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2025-11-21 12:30:00| Fast Company

Hi again, and welcome back to Fast Companys Plugged In. On November 18, Google announced a new product. More precisely, it declared that it was ushering in a new erawhich is what tech companies do when they really want you to pay attention. The product in question is Gemini 3 Pro, the latest version of Googles LLM. Its not just the foundation of Googles ChatGPT-like chatbot, also called Gemini. It underlies vast quantities of features in flagship offerings such as Google Search, Gmail, and Android. It powers Antigravity, a new Google AI coding platform that debuted on the same day. And thanks to Google Cloud, the model is also available to third-party developers as an ingredient for their apps. In short, Gemini 3 Pro could hardly be more essential to Googles aspiration to be AIs most important player. As Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis said in the announcement, the company sees it as a big step on the path toward AGIAI thats at least as capable as humans are at most cognitive tasks. Already, the announcement stated, Gemini 3 Pro demonstrates PhD-level reasoning.  Google supported its claims with a table listing 20 AI benchmarks in which Gemini 3 Pro beatand often just plain trouncedGemini 2 Pro, OpenAIs GPT-5.1, and Anthropics Claude Sonnet 4.5. Humanitys Last Exam, for example, is a 2,500-question test covering mathematics, physics, the humanities, and other topics. Its designed to be remarkably difficult (hence the name) and there has been debate over whether its so nebulous that some of the theoretically correct answers are nuanced or wrong. According to Googles table, GPT-5.1 achieved a score of 26.5%, while Claude Sonnet 4.5 managed only 13.7%. By contrast, Gemini 3 Pro scored 37.5%, and did even better when allowed to do searches and run code, with a score of 45.8%. Outside the lab, Gemini 3 Pro has been received as enthusiastically as any new AI model I can remember. Ethan Mollick, one of my favorite providers of AI analysis based on hands-on usage, pronounced it very good. Others said it delivered on the great expectations that OpenAIs GPT-5 stoked but failed to satisfy. As I write, Ive been playing with the Gemini chatbot for just a few days. Much of that experience has been positive. Two writing assignments I gave it came out exceptionally well: an article on the future of the penny, and a detailed report on pricing for Digital Equipment Corp.s 1960s minicomputers. Its first pass at a simple vibe coding projectbuilding a search engine for Fast Companys Next Big Things in Techwas a bit of a mess, but when I explicitly put it into Build mode, it nailed the assignment in a few minutes. It also excelled at figuring out what was going on in an assortment of photos I uploaded. Yet for all thats gone right so far, I also encountered significant glitches with Gemini 3 Pro from almost the moment I tried it. They left me particularly wary of Googles blanket claims about the LLM being ready to help users learn anything and delivering responses that are smart, concise and direct, trading cliché and flattery for genuine insight. My interactions gone wrong were mostly about animation and comics, topics I turn to when fooling around with new AI because I know them well enough to spot mistakes. Asked about these subjects, Gemini repeatedly spewed hallucinations. For instance, when I asked if Walt Disney himself had ever worked on the Mickey Mouse comic strip, the LLM gave a correct answer (yes, though only briefly) but then volunteered a bunch of facts I hadnt asked for that werent actually factual. For example, it said that when the strips longtime artist retired, his final panel showed Mickey and Minnie gazing into a sunset, a subtle way of marking his departure. (No such strip appeared.) In a different chat, it manufactured an elaborate, entirely fictional backstory involving a different cartoonist also being a noted animation historian, which it told me was well-documented and recognized. It wasnt just that Gemini hallucinated. ChatGPT and Claude still do that, too. But more than other models, Gemini tended to compound its failures by gaslighting me. Helpfully pointing out its gaffes led to some of the strangest exchanges Ive had with AI since February 2023, when Microsofts Bing said it didnt want to talk to me anymore. (Full disclosure: I understand that AI is just stringing together a sequence of words it doesnt understand. All of its human-seeming qualities, be they impressive or annoying, are simulated. But its hard to write about them without slipping into a certain degree of anthropomorphizing!) Repeatedly, Gemini acknowledged its inaccuracies but insisted they were lore, common misconceptions, or examples of my own confusion. In one case, it eventually confessed: I have failed you in this conversation by fabricating details to cover up previous errors. In another instance, it continued to insist that it was right, providing citations that didnt even mention the topic at hand. Im not arguing that the fate of AI hangs on how much the technology knows about old cartoons. However, if any company is burdened with the responsibility of ensuring that its LLM is a trustworthy source of general information, its Google. That I tumbled into an abyss of AI-generated misinformation so quickly isnt an encouraging sign. Part of the problem lies in the fact that Gemini 3 Pro offers two modes, Fast and Thinking. The first is the default and was responsible for the prevarications I encountered, at least one of which involved it conflating two separate topics Id brought up. So far, Thinking mode has worked better in my experiments. But even the speediest of AI models should meet a baseline of accuracy and good behavior, at leastif theyre being presented as a way to learn anything. (Like many AI tools, the Gemini chatbot does carry a mistakes-are-possible disclaimer.) To repeat myself, Gemini 3 Pro is impressive in many ways. Still, its launch is yet another example of the AI industry presenting an overly rosy portrait of what it has achieved. It also underlines that benchmarks tell us only so much about a models real-world performance. When OpenAI introduced ChatGPT three years ago this month, it did so in a brief blog post that took pains to detail the bots limitations and avoid grand pronouncements about its future. Letting its breakthrough new product speak for itself turned out to be a pretty effective marketing strategy. Even as AIs giants jostle for bragging rights in what may be the most hypercompetitive tech category of all time, they should remember that lesson. Youve been reading Plugged In, Fast Companys weekly tech newsletter from me, global technology editor Harry McCracken. If a friend or colleague forwarded this edition to youor if you’re reading it on fastcompany.comyou can check out previous issues and sign up to get it yourself every Friday morning. I love hearing from you: Ping me at hmccracken@fastcompany.com with your feedback and ideas for future newsletters. I’m also on Bluesky, Mastodon, and Threads, and you can follow Plugged In on Flipboard. More top tech stories from Fast Company A battle against the AI oligarchy is brewing in this wealthy New York districtTwo congressional candidates have made AI a major issue in the campaign. Read More Crypto’s path to legitimacy depends on the industry itself, not just politiciansOnly an internal cultural shift and rigorous self-policing can deliver mainstream approval.  Read More AI chatbots won’t save the media. But what powers them mightPublisher-built agents grounded in trusted archives may turn years of reporting into real products instead of just another chat widget. Read More   This massive new data center is powered by used EV batteriesA new project from battery recycling startup Redwood Materials and data center builder Crusoe shows that it’s possible to build data centers cheaper and faster while also slashing emissions.Read More   Why Trump’s AI diplomacy is doomed to failThis week, chips were on the menu in the White House Read More   Even (especially) in the age of AI, here’s why I hire for character over skillBecause that’s what reveals true talent. Read More 

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-11-21 12:00:00| Fast Company

Before Wicked opened on Broadway in October 2003, the musicals production team took the show to the Curran Theatre in San Francisco for whats called an out of town tryout. The five-week run allowed the producers, writers, and director to work out the kinks ahead of the shows Broadway debut. During the San Francisco run, University of Southern California film student Jon M. Chu happened to be home for the weekend visiting his parents, who owned a Chinese restaurant called Chef Chus in Los Altos, California, just outside Silicon Valley. Chu was the youngest of five children growing up in a family that spent their free time playing instruments or going to the ballet, the opera, musicals, and the movies. It was the time of Michael Jordan on TV, and Steven Spielberg movies, Chu recalls. Michael Jackson videos were like mini musicals.  Chu was raised on what he calls this beautiful idea of story, and went to film school with an inner theater geek driving his desire to learn the craft. So it wasnt a surprise when his mom, Ruth, suggested they catch the show at the Curran.  Also at the show was Marc Platt, Wickeds producer, who spent those five weeks in San Francisco putting the finishing touches on what would eventually become one of Broadways biggest hits.  Little did either of these men know that nearly 20 years later theyd pair up to bring Wicked to the big screen. I waited 20 some years to make the movie after I produced the stage show, Platt says. There were many reasons I waited; destiny was calling me to wait until Jon was available.  Director Jon M. Chu on the set of Wicked: For Good with Ariana Grande as Glinda [Photo: Universal Studios] Their partnership is now one of Hollywoods great success stories. Together, Chu and Platt delivered a giant blockbuster that grossed $114 million in box-office sales on its opening weekend in November 2024 (it went on to gross nearly $750 million). Now theyre poised to do it again with the release of part two, Wicked: For Good. The Wicked films represent a big gamble for Universal Picturestwo lavish movie musicals released back-to-back with an estimated combined budget of roughly $300 million. All this in an era when studios are cutting costs and audiences are distracted by content that requires them to do nothing more than scroll their phones or stream TV from the living room couch.  Still, Chu says he’s more optimistic about filmmaking than ever. Now is the moment, he says, to fight for big stories that can break through in a business thats increasingly driven by algorithms and a focus on the bottom line.  I think if you want to fight that fight, youve got to play by the rules of this game, he says. You have to entertain the hell out of people.  Jeff Goldblum (the Wizard of Oz) and Cynthia Erivo (Elphaba) in Wicked: For Good [Photo: Universal Studios] The Silicon Valley Showman meets the Hollywood Machine Chu grew up inside two great American experimentsthe immigrant dream and Silicon Valley innovation. His parents have run Chef Chus for decades. In fact, thats where he was gifted his first camera and editing software from some thoughtful customers who worked in the movie industry.  In high school Chu convinced his teachers to allow him to turn in short edited videos rather than written papers, which provided him the opportunity to develop a fluency with the software hed inherited at the restaurant. He also landed gigs shooting weddings and bar mitzvahs in his hometown. He was an early adopter from adolescence, learning how to master After Effects and Pro Tools.   In 2002, while at USC, Chu gained some notoriety for a short film called When the Kids Are Away, which he made with a grant from the Princess Grace Foundation. It was a full-blown movie musical with singing and dancing, all about how stay-at-home-mothers spend their time when children are in school and spouses are at work. To work on it with him, he pulled in film school classmate and budding cinematographer Alice Brooks. They would later reunite on the Wicked films. Chu had an early run of films that cemented his approach to musical storytelling. In his first studio film, 2008s Step Up 2 the Streets, Chu learned how to turn ideas into an actual production by marrying choreography and character. Then, as director of Justin Bieber: Never Say Never, Chu gained an understanding of how powerful internet culture can be as a storytelling mechanism. It wasnt until he directed Crazy Rich Asians, though, that Chu truly turned a corner in his career. The film allowed him to blend cultural nuance, authentic storytelling, and mass appeal. All of this leveled up into Wicked, which is Chus most ambitious film by far. The movie required him to stretch beyond his creative instincts. Donna Langley, chairperson of Universal Pictures, says Chu is as much a whip-smart executive as he is a creative: He thrives at the intersection of commerce and art. He is deeply empathetic, pragmatic, and innovative. He sees challenges as opportunities, is extremely methodical in his planning, and yet remains flexible in his execution. [Photo: Universal Studios] Storytelling as empathy Chu sees storytelling as a kind of transcendent currency in the current age of filmmaking. It is one of the most powerful empathy engines we have other than travel, he says. It helps, of course, that with Wicked Chu happens to be telling a uniquely magical story, in a land that feels so fantastical and vibrant you cannot help but be transported. But Chus singular power in bringing Wicked to life is his ability to think like a storyteller and work like an engineer. Chus creative system is deliberate and disciplined. He recalls how in his early years of editing, he devised a system for nonlinear storytelling logic that helped him organize his ideas. He would assemble thousands of screenshots, textures, and notes and organize them into folders. These folders became a creative pantry of sorts that he began drawing from when developing a new film.  [Photo: Universal Studios] When Chu and cinematographer Brooks were classmates at USC they bonded over their love of musicals. I think both of us are really emotional storytellers, says Brooks, who worked with Chu on both In the Heights and Wicked (among others). It’s about breaking a story from the inside out. She describes Chus process as incredibly intentional.  [Photo: Universal Studios] She and Chu move at their own pace during the early stages of production and planning, trusting one anothers instincts as they go. When we first get a script, we break down each scene with one word, emotional intention, and every single camera choice and lighting choice comes from those intentions, Brooks says. It’s a long marinating process of letting ideas grow first, and then the technical ideas come very much as a secondary.  On the set of Wicked: For Good, Chu implemented a process that required the actors to speak their lines while rolling before official filming began. While rehearsing the song For Good, actors Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo began to ad lib, singing to one another through a closet door. It was totally unplanned, but also part of Chus usual process ahead of a scene, so he let it go and the captured moment ended up one of the most memorable in the film. Process is how genius happens, he says.  [Photo: Universal Studios] During the development of a movie, Chu doesnt think about box-office sales. Instead, hes locked in on making sure the film is as entertaining as possible. He views movies as a portal into another world, where the audience can experience things from someone elses perspective. To me, that is what we need to protect most in our culture, Chu says. I feel great responsibility that I have a microphone to be in that space.  Chu began shooting both Wicked films in 2022 before AI really became a thing. He and the movies team of more than 700 visual effects experts were deeply focused on building a tactile but imperfect world. He wanted tables that wobbled and doors with cracks in them. For Wicked to work, nothing could feel overly manufactured or make believe.  [Photo: Universal Studios] He insisted the world be touchable, that we could feel the scratches and dirt, says Platt. That quality is what allows the audience to feel the high stakes in Glinda and Elphabas relationship, Chu says, noting that everything on set within 40 feet was physically built. The imperfections enabled a kind of intimacy with the audience that AI could never replicate. This couldnt feel like a dream, because we were talking about real things and were digging at real truth, he says. Platt says this unwavering commitment to emotional resonance is what makes Chu unique at this moment in time. Even when it was challenging to make changes, or we had disagreements with the writers, there was always joy in the process, Platt says. When your director feels that way, it permeates all those working on a production. But also it made me confident in our collaboration, and in the outcome. In many ways, Chu represents a blueprint for what the movie business will need as technology continues to infuse cinma. Chu believes that as AI becomes a bigger part of how creatives make their work, it will only put more value on human curiosity. In the end, he says, its about building something people can feeleven in a world made of pixels. 

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-11-21 11:00:00| Fast Company

AI has made us faster and more productive at work. It drafts our emails, summarizes our meetings, and even reminds us to take breaks. But heres the problem: in our rush to embrace AI, its quietly eroding our relationships and how we build human connections at work and in our everyday lives. People are increasingly using tools like ChatGPT to help them write, coach, and communicate. And many are also turning to it for therapy and relationship advice. The problem is, AI doesnt truly understand people as unique individuals. It can mimic empathy, but it cant understand it. It can predict tone, but it cant sense intent. The way we communicate with one person shouldnt be the same as the way we communicate with the next, yet thats exactly what happens when we hand over the nuances of being human to a machine. And its showing up at work: 82% of employees now report burnout, and 85% have experienced conflict at work. The majority trace it back to miscommunication, misunderstandings, or feeling unseen. AI is teaching us to write better, but not necessarily to understand better. Written communication has never been more polished. Yet the more we optimize our words, the more disconnected we seem to feel from one another. The importance of respecting human nuance AI can help us communicate, but it shouldnt act as a crutch. The real opportunity lies in using it as a mirror, which helps us better understand ourselves and the people we work with. Rather than replacing emotional intelligence (EQ), many teams are turning to personality science, such as the Five-Factor Model, to help leaders recognize how different teammates prefer feedback, how they handle stress, or why two colleagues interpret the same message in completely different ways. For teams, and for counselors and coaches, the goal is similar: not to have AI communicate for us, but to help us communicate better with each individual that we engage with. Because no two people hear, feel, communicate, or respond to information in the same way. And while the best communicators already know this instinctively, in todays era of chatbots and synthetic personas, we often abandon that awareness. We need to go back to giving each message, each meeting, and each moment the same level of consideration. Whos on the other side? What do they value? How do they process information or emotion? Leaders who take the time to personalize their communication build trust faster and resolve conflict sooner. When we adapt our style to meet people where they are, we only get better outcomes and make sure that people feel seen. Why we need to leverage EQ to optimize communications and outcomes Emotional intelligence isnt disappearing because people lack empathy. Its slipping because were letting machines do more of the communicating unilaterally. A new study by the Wharton School and GBK Collective found that 43% of leaders warn of skill atrophy as automation takes over routine work. This includes how we communicate. Leadership happens in the spaces algorithms cannot see: a pause in a meeting, the tension after a missed deadline, or the silence that signals someone doesnt feel safe speaking up. When we lose sensitivity to those cues, collaboration breaks down. Teams still communicate, but they stop connecting, and thats when misunderstandings quietly multiply into conflict and burnout. Heres how to keep the balance of efficiency and connection at work: Pause before you send. Before you hit “approve” on an AI-generated message, ask yourself: Does this sound like me? Does this reflect what the other person needs to hear? Sometimes, a call or short message will land better than a polished paragraph. Use AI for preparation, not delivery. Let technology help you structure the what, but you bring in the who with the persons history, style, and emotional context in mind. Listen and follow up. After sending feedback or direction, prioritize follow-up and check-ins to make sure you keep building the relationship, while listening and applying feedback. Prioritize taking a relationship-first approach. Remember that every person interprets messages differently. Landing the right tone and approach, depending on the relationship, shows respect and builds your connection. The leaders who thrive wont be those who use AI to talk more. Theyll be the ones who use it to listen more intentionally, understand people, and communicate with individuals uniquely. Because in the end, our progress, happiness, and success depend on the quality of relationships that we have with one another.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-11-21 11:00:00| Fast Company

The modern workplace runs on a dangerous myth: that constant motion equals maximum productivity. We’ve built entire corporate cultures around this fallacy, glorifying the “always on” mentality while our teams quietly unravel. The result? A burnout crisis that’s costing companies billions in turnover, absenteeism, and lost innovation. But here’s what the dataand our own exhausted bodiesare trying to tell us: emotional recovery isn’t a luxury. It’s the most strategic investment a leader can make. The Real Cost of Running on Empty Burnout isn’t just about feeling tired. It’s a systematic depletion that manifests as cynicism, detachment, and plummeting professional efficacy. When leaders and teams operate without adequate recovery, they’re not just less productivethey’re fundamentally less capable of the creative thinking and empathetic connection that drives innovation. The science is clear: failing to detach from work triggers rumination, which prevents the replenishment of our cognitive and emotional resources. It’s like trying to run a marathon on an empty tankeventually, the system fails. And when it does, the costs are staggering: disengaged teams, toxic cultures, and the loss of top talent who refuse to sacrifice their well-being for outdated notions of “commitment.” Enter Move. Think. Rest: Your Operating System for Human Sustainability The move, think, rest, or MTR framework I developedpronounced “motor”offers a refreshingly simple yet scientifically grounded approach to emotional recovery. The MTR framework recognizes that our bodies and minds operate as an integrated system, where physical movement, cognitive engagement, and intentional rest work together to create resilience. Here’s how each element powers recovery: Movement recalibrates your system. Physical activity doesn’t just burn off stressit fundamentally changes your biochemistry. Exercise reduces cortisol while flooding your system with mood-enhancing endorphins. But this isn’t about mandatory gym memberships or corporate fitness challenges. It’s about recognizing that even simple movementa walk around the block, stretching between meetings, taking the stairs instead of the elevatorhelps reset our nervous system and prepares us for deeper rest. Thought creates internal space. Reflection and mindfulness aren’t just wellness buzzwordsthey’re tools for strengthening attention and emotional regulation. When we create space for intentional thinking, we develop the self-awareness needed to recognize depletion before it becomes a crisis. This cognitive recovery is where insights emerge and where we reconnect with the purpose that initially drew us to our work. Rest is where integration happens. Here’s the counterintuitive truth: some of our most productive work happens when we’re doing nothing. Rest provides the liminal space where our minds process, integrate, and make connections that conscious effort can’t force. It’s not lazinessit’s essential maintenance. Sometimes doing less really is doing better. From Surviving to Flourishing The goal of MTR isn’t just to prevent burnoutit’s to enable flourishing. This is the state where productivity becomes a natural byproduct of being fully engaged and authentically yourself. It’s where innovation thrives, where teams genuinely collaborate, and where the “unlimited potential of the Imagination Era” actually becomes accessible. This shift from survival to flourishing isn’t just good for employees, it’s also a competitive advantage. In an AI-driven economy where routine tasks are increasingly automated, the uniquely human capacities for creativity, empathy, and strategic thinking become paramount. But these capacities only emerge when people have the emotional bandwidth to access them. Making Recovery Real: Your Action Plan If you are ready to transform your organization’s approach to emotional recovery, here’s where to start. Keep in mind that it’s not a linear processit is situational and integrated throughout the work day, week, and year.: 1. Institute Strategic Microbreaks Build recovery into the rhythm of the workday, not just the weekend. Implement 15-minute “reset breaks” between back-to-back meetings. Create “No Meeting Thursday Mornings” to give teams uninterrupted time for deep workand genuine rest. Research shows these small reprieves sustain performance far better than pushing through exhaustion. 2. Lead with Visible Vulnerability Recovery will only become culturally acceptable when leaders model it. Take your vacation daysall of them! Talk openly about your own emotional recovery practices in team meetings. Share when you’re taking a walk to clear your head or blocking time for reflection. When senior leaders demonstrate that recovery is valued, not penalized, it gives everyone permission to prioritize their well-being. 3. Measure What Matters Beyond Output Expand your performance metrics to include recovery indicators. Track when teams are taking breaks, using PTO, and maintaining sustainable work rhythms. Celebrate leaders who help their teams achieve results while maintaining healthy boundaries. What gets measured gets managedso start measuring recovery as rigorously as you measure revenue. The Bottom Line The organizations that will thrive in the coming decades won’t be those that extract the most from their peoplethey’ll be those that invest most wisely in their people’s capacity to think, create, and connect. MTR isn’t just a framework for emotional recovery; it’s a blueprint for building companies where human potential can actually flourish. The hustle culture isn’t just outdated, it’s actively undermining your most valuable asset: the full humanity of your workforce. It’s time to build a new model, one that recognizes that our best work emerges not from relentless grinding, but from the dynamic interplay of movement, thought, and rest. The recovery revolution starts now. Are you ready to power down so you can truly power up?

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-11-21 11:00:00| Fast Company

Google has 44 data centers in operation or in development around the world, but as demand for AI and the need for compute capacity grows, the company is already getting started on three more. This latest batch is destined for Texas, where Google already has a pair of data centers in operation just south of Dallas. One of the new centers will be located outside of Amarillo in Armstrong County, with the other two headed to Haskell County, about three and a half hours west of Dallas. The $40 billion investment in the Lone Star State will help the company build additional infrastructure for its cloud and AI units. The company expects the centers to be operational by the end of 2027. This will be Google’s largest single investment in any individual state, according to Texas Governor Greg Abbott. It follows data center announcements in Texas by Anthropic and Microsoft last week. “This is a Texas-sized investment in the future of our great state,” he said in a statement. Google’s $40-billion investment makes Texas Google’s largest investment in any state in the country and supports energy efficiency and workforce development in our state.” Despite Abbott’s claim about AI development, Texas isn’t quite the epicenter of data centers. With these three new ones, however, the state solidifies its bragging rights as having the second most in the country with approximately 415. Texas is still far behind Virginia, however, which has more than 660, mostly in a concentrated area in the Northern part of the state known as “Data Center Alley”. Data centers are essential to the AI efforts of Google and other leaders in that field, but environmentalists have sounded a warning bell about the climate ramifications of the facilities. The power requirements of data centers in North America increased from 2,688 megawatts at the end of 2022 to 5,341 megawatts at the end of 2023, according to MIT. And demand is only growing. (Energy Secretary Chris Wright, in February, called for more nuclear power plants to meet the growing demands of AI companies.) The demand for new data centers cannot be met in a sustainable way, said Noman Bashir, a Computing and Climate Impact Fellow at MIT’s Climate and Sustainability Consortium. “The pace at which companies are building new data centers means the bulk of the electricity to power them must come from fossil fuel-based power plants.” By 2030, Cornell forecasts, the public health burden of AI data centers will be double that of the U.S. steelmaking industry. And it could be on par with all the cars, buses, and trucks in California. Google says its new data centers in Texas will be built responsibly, bringing new energy resources onto the grid and supporting community energy efficiency initiatives. That will include a $30 million Energy Impact Fund to scale and accelerate energy initiatives. One of the Haskell County data centers, the company says, will be built alongside a new solar and battery storage plant. Beyond the short-term job bump that comes with the creation of these centers, Texas will also see a rise in the number of electrical workers. Google says it will train existing electrical workers and more than 1,700 apprentices in Texas by 2030, which will double the pipeline of new electricians in the state, which could encourage other companies to build there. They say that everything is bigger in Texas and that certainly applies to the golden opportunity with AI, said Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-11-21 11:00:00| Fast Company

Google has 44 data centers in operation or in development around the world, but as demand for AI and the need for compute capacity grows, the company is getting started on three more. This latest batch is destined for Texas, where Google already has a pair of data centers in operation just south of Dallas. One of the new centers will be located outside of Amarillo in Armstrong County, with the other two headed to Haskell County, about three and a half hours west of Dallas. The $40 billion investment in the Lone Star State will help the company build additional infrastructure for its cloud and AI units. The company expects the centers to be operational by the end of 2027. This will be Google’s largest single investment in any individual state, according to Texas Governor Greg Abbott. It follows data center announcements in Texas by Anthropic and Microsoft earlier this month. “This is a Texas-sized investment in the future of our great state,” Abbott said in a statement. Despite Abbott’s claim about AI development, Texas isn’t quite the epicenter of data centers. With these three new ones, however, the state solidifies its bragging rights as having the second most in the country with approximately 415. Texas is still far behind Virginia, however, which has more than 660, mostly in a concentrated area in the Northern part of the state known as “Data Center Alley.” Data centers are essential to the AI efforts of Google and other leaders in that field, but environmentalists have sounded a warning bell about the climate ramifications of the facilities. The power requirements of data centers in North America increased from 2,688 megawatts at the end of 2022 to 5,341 megawatts at the end of 2023, according to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. And demand is only growing. (In February, Energy Secretary Chris Wright called for more nuclear power plants to meet the growing demands of AI companies.) “The pace at which companies are building new data centers means the bulk of the electricity to power them must come from fossil-fuel-based power plants,” said Noman Bashir, a computing and climate impact fellow at MIT’s Climate and Sustainability Consortium. Cornell forecasts that by 2030 the public health burden of AI data centers will be double that of the U.S. steelmaking industry. And it could be on par with all the cars, buses, and trucks in California. Google says its new data centers in Texas will be built responsibly, bringing new energy resources onto the grid and supporting community energy-efficiency initiatives. That will include a $30 million Energy Impact Fund to scale and accelerate energy initiatives. One of the Haskell County data centers, the company says, will be built alongside a new solar and battery storage plant. Beyond the short-term job bump that comes with the creation of these centers, Texas will also see a rise in the number of electrical workers. Google says it will train existing electrical workers and more than 1,700 apprentices in Texas by 2030, which will double the pipeline of new electricians in the statethat, in turn, could encourage other companies to build there. They say that everything is bigger in Texasand that certainly applies to the golden opportunity with AI, Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai said.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-11-21 10:45:00| Fast Company

With little more than a coat of paint, buildings could soon make the air around them cooler and harvest gallons of water directly from the atmosphere. Researchers at the University of Sydney in Australia have created a nanoengineered polymer coating that passively cools building surfaces while enabling them to collect water like dew-coated leaves. It’s a material solution that could help combat rising heat and water insecurity in places all over the world. The white coating, a porous paint-like material, reflects up to 97% of sunlight and radiates heat, making surfaces up to 10 degrees cooler than the surrounding air, even under direct sun. This cooler condition allows water vapor in the air to condense like dew on the smooth coating surface, where it can be collected. In a recent test, a roughly 10-square-foot area treated with the coating was able to harvest 1.6 cups of water over the course of single day. Prof. Chiara Neto and Dr. Ming Chiu [Photo: University of Sydney] This research was led by Chiara Neto, a professor at the University of Sydney’s Nano Institute and School of Chemistry. Neto is also cofounder of a startup that’s commercializing this coating, called Dewpoint Innovations. “Our main goal in designing this new material is to address water scarcity, providing a sustainable and delocalized source of water that is entirely passive,” she says. [Photo: University of Sydney] Reflective paint 2.0 Solar-reflective paint is hardly new to the world of sustainability, and it’s been used widely to reduce heat gain on everything from buildings to UPS trucks to playgrounds. This new coating builds on those applications by taking more advantage of the cooler air produced by bouncing heat off a building, creating a surface onto which water vapor can condense in the cooler ambient temperatures. The coating’s porous nature makes it more durable than typical reflective paints, which enables it to better collect dew than other surface coverings that quickly degrade. The cooling and water harvesting potential of the coating could be substantial, according to a study recently published in the journal Advanced Functional Materials. The researchers measured the coating’s performance in six months of outdoor tests on the roof of a building on the campus of the University of Sydney. Specially designed surfaces and measurement tools tracked surface temperature and dew water collected on a minute-by-minute basis alongside weather and climate data to better understand when the coating would perform best. [Photo: University of Sydney] A theoretical model extended that data to create a water capture prediction for the rest of Australia, suggesting the highest water capture rates in the tropical northeast of the country. Neto says this model could be used by extension in the rest of the world, and has identified places where the coating could be especially useful. “The areas most suited to the passive cooling effect are areas in which the sky is often clear of clouds, and the amount of water in the air is not too high and not too low (ideally around 80% relative humidity), to obtain the highest cooling of the surface and the highest water condensation,” Neto explains. She notes that the coatings need to be clearly exposed to the sky to be most effective. “If used on the walls of buildings, they would still bring some cooling, but not as much as on the roof,” she adds. The ideal configuration is at a small tilt, a roof angled at about 30 degrees, to enable the roll-off of water droplets. [Photo: University of Sydney] But even in places where the humidity is too low to harvest much dew, the reflectivity of the coating will still provide the benefit of lower ambient temperatures and reduced energy requirements for buildings. The coating is not designed to be used as a ground cover, but Neto says it could be used in tilted and flat areas around sport courts, fields, on tents, on animals sheds, and other spaces. If it were to be implemented widely, the coating could provide a steady source of water, albeit a small one. The study found that a one-square-meter section of roof treated with the coating could harvest up to 390 milliliters of water per day, a little more than a cup and a half of water from about 10 square feet of surface. Scaling up to the size of a building, that could add up to several gallons worth of water a day. That may not seem like a lot when the average person in the U.S. uses more than 150 gallons per day, but the volume could easily add up as more buildings are retrofitted, or even designed specifically, to use this coating. This passive approach to water collection “opens the door to sustainable, low-cost, and decentralized sources of fresh watera critical need in the face of climate change and growing water scarcity,” Neto says.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-11-21 10:30:00| Fast Company

There are certain things that make it obvious that you are a working parent. And I am not talking about the bags under your eyes or the six cups of coffee needed to get through the day. It usually happens at 4:59 p.m. when they start to pack up so they can make it to daycare or a school recital or any number of obligations parents have. As they slip out of the open-plan cubicle maze, a child-free colleague glances over and thinks (or sometimes says out loud), Must be nice. Welcome to the us versus them of modern work life: parents versus nonparents, aka committed versus distracted or the all-in versus the always juggling. In my book How to Have a Kid and a Life, I wrote about the motherhood penalty, the well-documented hit mothers take in pay, promotions, and perceived competence. Decades of research show that when you add kids to a womans résumé, hiring managers see her as less committed and less competent than an identical candidate without children. The same studies show fathers are often perceived as more committed. Before hybrid work was an option, mothers had a clear disadvantage. The question now is: Does flexible work close that empathy gap or widen it? {"blockType":"creator-network-promo","data":{"mediaUrl":"https:\/\/images.fastcompany.com\/image\/upload\/f_webp,q_auto,c_fit\/wp-cms-2\/2015\/08\/erikaaslogo.png","headline":"Girl, Listen: A Guide to What Really Matters","description":"Ericka dives into the heat of modern motherhood, challenging the notion that personal identity must be sacrificed at the altar of parenting. ","substackDomain":"https:\/\/erickasouter.substack.com\/","colorTheme":"blue","redirectUrl":""}} Many workplaces still worship the ideal worker. You know the typealways available and never needs to slip out for a child with a fever. In interviews for my book, women described how the bias shows up in little moments: The big project that always gets handed to the single guy and then becomes his fast track to promotion. The manager who says, I just didnt want to burden you, a move that quietly sidelines a new mom. The performance review that praises a mothers flexibility but questions her availability. Parenthood isnt seen as a strength or a crash course in time management and crises response. Its treated as a potential liability the company is doing us a favor by accommodating. Is hybrid work the cure parents need? On paper, hybrid work should be the great equalizer. Parents gain flexibility, lose the soul-sucking commute, and can occasionally make it to the school play and not worry about annoyed glances from colleagues. Studies show that hybrid arrangements can reduce stress and improve well-being, particularly for caregivers. But the reality is more complicated. Post-pandemic research on working parents finds that while many value flexibility, they worry it could hurt their careers. In one national survey, parents reported feeling pressure to hide caregiving responsibilities again. Sociologists call this flexibility stigma, which is the perception that people who work remotely or adjust their hours for family reasons are less committed and less deserving of moving up. Not surprisingly, this stigma hits mothers the hardest. So hybrid schedules can actually create a new divide: The nonparent whos in the office four days a week is seen as visible and all-in. The parent whos remote two days a week is seen as harder to reach. Never mind that they are online and answering emails at 9:30 p.m. Same output, totally different story. The backup system Heres where the us versus them really kicks in. Nonparents sometimes feel like they are the default backup system. They are the ones who stay late, travel on short notice, or cover the late-night launch because you dont have kids.  Meanwhile, parents scramble to log back on after bedtime. In How to Have a Kid and a Life, I talk about this: parents trying to prove theyre as committed as ever while also trying not to miss their entire family life. Many moms told me they felt they had to be better than before and better than everyone else just to be seen as equally talented at work. The result is a workplace full of exhausted parents and quietly resentful nonparents; each convinced the other group has it easier. So, is hybrid helping? The honest answer is it depends on how we use it. Hybrid work can bridge the empathy gap when: Leaders model flexibility for everyone, not just parents. Promotion and star status are tied to measurable results, not just hours behind the desk. Parents dont feel the need to make their personal lives invisible by muting their kids and hiding school pickups. It widens the gap when: Flexibility is unofficial and negotiated in whispers. Remote days become mommy track days. Teams quietly equate butt-in-seat time with loyalty and ambition. The real opportunity isnt to build a special system for parents. Its to stop treating not having a busy personal life as a qualification. Everyone benefits from a workplace where: People can have caregiving responsibilities or a passion or a life outside Slack and still be seen as serious about their careers. Nonparents can say, I cant stay tonight without needing a daycare story to justify it. Parents dont have to apologize for being parents or prove their worth with late-night emails. If theres one thing my reporting, my book, and, frankly, my own life have taught me its this: A workforce full of burned-out, overcompensating people is bad for business and terrible for human beings. Hybrid work gives us new tools. Whether it becomes a bridge or a black hole depends on how honest were willing to be about the biases we still carry and whether were finally ready to dump the myth of the ideal worker and replace it with something real: the ideal human. {"blockType":"creator-network-promo","data":{"mediaUrl":"https:\/\/images.fastcompany.com\/image\/upload\/f_webp,q_auto,c_fit\/wp-cms-2\/2015\/08\/erikaaslogo.png","headline":"Girl, Listen: A Guide to What Really Matters","description":"Ericka dives into the heat of modern motherhood, challenging the notion that personal identity must be sacrificed at the altar of parenting. ","substackDomain":"https:\/\/erickasouter.substack.com\/","colorTheme":"blue","redirectUrl":""}}

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-11-21 10:00:00| Fast Company

If your team cant function without you in the room, you dont have a team, you have a dependency. Too many business owners confuse supporting their team with carrying them. Instead of learning how to coach team members, they do the work for them. They jump into every problem, solve every issue, and answer every question themselves. It feels like good leadership, but its actually just bottlenecking in disguise.  The goal of leadership isnt to be the smartest person in the room. Instead, its to build a room full of people who can think, solve, and act without you. That shift, from problem-solver to coach, is one of the most important moves a business owner can make. Its also the only way to scale without burning out. Heres how to make it.  1. Stop answering every question When a team member asks you, What should I do about X? dont give them the answer right away. Instead, ask:  What options have you considered?  What would you do if I werent here?  Whats the next step you could take?  This isnt about being evasive. Its about developing their decision-making muscles. Every time you solve it for them, you train them to keep coming back. When you coach them through it, you grow their confidence and capability.  2. Trade firefighting for frameworks Good managers put out fires. Great leaders build fire prevention systems. Start capturing how you think through challenges:  What is your decision-making process?  What questions do you ask before committing to a course of action?  What patterns do you see in recurring issues?  Turn those into frameworks your team can use. That could be a decision tree, a checklist, or a step-by-step doc. If its in your head, its a habit. If its on paper, its a tool.  3. Coach on outcomes, not style  Many owners get stuck correcting how something is done instead of focusing on the result. If a team member gets to 90% of the desired outcome in their own way, then celebrate that. Tweak where needed but resist the urge to micromanage their method.  Too much intervening or micromanaging can stifle creativity and growth. Your goal isnt to build clones. Its to build capability. Let people solve problems in their own voice as long as the standards are met.  4. Create a feedback loop. Then, step back Coaching doesnt mean disappearing. It means setting up support and structure:  Weekly check-ins focused on progress, not perfection.  Clear KPIs tied to outcomes, not hours.  Open channels for questions but with the expectation that they will bring solutions too.  When you step back with structure, your team steps up with ownership.  5. Let go of the hero identity It feels good to be the fixer, the rescuer, or the one who always has the answers. However, if your business depends on you always being the hero, youll never escape the hamster wheel. And your team will never reach their full potential. Great coaches dont chase trophies. They build champions.  Be the multiplier, not the machine Your job isnt to do more. Its to make everyone around you better. Coaching is the leverage point where leadership stops being reactive and starts becoming exponential. Its the difference between growth that drains you and growth that sustains you.  So the next time you feel the urge to fix something for your team, pause and ask: Is this a task to completeor a chance to coach? One builds a to-do list.  The other builds a business.  David Finkel This article originally appeared on Fast Companys sister publication, Inc. Inc. is the voice of the American entrepreneur. We inspire, inform, and document the most fascinating people in business: the risk-takers, the innovators, and the ultra-driven go-getters that represent the most dynamic force in the American economy.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-11-21 10:00:00| Fast Company

Instead of teens simply putting down their phones to take a break, TikTok wants them to use the app’s new breathing exercises and affirmation journal to improve their well-being.  Over the past couple of years, a growing number of legislators have been proposing or enacting laws to restrict or limit minors access to social media apps in order to protect children’s and teens mental health.  TikTok has other ideas on how to boost well-beingwithout ever leaving the app. This week, it launched a Time and Well-Being space within users account settings, replacing the existing screen-time management page.  New features in the space include an affirmation journal with more than 120 positive prompts that let users set an intention for the day ahead. (Naturally, they are shareable on social media.) Theres also a sound generator that can play calming sounds like rain or ocean waves. TikTok cites survey data that those who use the platform are 14% more likely than nonusers to listen to music to help them sleep or relax.  The page will also feature a breathing exercise module and content from creators who discuss topics including limiting screen time, utilizing parental tools, and customizing feeds.  The company said that during its early testing, more people visited the new well-being screen versus the previous version of the screen-time menu. The affirmation journal has reportedly been the most popular tool. To incentivize users to prioritize their well-being while using the app, badges will be given to those who complete well-being missions, which include meditating on the app and sticking to a self-imposed screen-time limit. In a blog post, TikTok said that tens of millions of people have meditated using the tool after it was made available earlier this year. The company also said that it will prompt people to visit the Time and Well-Being section of the app settings if they use the app during designated sleep hours. Considering how much time teens spend on TikTok, prioritizing their well-being while on the app is paramount. According to the Pew Research Center, 6 in 10 U.S. teens visit TikTok daily, and 16% say they use it almost constantly.  However, these latest features may simply be a case of rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic. Last year, more than a dozen states sued TikTok for its allegedly addictive algorithm, claiming it was deliberately designed to keep young people hooked on the app.  These tools are meant to improve safety and well-being on the platform, particularly for teenagers. Yet, if you have to turn to deep breathing or be incentivized to stay off an app, it just might be the app that is the problem.

Category: E-Commerce
 

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