In this conversation, Daniel Priestley explores the transformative impact of AI on the global economy, predicting a major financial crisis by 2029 due to the unsustainable costs of maintaining data center infrastructure. He argues that while AI will commoditize intelligence and traditional professional roles like law, it will simultaneously elevate blue-collar trades and "irreplaceably human" skills. The "Jevons Paradox" suggests that as AI makes business creation cheaper and faster, we will see an explosion of niche, community-driven "lifestyle businesses" that prioritize personal connection and human experience over massive scale. Priestley emphasizes that the most defensible assets in an AI-driven world are personal branding, entrepreneurial thinking, and lived experience—elements that cannot be replicated by algorithms. He advises individuals to focus on "founder-opportunity fit," leveraging AI tools to prototype ideas quickly while staying anchored in real-world human relationships. The discussion also touches on broader societal shifts, including the risks of government over-involvement in the economy and the vital importance of family and meaningful struggle as the true sources of long-term fulfillment. [Gemini 3 provided assistance with the summary]
Saturday, March 21, 2026
History tells us a golden age can come after the AI apocalypse- Jo-An Occhipinti, Ante Prodan and Roy Green, Financial Review
Friday, March 20, 2026
AI could leave many college grads unemployed, says ServiceNow CEO - EdScoop
Key findings about how Americans view artificial intelligence - Michelle Faverio and Emma Kikuchi, Pew Research
Thursday, March 19, 2026
University of Phoenix Scholars Publish Study on Academic Applications of Generative AI in Higher Education - University of Phoenix
OpenAI ChatGPT leader discusses AI agents and the future of knowledge work at Harvard Business School - Emma Thompson, EdTech Innovation Hub
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
What 3 Leading AI Models Say Are the Most Vulnerable Jobs in Higher Ed - Ray Schroeder, Inside Higther Ed
Adopting AI is a social contract - Andrew Inkpen & Dani Inkpen, University Affairs
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
AI broke the college degree: Why higher education matters more than ever - Katherine Perry, the Linfield Review
AI Tools to Reduce College Dropout Rates - Nancy Mann Jackson, EdTech
Roughly 3 in 10 college students drop out without earning any degree, resulting in higher unemployment and lower lifetime earnings than those who earn bachelor’s degrees, according to the Education Data Initiative. To help boost student retention, colleges and universities are using a variety of artificial intelligence tools that can help identify at-risk students early, offer customized learning, provide 24/7 assistance and improve engagement. “We’ve always known in higher education that we need to deliver more personalized, timely help to students who are struggling, but we haven’t always had the resources to deliver personal attention at scale,” says Timothy Renick, executive director of the National Institute for Student Success at Georgia State University. “Using technology can level the playing field, allowing us to leverage data and analytics to deliver personal attention at scale in a way that is much more cost effective than hiring hundreds of new staff.”
https://edtechmagazine.com/higher/article/2026/03/ai-tools-reduce-college-dropout-rates
Monday, March 16, 2026
Today’s AI is built to respond. The future belongs to proactive systems. - Kiara Nirghin & Nikhara Nirghin, Big Think
What national AI plans get wrong and how to fix them - Cameron F. Kerry and Saurabh Mishra, Brookings
Sunday, March 15, 2026
Universities Are Not Only About Jobs. They're About Human Existence in the Age of AI. - Maria Mercedes Mateo-Berganza Diaz, IDB
In a world where AI can outperform humans in many cognitive tasks, universities must preserve human judgment, ethics, and purpose — not just technical skills. Higher education must prioritize broad, humanistic foundations alongside specialized skills to prepare students for complex, “messy” work that machines cannot replace. For the Global South, the stakes are even higher: universities are essential to safeguard agency, cultural sovereignty, and the ability to shape futures — not merely adapt to those designed elsewhere.
OpenAI's new GPT-5.4 clobbers humans on pro-level work in tests - by 83% - David Gewirtz, ZDnet
GPT-5.4 is also more reliable, producing 18% fewer errors and 33% fewer false claims than GPT-5.2, according to OpenAI. GPT-5.4's 83% score suggests AI rivals expert professionals. Tests span nine industries and 44 real-world occupations. New capabilities boost coding, tools, and computer control.