Cohere’s post appears to frame the future-of-work debate as limited by weak or incomplete evidence. Based on the title alone, its likely focus is not a product announcement but a commentary on how claims about AI’s workplace impact should be evaluated. The central takeaway is that policymakers, employers, and researchers should avoid overconfident predictions without better data.
Apollo Wealth's Daily Spark column revisits the AI jobs crisis narrative from an institutional investment perspective. Despite widespread enterprise adoption of generative AI tools, major labor markets have not shown the structural collapse many analysts predicted. The piece implies AI's employment impact may be slower, more uneven, or manifesting differently than the classic automation-displacement model suggests.
Ethan Mollick’s One Useful Thing post announces or frames Co-Existence, the follow-up to Co-Intelligence. The core shift is from prompting chatbots as collaborators toward living and working alongside increasingly embedded AI systems. It is best read as commentary and book positioning, not a technical release, benchmark, or tool tutorial.
This Import AI issue is a long essay and fiction piece about living through rapid AI progress. Clark uses personal experience and Anthropic’s internal use of Claude to show work shifting toward delegation, verification, observability, and agent management. He then offers speculative 2026-2028 predictions around biology, autonomous companies, robotics, recursive self-improvement, and a positive singularity story focused on healthcare.
Wharton School professor Ethan Mollick, writing in his well-known newsletter "One Useful Thing," has published a profound analysis of GPT-5.5. He describes…
Wharton School professor Ethan Mollick, in his latest article "The Shape of the Thing," sketches out a clear picture of the current state of AI technological…
Wharton School professor Ethan Mollick, in his latest article, points out that we are at an inflection point — shifting from "Copilot" collaboration to…
Wharton School professor Ethan Mollick, in his latest article, examines Anthropic's newly launched command-line tool "Claude Code" in depth, arguing that it…
Wharton School professor Ethan Mollick, writing on his blog "One Useful Thing," offers a sharp retrospective on the most fundamental paradigm shift in AI over…
University of Pennsylvania Wharton School professor Ethan Mollick, in his latest article, explores the far-reaching changes brought about by AI Agents…
University of Pennsylvania Wharton School professor Ethan Mollick, in his latest article, compares the experience of collaborating with generative AI (such as…
In this article exploring "Mass Intelligence," University of Pennsylvania Wharton School professor Ethan Mollick reveals an imminent future: high-level…
Renowned AI scholar and Wharton School professor Ethan Mollick published a forward-looking observation about GPT-5 on his blog "One Useful Thing," titled…