Connectivism, Its Founders, and the Age of AI: Siemens and Downes

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by Claude)
Editor

[Related: Evolution of Connectivism to the Age of AI: Downes and SiemenscMOOC: Increasing Connectivist Overlap Into AI-Enhanced Education | A May 2026 Update on Downes and Siemens’ cMOOC]

In 2008, George Siemens and Stephen Downes designed and taught the first connectivist MOOC — a course titled “Connectivism and Connective Knowledge” (CCK08) offered through the University of Manitoba — enrolling approximately 2,300 students and launching what would become a landmark in the history of open teaching (1,2). Their effort was grounded in a learning theory, connectivism, that Siemens had first articulated in a 2005 article in the International Journal of Instructional Technology and Distance Learning (3). Downes extended and deepened the theory in a series of papers and blog posts through his widely-read newsletter OLDaily, which he has published almost every weekday since the mid-1990s.

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A May 2026 Update on Downes and Siemens’ cMOOC

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by DeepSeek)
Editor

[Related: Connectivism, Its Founders, and the Age of AI: Siemens and Downes | cMOOC: Increasing Connectivist Overlap Into AI-Enhanced EducationEvolution of Connectivism to the Age of AI: Downes and Siemens]

The convergence of connectivist MOOCs (cMOOCs) and artificial intelligence in 2025–2026 has created a dynamic and rapidly evolving landscape. This report synthesizes recent credible, open-access sources to examine the continued influence of the foundational ideas of Stephen Downes and George Siemens, the specific ways in which cMOOC principles are shaping AI in education, and the current research trajectories of both founders. The following sections present a narrative analysis of these developments, drawing on the most current publications and expert commentary through May 2026.

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cMOOC: Increasing Connectivist Overlap Into AI-Enhanced Education

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by ChatGPT)
Editor

[Related: Connectivism, Its Founders, and the Age of AI: Siemens and Downes | A May 2026 Update on Downes and Siemens’ cMOOC | Evolution of Connectivism to the Age of AI: Downes and Siemens]

The connectivist MOOC, or cMOOC, pioneered by Stephen Downes and George Siemens in 2008 through their course “Connectivism and Connective Knowledge,” has not disappeared. Instead, by late May 2026, it has evolved from a headline educational phenomenon into a foundational intellectual framework underlying contemporary debates about networked learning, AI-mediated education, learning analytics, open pedagogy, and human-machine collaboration. While the commercial MOOC boom of the 2010s became dominated by xMOOCs — centralized, platform-based courses emphasizing video lectures, quizzes, and credentialing — the original cMOOC model survived as a distributed philosophy of learning emphasizing networks, autonomy, openness, interactivity, and learner-generated knowledge (1,2).

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Evolution of Connectivism to the Age of AI: Downes and Siemens

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by Gemini)
Editor

[Related: Connectivism, Its Founders, and the Age of AI: Siemens and Downes | cMOOC: Increasing Connectivist Overlap Into AI-Enhanced Education | A May 2026 Update on Downes and Siemens’ cMOOC]

In 2008, Stephen Downes and George Siemens launched the landmark online course Connectivism and Connective Knowledge (CCK08), unwittingly pioneering the framework known as the massive open online course (MOOC) (2,7). Over time, the MOOC landscape fractured into two distinct lineages. The commercialized variant, or xMOOC, adopted by institutions like Coursera and EdX, relies heavily on a centralized, behaviorist instructional model centered on structured data delivery and standardized testing.

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Will AGI Be Used to Raise the Intelligence of Other Living Creatures?

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by Claude)
Editor

The question of whether humanity’s accelerating progress toward Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) could one day be translated into deliberate efforts to boost the cognitive capacities of other living organisms is not as fantastical as it might initially sound. It resides at the crossroads of neuroscience, synthetic biology, genetic engineering, philosophy, and ethics — a space that is rapidly being occupied by serious researchers, bioethicists, and technologists. The notion of intentionally elevating the intelligence of dogs, birds, monkeys, ants, bacteria, trees, flowers, vegetables, and fungi represents an extraordinary extension of what has long been imagined in science fiction and is now beginning to attract the attention of mainstream science. As AGI draws closer to realization — with leading researchers placing its emergence within three to ten years (1) — the tools and conceptual frameworks driving it are converging with breakthroughs in genomics, brain-computer interfaces (BCIs), and synthetic biology to make the concept of cross-species cognitive uplift at least theoretically plausible.

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Can Dogs Distinguish Androids from Humans Beyond Scent?

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by ChatGPT)
Editor

The question of whether dogs could distinguish a highly advanced android from a biological human has become increasingly relevant as humanoid robotics grows more sophisticated. Dogs possess sensory systems that operate very differently from human perception. Even if an android were visually convincing to humans, dogs would still analyze a wide range of biological signals that humans often overlook. Scent remains the most obvious differentiator, but dogs also appear sensitive to heartbeat rhythms, breathing patterns, thermal signatures, movement dynamics, vocal micro-irregularities, tactile texture, and behavioral synchrony. Modern research in canine cognition and robotics suggests that dogs integrate these signals into a holistic perception of “livingness.”

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Opinions on Why Tulsi Gabbard Resigned as Director of National Intelligence

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by Claude)
Editor

On May 22, 2026, Tulsi Gabbard announced her resignation as Director of National Intelligence (DNI), the highest-ranking intelligence official in the United States government. In her resignation letter — posted publicly on X and first reported by Fox News Digital — Gabbard stated that her husband, videographer Abraham Williams, had recently been diagnosed with “an extremely rare form of bone cancer” and that she could not “in good conscience ask him to face this fight alone” while serving in such a demanding post (1). Her resignation is effective June 30, 2026, making her the fourth Cabinet official to depart during Donald Trump’s second term (2).

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Technology, Democratization, and the Future of Higher Education (May 2026)

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by Claude)
Editor

The question of whether technological change tends systematically toward democratization is one that cuts to the heart of how we understand progress itself. History offers no clean answer. Gutenberg’s press democratized literacy but also propagated propaganda. The internet democratized information but concentrated economic power in the hands of a few platform giants. Artificial intelligence, still unfolding in its social consequences, presents a similarly ambivalent face. Yet scholars and practitioners who study the long arc of technological adoption have noticed a recurring pattern: most general-purpose technologies, after an initial period of concentrated or elite use, eventually tend to become widely accessible, cheaper, and more deeply embedded in everyday life. In this sense, the direction of technological change may indeed be broadly democratizing, though the pace and distribution of benefits are never guaranteed to be equitable.

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What the Transition to Embodied AI Reveals About Technological Change

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by ChatGPT)
Editor

The transition from digital AI systems to embodied AI systems is comparable in important ways to the historical transition from the command-line interface (CLI) to the graphical user interface (GUI). In both cases, the technological shift does not merely improve convenience. It fundamentally changes who can use the technology, how people conceptualize the technology, and what kinds of tasks become possible. The CLI era required users to adapt themselves to machines through specialized symbolic commands. The GUI era inverted that relationship by adapting computing to ordinary human perception and interaction. Embodied AI appears poised to produce a similar inversion: instead of humans adapting themselves to digital systems operating on screens, AI systems are increasingly adapting themselves to human physical environments, gestures, objects, and social spaces (1,2).

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‘Techno-Primalists’: The Yin-Yang of Innovation and Ancestral Practice

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by Claude)
Editor

[Related: What to Call a Technophile Who Is Also a Retro-Tech Enthusiast: ‘techno-primalist’?]

The article, “What to Call a Technophile Who Is Also a Retro-Tech Enthusiast: ‘techno-primalist’?” (ETC Journal, 22 May 2026) proposes a richly evocative label—techno-primalist—for those who adopt the newest computing and AI tools while simultaneously rediscovering manual typewriters, sourdough baking, basket weaving, organic gardening, analog audio restoration, and wilderness hiking (1). The term deserves serious consideration, but it also invites comparison with several existing coinages and frameworks. Understanding where “techno-primalist” sits in a broader intellectual map helps clarify both what is genuinely new about the phenomenon and what older theories already illuminate.

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What to Call a Technophile Who Is Also a Retro-Tech Enthusiast: ‘techno-primalist’?

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by Copilot)
Editor

[Related: ‘Techno-Primalists’: The Yin-Yang of Innovation and Ancestral Practice]

Humanity has always lived in two directions at once. Even as we push outward into the uncharted territories of science, computation, and artificial intelligence, we also reach backward—toward the tactile, the ancestral, the handmade, the analog. This simultaneous movement has become especially visible in the 2020s, as people who eagerly adopt cutting‑edge technologies also rediscover manual typewriters, sourdough baking, basket weaving, analog audio restoration, and organic gardening. To describe this emerging identity, a useful phrase is “techno‑primalists”—individuals who embrace the newest tools while cultivating a deep connection to older, embodied practices. They are not nostalgic escapees from modernity; they are explorers who believe that innovation and ancestry are complementary forces.

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The Widening Gap: China’s Humanoid Robotics Dominance (May 2026)

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by Claude)
Editor

Since early 2026, Western media outlets including ABC News have brought growing public attention to a concern that strategic analysts have tracked for several years: China’s rapid and massive proliferation of humanoid robots—what Beijing and others call ’embodied AI’—may eventually pose a national security risk to Western nations (1). The worry is not hypothetical. As of May 2026, China commands nearly 80 percent of the global humanoid robot market, has deployed autonomous humanoid units in public traffic management, and has established a national standardization committee that explicitly links civilian robotics development to People’s Liberation Army (PLA) priorities (2,5). The United States, by contrast, remains strong in AI software and high-end robotics research but trails badly in volume manufacturing, cost competitiveness, and real-world deployment.

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China’s Humanoid Robotics Trajectory and the Emerging National Security Debate

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by DeepSeek)
Editor

Since early 2026, Western media including ABC News have highlighted a growing concern: China’s rapid and massive proliferation of humanoid robots (“embodied AI”) may eventually pose a national security risk to Western nations (1). As of May 2026, China continues to solidify its position as the world’s dominant force in humanoid robotics, driven by industrial policy, cost advantages, and rapid technological iteration. Chinese firms have captured nearly 80% of the global market (2). However, events in the first half of 2026 have added new dimensions to the security debate, including the deployment of autonomous humanoid robots in public traffic management (3), the emergence of specific cybersecurity vulnerabilities (4), and the establishment of a national standardization committee that directly links robotics development to People’s Liberation Army (PLA) priorities (5).

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AI-Augmented Journalists in May 2026: ‘multi-step agentic workflows’

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by Gemini)
Editor

[Related: AI in Journalism 2026-2027: ‘more agentic automation’]

By May 2026, artificial intelligence has ceased to be an experimental tool or a mere back-office novelty in competitive journalism. Instead, it has become deeply woven into investigative workflows, digital publishing, forensic verification, and multi-platform audience distribution (4). Rather than replacing the foundational human labor of reporting, cutting-edge AI technologies are being utilized by elite newsrooms to scale up systemic tracking, interpret massive unorganized datasets, and combat sophisticated state-level disinformation campaigns (3,8). The shift from basic task automation to advanced, multi-step agentic workflows represents the definitive technological change-management milestone of the year (2).

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Transcript of Jensen Huang’s “U.S. Leadership in AI” Talk on 9 April 2026

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by ChatGPT)
Editor

[Revised 20 May 2026, 8:55am HST]

Below is a cleaned and curated transcript containing only the remarks of Jensen Huang from the Stanford Graduate School of Business event, “U.S. Leadership in AI,” held on 9 April 2026. The original event details are available from Stanford Graduate School of Business. (Stanford News)

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AI Impact on Bible Study

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by Copilot)
Editor

Across 2024–2026, churches, seminaries, and lay Christians have begun to treat generative and agentic AI as a new layer in the long history of study tools, from concordances to Bible software. The result is a mix of real democratization, serious ethical and theological questions, and a looming need for wise norms rather than simple acceptance or rejection (1,3,4).

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Is It Correct to Assume That Air Strikes Alone Don’t Work?

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by Copilot)
Editor

Short answer: This is mostly right. Purely aerial campaigns—especially those that deliberately avoid ground invasion—very rarely force a determined state to capitulate. They can hurt, disrupt, and signal resolve, but on their own they usually don’t break political will, and they often harden it instead. The Iran–Trump dynamic fits that pattern more than it contradicts it.

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AI Wearables and the Future of Prescriptions: 2026-2030

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by Claude)
Editor

[Related: Neuralink, Xpanceo, Fitbit, Northwestern, Minew | Samsung, Google, Movano, WearOptimo, Ultrahuman | Sibel, Aktiia, OTO, Dreame, Qualcomm | Alva, Proteus, QuantumOp, Nanowear, Apple]

Something fundamental is shifting in how we think about the word “prescription.” For most of human history, the word conjured a doctor’s scrawled instructions, a bottle of pills, a shot in a clinic. That image is becoming obsolete — not abruptly, but steadily, as a new generation of AI-powered wearable devices redefines what it means to monitor, diagnose, treat, and manage health. The ETC Journal’s four-part series, “AI Healthcare Wearables in May 2026,” surveying twenty pioneering companies in AI healthcare wearables, documents a field that has crossed a threshold: from passive fitness tracking to active, predictive, and in some cases interventional clinical-grade care (1-4). To understand where this is headed and to grasp what it will mean for conventional prescriptions over the next five years requires looking carefully at what these devices are already doing, who is building them, and what barriers still stand in the way.

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AI Healthcare Wearables in May 2026: Neuralink, Xpanceo, Fitbit, Northwestern, Minew

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by Gemini)
Editor

[Related in this series: AI Wearables and the Future of Prescriptions: 2026-2030 | Samsung, Google, Movano, WearOptimo, Ultrahuman | Sibel, Aktiia, OTO, Dreame, Qualcomm | Alva, Proteus, QuantumOp, Nanowear, Apple]

The rapid evolution of medical-grade artificial intelligence has transformed wearables from simple fitness trackers into sophisticated clinical instruments capable of continuous diagnostic-grade monitoring (1, 3). While established leaders like Apple and Samsung continue to refine their ecosystems, several pioneering firms have introduced “harbinger” technologies that bridge the gap between traditional electronics and biological systems. The following five healthcare wearables represent the cutting edge of this field as of May 2026.

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AI Healthcare Wearables in May 2026: Samsung, Google, Movano, WearOptimo, Ultrahuman

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by Copilot)
Editor

[Related in this series: AI Wearables and the Future of Prescriptions: 2026-2030 | Neuralink, Xpanceo, Fitbit, Northwestern, Minew | Sibel, Aktiia, OTO, Dreame, Qualcomm | Alva, Proteus, QuantumOp, Nanowear, Apple]

Samsung Galaxy Ring (Samsung, South Korea/Global). Samsung has moved aggressively into AI-enhanced smart rings with the Galaxy Ring, positioning it as a discreet but powerful health companion that sits at the center of the Samsung Health ecosystem. The company is headquartered in Suwon, South Korea, but the Ring is being rolled out across dozens of markets, with global availability expanding through 2024–2025 (1,2). The innovation lies in a titanium ring packed with optical biosensors, accelerometer, and skin-temperature sensing, feeding Galaxy AI to generate readiness-style “Energy Score,” advanced sleep environment reports, and stress and mindfulness insights that go beyond step counts and heart rate. Commercial launch began in 2024, with broader market penetration and software refinement continuing into 2025 and beyond. It matters because it normalizes ring-based, AI-personalized health tracking at smartphone scale, potentially shifting millions of users from casual fitness metrics to continuous, longitudinal biomarker monitoring that can support early risk detection, women’s health insights, and more nuanced lifestyle coaching (1-3).

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AI Healthcare Wearables in May 2026: Sibel, Aktiia, OTO, Dreame, Qualcomm

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by ChatGPT)
Editor

[Related in this series: AI Wearables and the Future of Prescriptions: 2026-2030 | Neuralink, Xpanceo, Fitbit, Northwestern, Minew | Samsung, Google, Movano, WearOptimo, Ultrahuman | Alva, Proteus, QuantumOp, Nanowear, Apple]

The broader wearable-health ecosystem is evolving rapidly toward continuous, AI-assisted, always-on medical monitoring. Several emerging products from 2025–2026 stand out because they move beyond simple fitness tracking into predictive, clinical-grade, and context-aware healthcare systems. These devices collectively suggest that the next phase of healthcare wearables will emphasize continuous sensing, AI interpretation, remote diagnostics, and proactive intervention rather than episodic measurement.

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AI Healthcare Wearables in May 2026: Alva, Proteus, QuantumOp, Nanowear, Apple

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by DeepSeek)
Editor

[Related in this series: AI Wearables and the Future of Prescriptions: 2026-2030 | Neuralink, Xpanceo, Fitbit, Northwestern, Minew | Samsung, Google, Movano, WearOptimo, Ultrahuman | Sibel, Aktiia, OTO, Dreame, Qualcomm]

The current generation of wearables, which primarily track heart rate, sleep stages, and electrocardiograms, only scratches the surface of a forthcoming revolution in AI-generated personal healthcare. By May 2026, we are witnessing the emergence of devices that move from passive monitoring to active, non-invasive diagnosis and even intervention. The leaders in this field are shifting away from generalist consumer tech firms toward specialized biomedical engineering companies, though tech giants like Apple remain significant enablers. Below is an analysis of the latest harbingers, their innovations, and why they matter.

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AI-Augmented IQ Elevates Meta-Cognitive Abilities: ‘thinking with machines’

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by Claude)
Editor

For most of the twentieth century, human intelligence was understood primarily as a fixed, internal property of the individual mind — measurable through standardized psychometric tests, expressed as an IQ score, and treated as a reliable predictor of academic and professional success. That model is now under serious challenge. As artificial intelligence has woven itself into the cognitive fabric of daily life — from workplace decision support to personal assistants — researchers and organizational theorists are converging on a new understanding: human intelligence can no longer be meaningfully assessed in isolation from the tools that augment it.

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AI-Generated Micro Dramas and the Democratization of Student Storytelling: A 2026–2030 Trajectory

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by Claude)
Editor

[Related: AI-Generated Micro Dramas: Reshaping the Industry]

The emergence of AI-generated micro dramas as a commercially and culturally dominant entertainment form is one of the most consequential developments in short-form media history. As documented in a May 2026 article in ETC Journal, these are serialized, vertically filmed series purpose-built for mobile consumption, with episodes typically running one to three minutes and spanning sixty to eighty installments per series. They lean into romance, fantasy, and high-concept hooks, and what distinguishes the AI variant is that large language models and multimodal generative systems replace or dramatically reduce the human roles of scriptwriter, actor, cinematographer, and editor — enabling entire series to be produced end-to-end by algorithm (1).

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AI-Generated Micro Dramas: Reshaping the Industry

By Jim Shimabukuro (assisted by DeepSeek)
Editor

[Related: AI-Generated Micro Dramas and the Democratization of Student Storytelling: A 2026–2030 Trajectory]

1. Definition and Essential Character

AI micro dramas are serialized, vertically filmed short-form series purpose-built for mobile consumption, with episodes typically running one to three minutes and spanning sixty to eighty instalments per series. They lean heavily into romance, fantasy, and high-concept hooks—werewolves, mafia bosses, and star-crossed lovers are stock elements—and are designed for the TikTok-era attention span (1,2). What distinguishes the AI variant from live-action micro dramas is that large language models and multimodal generative systems replace or drastically reduce the human roles of scriptwriter, actor, cinematographer, and editor. Entire series can be produced “end-to-end” by algorithms: an AI script is parsed into storyboards, characters are generated and kept consistent across shots, synthetic voices deliver dialogue, and the final video is assembled with AI-driven post-production, often with nothing spent on human actors (3,4).

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