There is little question that Donald Trump’s return to the presidency has accelerated a fundamental transformation in how international diplomacy is practiced. Perhaps the most evident outcome of recent years is that the art of diplomacy — traditionally conducted behind the closed doors of high offices — has shifted into the realm of a live political show, with millions of people around the globe following the twists and turns of major international negotiations much like they would follow the new episodes of a captivating television series [7]. The philosophical underpinning of this shift reaches back to 1987, when Trump co-authored The Art of the Deal. In that book, the real estate mogul described his disruptive negotiating method, which consists of thinking big, asking for a lot, and using the media to his advantage [5]. What was once a boardroom philosophy has now become a template for summit diplomacy, and its influence is reverberating from Europe to Asia to Africa [6].
1. Gartner’s 40% prediction for task‑specific agents by 2026
Gartner, a leading technology research and advisory firm, projects that 40% of enterprise applications will be integrated with task‑specific AI agents by the end of 2026, up from less than 5% in 2025.[1,2] The core of this prediction is that today’s embedded “assistants” will rapidly evolve into autonomous, task‑specialized agents that can execute workflows, manage incidents, and resolve support cases without constant human prompting. Gartner reaches this conclusion by combining its long‑running enterprise software market tracking with scenario modeling of AI adoption stages, outlining a five‑step evolution from simple assistants in 2025 to multi‑agent ecosystems by 2029.[1,2] This matters because it effectively time‑stamps a platform shift: if nearly half of enterprise apps contain agents by 2026, then for many people “using software at work” will increasingly mean collaborating with semi‑autonomous systems that anticipate, decide, and act. The prediction signals that the everyday impact of agentic AI will not arrive as a distant AGI moment but as a fast, incremental redesign of the tools people already use—changing job roles, required skills, and expectations of accountability inside organizations.
NVIDIA Corporation is headquartered in Santa Clara, California, and was founded in 1993 by Jensen Huang, Chris Malachowsky, and Curtis Priem. It is a fabless semiconductor company — meaning it designs its chips but outsources manufacturing, primarily to TSMC in Taiwan. Today, with a market capitalization that has surpassed four trillion dollars, NVIDIA stands as one of the most valuable companies in the history of global business.
The Terafab project—Elon Musk’s ambitious joint semiconductor initiative spanning Tesla and SpaceX—has moved rapidly from announcement in March 2026 into an unusually aggressive early execution phase by mid-April, with several concrete developments emerging across hiring, partnerships, supplier outreach, and adjacent chip progress.
Yes, there are K‑12 equivalents to “AI colleges” or “AI‑native universities,” but the language is still unsettled. Most systems don’t yet use a single, formal label; instead you see phrases like “AI‑themed high school,” “AI magnet program,” “AI‑focused curriculum,” or “AI‑embedded education.”1,2,6 In that sense, “AI school” or “AI‑native school” is a fair, accurate shorthand for a small but growing group of K‑12 institutions that treat AI not as an add‑on tool, but as a core design principle for curriculum, pedagogy, and student pathways. These schools sit at the far edge of a broader wave: states issuing AI guidance, districts running pilots, and magnet programs weaving AI into their identity rather than sprinkling it on top.3,5,9,10
Recent work suggests that gender differences in AI anxiety are real but not just about anxiety alone: women tend to report higher AI anxiety and lower positive attitudes, use, and self-rated knowledge, yet the gender gap in attitudes shrinks when anxiety is high, because anxiety itself depresses attitudes for everyone.1 A newer 2026 study adds an important layer by showing that women’s greater skepticism toward AI is also tied to higher perceived risk and greater exposure to AI-related harms, especially when AI’s benefits are uncertain.2
Oil has been the industrial age’s quintessential strategic commodity—dense energy, easily transported, and indispensable for mechanized armies, aviation, shipping, and modern economies.1 As navies converted from coal to oil and airpower became central to warfare, control over oil fields, refineries, and chokepoints translated directly into military capability and geopolitical leverage.1,2 At the same time, oil revenues reshaped state power: they allowed governments to fund patronage networks, buy weapons, and sometimes wage war without broad taxation, feeding what scholars call the “resource curse.”3 Yet the claim that a vast majority of modern wars are “about oil” is too strong. Recent research argues that many famous “oil wars” had multiple drivers—territorial disputes, regime survival, ideology, or regional rivalry—with oil often intensifying stakes rather than serving as the sole or even primary cause.1,4 Still, there is a clear pattern: where oil is abundant or strategically located, it frequently magnifies tensions, shapes war aims, and influences how outside powers intervene.1,2
The reality of AI dominated mail and parcel delivery services emerging in 2025–2026 is more nuanced than a sudden AI takeover. We are witnessing a layered, system-wide transformation in which AI becomes the invisible operating system of logistics. The shift is already well underway, but it is unfolding unevenly across different parts of the delivery chain, with some segments (warehouses, routing, tracking) advancing much faster than others (last-mile autonomy, full end-to-end replacement of human labor).
AI colleges pose a serious and growing threat to traditional higher education — but the threat is neither uniform nor immediate. It is best understood as a structural acceleration of pre-existing vulnerabilities in the traditional college model, sharpened by AI-native competitors that are small today but gaining legal legitimacy and marketplace positioning far faster than their predecessors in online education did.
“AI colleges” or “AI‑native universities” are higher‑education institutions built around artificial intelligence not just as a subject of study, but as the core infrastructure for teaching, assessment, and student support. Instead of layering chatbots onto a traditional campus, these institutions use AI tutors, autonomous learning platforms, and mastery‑based progression as the default way students learn, often with flexible pacing, continuous feedback, and heavy alignment to workforce skills.1,2 The idea crystallized in the early‑to‑mid 2020s as generative AI matured and institutions began to imagine “AI‑native” models where every student has a persistent AI assistant and much of the instructional and administrative workflow is automated or co‑run by AI systems.1 By 2024–2025, several organizations started branding themselves as AI‑exclusive or AI‑native universities, offering accredited degrees, low‑cost or scholarship‑backed tuition, and fully online or autonomous learning environments that challenge the assumptions of traditional colleges.2,4,7
Adam Todd: Welcome to Classroom Dynamics,1 the podcast where we unlock the future of education. Hi everybody, I’m your host, Adam Todd. Today we’re heading to Hawai‘i to meet a true changemaker, Gabriel Yanagahara. From the classrooms in Honolulu to statewide workshops impacting thousands of educators, Gabriel is leading a grassroots AI movement in community, creativity, and culture. He’s not just teaching artificial intelligence. He’s empowering students and teachers to shape it. With over 2500 educators trained in programs reaching millions, his work blends cutting edge tech with local relevance and ethical responsibility. Now, I recently met Gabriel at South by Southwest in Austin, Texas,2 after attending his session on AI and I immediately had to have him on this very podcast talking about it at the Logitech Logic Work Lounge.
If you have not registered yet, we would love for you to join educators from around the world at the 31st Annual TCC Worldwide Online Conference. This year’s theme, Human By Design, tackles the most pressing questions around AI, creativity, and purposeful education.
Today, April 10, 2026 — Siblings Day — arrives with a haunting irony: for tens of millions of children alive right now, there are no siblings to call. The one-child family, once a curiosity in Western demography or a government mandate in China, has become a defining feature of the modern developed world, and its gravitational pull is spreading outward into middle-income nations with startling velocity.
Image created by Copilot. (The similar image in the sidebar was also created by Copilot.)
The April 6–9, 2026 HumanX conference at Moscone Center in San Francisco can be read not simply as a gathering of prominent technologists, but as a signal event in the consolidation of an AI-era worldview. Taken together, the remarks of speakers such as Fei-Fei Li, Matt Garman, Andrew Ng, Bret Taylor, Ali Ghodsi, Sarah Guo, Sridhar Ramaswamy, and Al Gore reveal a coherent narrative: AI in 2026 is no longer emerging—it is structuring the next phase of economic, institutional, and human development.
When Donald Trump published The Art of the Deal in 1987 — a memoir and business-advice hybrid ghost-written by journalist Tony Schwartz — few could have predicted that its eleven negotiating principles would one day be road-tested against a geopolitical chokepoint carrying a fifth of the world’s oil supply.1 Yet that is precisely what has unfolded in the spring of 2026, as Trump cycled through threats, deadlines, retreats, and ultimatums in his effort to reopen the Strait of Hormuz after a U.S.-Israeli military campaign against Iran effectively closed it to commercial shipping.2 The episode has galvanized a body of serious scholarship that identifies a direct throughline between Trump’s boardroom instincts and his conduct of international conflict resolution — and has surfaced instructive historical parallels in the careers of past American presidents and world leaders.
The April 7, 2026 cease-fire between the United States and Iran is best understood not as a comprehensive peace agreement but as a narrowly constructed, time-bound de-escalation mechanism centered on the immediate crisis in the Strait of Hormuz. Across multiple contemporaneous reports, the core terms converge on a two-week provisional cease-fire, brokered by Pakistan, under which the United States halts imminent large-scale strikes and Iran agrees to “complete, immediate, and safe” reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and safe passage for shipping.1-3
To have a real shot in 2028, Democrats need to start from a sober account of why Trump’s power has grown rather than treating it as a temporary aberration or as purely a story about prejudice. Trump’s 2024 coalition was not only large but more racially and ethnically diverse than in 2016 or 2020, with measurable gains among Hispanic and Black voters, especially men, while retaining strong support among noncollege and rural voters.1,3 His strength rests on three intertwined pillars: a durable identification with “forgotten” working‑class communities, especially outside major metros; a sense that he channels anger at economic and cultural elites; and a style that fits what researchers describe as “authoritarian populism”—a leader claiming to embody “the people,” promising order and national restoration, and attacking institutions that constrain him.4,9,14 If Democrats misdiagnose this as a fringe phenomenon or as purely a matter of disinformation, they will keep designing campaigns for the electorate they wish existed rather than the one that actually turned out in 2024.
The phrases “shadow ruler” and “shadow government” are already circulating in mainstream political discourse, though they have been applied so far primarily to figures operating within Trump’s current administration rather than to Trump himself as a future out-of-office actor. ProPublica investigative reporter Andy Kroll has used the precise term “shadow president” to describe Russell Vought, Trump’s director of the Office of Management and Budget, characterizing him as “basically a second commander-in-chief, a shadow president” within the second Trump term.1Brewminate, drawing on that reporting, extended the concept further, describing how Vought has built what some in Washington describe as a “government-in-waiting,” a network of conservative think tanks, legal operatives, and former staffers who now serve as the brain trust for Trump’s second term.2 If such a structure already exists around Trump while he is in office, the question of whether Trump himself could assume a comparable shadow role after January 2029 is not merely hypothetical — it follows a logic already visible in the architecture of MAGA governance.
Of all the figures listed in the 5 April 2026 ETC Journal ranking of 2028 Democratic prospects, Andy Beshear may be the most consequential dark horse that most voters outside Kentucky have yet to fully reckon with.1 He is ranked sixth in the ETC Journal field — well below Gavin Newsom and Kamala Harris — yet the case for his candidacy is surprisingly robust when examined against recent reporting and polling.
Projecting 2028 primaries this far out is inherently speculative, but there is already a surprisingly rich ecosystem of reporting, early polling and “invisible primary” maneuvering to work with. What follows is a rank-ordered snapshot as of 5 April 2026, grounded in Ballotpedia’s lists of potential contenders and cross‑checked against recent, non‑paywalled analyses of who appears best positioned inside each party. Be sure to confirm any specific claims, especially about polling and offices held, with up‑to‑date trusted sources as the cycle evolves.
AI is changing journalism quickly, but the strongest evidence from 2025–2026 points to augmentation, workflow redesign, and selective automation rather than wholesale replacement of human reporters.1-3 The clearest pattern is that AI is taking over repetitive, structured, or high-volume tasks while journalists retain responsibility for verification, judgment, interviews, and accountability.1,4,5
Considering the AI-dominated direction that modern warfare is taking on a global scale, military leaders and heads of state are transforming their expectations of future soldiers. The deep reality is unsettling and historically significant: militaries are not merely updating training or adding new technical specialties; they are beginning to redefine the ontology of the “soldier” itself. Across doctrine, training pipelines, force structure, and civil-military boundaries, evidence from 2024–2026 suggests the early stages of a systemic transformation comparable to the shift from industrial warfare to nuclear-era deterrence—except this time the change is diffused, software-driven, and deeply entangled with civilian technological ecosystems.
In April 2026, artificial intelligence is no longer a peripheral tool in U.S. marketing—it is reshaping the profession at a structural level, altering not only how work is done but what “marketing expertise” means. Across industries, executives increasingly describe marketing as an “AI-first” function at a turning point, where human labor is being reorganized around intelligent systems rather than merely assisted by them.1 This shift is visible in both organizational strategy and day-to-day workflows: companies such as Apple are now appointing senior leaders specifically to oversee AI-driven marketing transformation, signaling that AI is not a niche capability but a core strategic domain.2 At the same time, major advertising firms like WPP are restructuring and cutting jobs explicitly to become “AI-enabled businesses,” underscoring that AI adoption is directly tied to workforce redesign.3
International organizations such as the OECD, UNESCO, the World Bank, and EDUCAUSE have produced a steady stream of reports on artificial intelligence in education over the past several years, yet their analyses share a strikingly consistent institutional framing. Across these bodies, AI is conceptualized primarily as a tool for teachers, schools, and education systems, with attention focused on pedagogical integration, governance, ethics, and institutional readiness. The OECD’s Digital Education Outlook 2026, for example, devotes extensive attention to AI as a tutor, partner, or assistant within formal instructional settings, while treating student use outside school largely as a risk to be managed rather than a learning frontier to be understood.1