billion in a funding round that valued the AI company at $965 billion including the new investment, eclipsing rival OpenAI’s value for the first time. @EdLudlow explains. More here: https://t.co/oemSvrhyEK
🚨BREAKING: Nvidia will pay you $1,000 a month to host a mini AI data center at your house.
It looks like a regular AC unit sitting in your yard. Nobody walking past would know what is inside.
Inside sits 16 Nvidia Blackwell GPUs and Dell servers running at full capacity.
A startup called Span builds and installs them. They are backed by Nvidia directly. The whole unit bolts onto your home and you get paid for the power and Wi-Fi you supply.
Some estimates put the monthly payout around $1,000. That is rent money just for hosting a box you never touch.
Span says the units deploy significantly faster and cheaper than traditional data centers. That is exactly why Nvidia is backing the suburban rollout instead of waiting for more commercial land.
The AI boom needed more compute. It found it in the suburbs.
The grid is being rebuilt one backyard at a time. Save this.
AI was built on your creativity, your tax dollars, and your electric grid.
The profits shouldn't only flow to billionaires.
It's time to tax AI and invest in people.