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  • Companies keep slashing jobs. How worried should workers be about AI replacing them?

    Companies keep slashing jobs. How worried should workers be about AI replacing them?

    Tech companies that are cutting jobs and leaning more on artificial intelligence are also disrupting themselves.

    Amazon’s Chief Executive Andy Jassy said last month that he expects the e-commerce giant will shrink its workforce as employees “get efficiency gains from using AI extensively.”

    At Salesforce, a software company that helps businesses manage customer relationships, Chief Executive Marc Benioff said last week that AI is already doing 30% to 50% of the company’s work.

    Other tech leaders have chimed in before. Earlier this year, Anthropic, an AI startup, flashed a big warning: AI could wipe out more than half of all entry-level white-collar jobs in the next one to five years.

    Ready or not, AI is reshaping, displacing and creating new roles as technology’s impact on the job market ripples across multiple sectors. The AI frenzy has fueled a lot of anxiety from workers who fear their jobs could be automated. Roughly half of U.S. workers are worried about how AI may be used in the workplace in the future and few think AI will lead to more job opportunities in the long run, according to a Pew Research Center report.

    The heightened fear comes as major tech companies, such as Microsoft, Intel, Amazon and Meta cut workers, push for more efficiency and promote their AI tools. Tech companies have rolled out AI-powered features that can generate code, analyze data, develop apps and help complete other tedious tasks.

    “AI isn’t just taking jobs. It’s really rewriting the rule book on what work even looks like right now,” said Robert Lucido, senior director of strategic advisory at Magnit, a company based in Folsom, Calif., that helps tech giants and other businesses manage contractors, freelancers and other contingent workers.

    Disruption debated

    Exactly how big of a disruption AI will have on the job market is still being debated. Executives for OpenAI, the maker of popular chatbot ChatGPT, have pushed back against the prediction that a massive white-collar job bloodbath is coming.

    “I do totally get not just the anxiety, but that there is going to be real pain here, in many cases,” said Sam Altman, chief executive of OpenAI, at an interview with “Hard Fork,” the tech podcast from the New York Times. ”In many more cases, though, I think we will find that the world is significantly underemployed. The world wants way more code than can get written right now.”

    As new economic policies, including those around tariffs, create more unease among businesses, companies are reining in costs while also being pickier about whom they hire.

    “They’re trying to find what we call the purple unicorns rather than someone that they can ramp up and train,” Lucido said.

    Before the 2022 launch of ChatGPT — a chatbot that can generate text, images, code and more —tech companies were already using AI to curate posts, flag offensive content and power virtual assistants. But the popularity and apparent superpowers of ChatGPT set off a fierce competition among tech companies to release even more powerful generative AI tools. They’re racing ahead, spending hundreds of billions of dollars on data centers, facilities that house computing equipment such as servers used to process the trove of information needed to train and maintain AI systems.

    Economists and consultants have been trying to figure out how AI will affect engineers, lawyers, analysts and other professions. Some say the change won’t happen as soon as some tech executives expect.

    “There have been many claims about new technologies displacing jobs, and although such displacement has occurred in the past, it tends to take longer than technologists typically expect,” economists for the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics said in a February report.

    AI can help develop, test and write code, provide financial advice and sift through legal documents. The bureau, though, still projects that employment of software developers, financial advisors, aerospace engineers and lawyers will grow faster than the average for all occupations from 2023 to 2033. Companies will still need software developers to build AI tools for businesses or maintain AI systems.

    Worker bots

    Tech executives have touted AI’s ability to write code. Meta Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg has said that he thinks AI will be able to write code like a mid-level engineer in 2025. And Microsoft Chief Executive Satya Nadella has said that as much as 30% of the company’s code is written by AI.

    Other roles could grow more slowly or shrink because of AI. The Bureau of Labor Statistics expects employment of paralegals and legal assistants to grow slower than the average for all occupations while roles for credit analysts, claims adjusters and insurance appraisers to decrease.

    McKinsey Global Institute, the business and economics research arm of the global management consulting firm McKinsey & Co., predicts that by 2030 “activities that account for up to 30 percent of hours currently worked across the US economy could be automated.”

    The institute expects that demand for science, technology, engineering and mathematics roles will grow in the United States and Europe but shrink for customer service and office support.

    “A large part of that work involves skills, which are routine, predictable and can be easily done by machines,” said Anu Madgavkar, a partner with the McKinsey Global Institute.

    Although generative AI fuels the potential for automation to eliminate jobs, AI can also enhance technical, creative, legal and business roles, the report said. There will be a lot of “noise and volatility” in hiring data, Madgavkar said, but what will separate the “winners and losers” is how people rethink their work flows and jobs themselves.

    Tech companies have announced 74,716 cuts from January to May, up 35% from the same period last year, according to a report from Challenger, Gray & Christmas, a firm that offers job search and career transition coaching.

    Tech companies say they’re slashing jobs for various reasons.

    Autodesk, which makes software used by architects, designers and engineers, slashed 9% of its workforce, or 1,350 positions, this year. The San Francisco company cited geopolitical and macroeconomic factors along with its efforts to invest more heavily in AI as reasons for the cuts, according to a regulatory filing. Other companies such as Oakland fintech company Block, which slashed 8% of its workforce in March, told employees that the cuts were strategic not because they’re “replacing folks with AI.”

    Diana Colella, executive vice president, entertainment and media solutions at Autodesk, said that it’s scary when people don’t know what their job will look like in a year. Still, she doesn’t think AI will replace humans or creativity but rather act as an assistant.

    Companies are looking for more AI expertise. Autodesk found that mentions of AI in U.S. job listings surged in 2025 and some of the fastest-growing roles include AI engineer, AI content creator and AI solutions architect. The company partnered with analytics firm GlobalData to examine nearly 3 million job postings over two years across industries such as architecture, engineering and entertainment.

    Workers have adapted to technology before. When the job of a door-to-door encyclopedia salesman was disrupted because of the rise of online search, those workers pivoted to selling other products, Colella said.

    “The skills are still key and important,” she said. “They just might be used for a different product or a different service.”

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  • ‘It really felt like I was in a fairytale’: Mustafa Seven’s best phone picture | Photography

    ‘It really felt like I was in a fairytale’: Mustafa Seven’s best phone picture | Photography

    Mustafa Seven and his friend Hazem were attempting to escape the tourists in an Austrian village when they took this image. Rumoured to have inspired Disney’s Frozen franchise, Hallstatt has been known to attract up to 10,000 visitors a day during high season. Seven had seen many Instagram shots of the place and was curious to visit. He was taken aback by what he found.

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    “There were tourist buses and people everywhere,” he says. “Frankly, neither of us like taking landscape photos, but the fairytale surroundings pulled us along. When I realised every image I’d shot had someone in the frame, we decided to change our route and walk up the slips of the village instead.”

    The cold weather and heavy snowfall made it hard going, but after half an hour the pair reached the edge of the village. They paused by a garden to rest a little, and it was there they found this docile, curious cat.

    “I was trying to get closer to say hello and kept expecting it to get scared and run away, but it didn’t.

    “We all seemed to be there for the same reason: to soak up a rare moment of peace and enjoy the view of the village, church and lake below us. It really felt like I was in a fairytale, like a scene that was too fictional to be real.”

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  • AI Uncovers Breakthrough Treatment For Rare Genetic Disorder

    AI Uncovers Breakthrough Treatment For Rare Genetic Disorder

    A team of researchers from the Wyss Institute at Harvard University developed a promising new treatment for a severe genetic disorder, powered by artificial intelligence. The breakthrough utilizes an AI-driven drug discovery process with innovative disease modeling to identify a potential therapy for Rett syndrome, a disorder primarily affecting girls.

    Researchers identified vorinostat, a medicine used to manage cutaneous T cell lymphoma, as a potential therapy.

    AI Battles Rett Syndrome

    Photo: Have a nice day/Shutterstock

    Rett syndrome affects approximately 1 in 10,000 girls globally. Mutations in the MeCP2 gene cause the disease and are historically viewed as a neurological disorder. However, it also impacts non-neurological systems, such as the digestive, musculoskeletal, and immune systems. This makes it difficult to develop a treatment.

    The Wyss Institute team’s study was published in Communications Medicine.

    Researchers discovered that vorinostat showed promising disease-modifying abilities across neuronal and non-neuronal tissues. In preclinical models, it was “superior” to trofinetide, the only current approved treatment.

    A key was the Wyss Institute’s computational algorithm, nemoCAD. The AI approach analyzes changes across gene networks across multiple organ systems to predict drug candidates. Traditionally, drug prediction targets a single molecule. Wyss Institute’s “target-agnostic” method rapidly and effectively identified potential therapies.

    Researchers used genetically engineered Xenopus laevis tadpoles that replicated Rett syndrome features to model the disease. The team compared gene expression changes in the modified tadpoles to healthy ones. NemoCAD then predicted drugs to reverse the pathological changes. Finally, vorinostat emerged as a top candidate. According to the researchers, it significantly suppressed symptoms such as seizures, unusual movements, and gastrointestinal issues in the modified tadpole models.

    “The identification and further development of vorinostat as the potentially first curative treatment for Rett syndrome would not have been possible without our unique AI-enabled computational approach to drug discovery, and its combination with an innovative disease model that broadly mimics the features of Rett syndrome,” said Donald Ingber, M.D., Ph.D., senior author and Wyss Founding Director.

    Vorinostat is already FDA-approved for treating a blood disease. Unravel Biosciences, a Wyss-enabled startup, is now repurposing it for Rett Syndrome.


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  • A ‘Golden Handle’ will appear on the moon on July 5. Here’s how to see it

    A ‘Golden Handle’ will appear on the moon on July 5. Here’s how to see it

    Saturday night presents a perfect opportunity to spot a “Golden Handle” shining brightly on the moon’s surface. It is a fleeting sight that appears when sunlight catches the peaks of a mountain range on the moon.

    On July 5, the moon’s terminator, the line that separates lunar night from day, falls slightly to the west of the great circular plain Sinus Iridum (Latin for the ‘Bay of Rainbows’) in the northwest region of the lunar surface. At this time the sun is perfectly positioned to illuminate the eastern peaks of the vast Montes Jura mountain range bordering Sinus Iridum’s northernmost edge, giving rise to a spectacular golden arc that has since become known as the “Golden Handle”.

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  • When To See The ‘Buck Moon’ Rise Where You Are

    When To See The ‘Buck Moon’ Rise Where You Are

    Topline

    The full buck moon — the first full moon of summer in the Northern Hemisphere — will turn full on Thursday, July 10. It will be best seen at moonrise as it appears in the east during dusk that evening. It takes its name from the antlers that emerge from a buck’s forehead in summer. Occurring so soon after the solstice, like last June’s strawberry moon, it will also be one of the lowest-hanging full moons of the year.

    Key Facts

    The buck moon will turn full at 4:38 p.m. EDT on Thursday, July 10. It will look full the night before and the night after it’s officially 100%-lit by the sun, but the best time to watch it rise will be at moonrise during dusk on Thursday, July 10.

    EarthSky says July’s full moon is called the buck, thunder and hay moon in North America. Cultural and seasonal names for a full moon vary hugely across the world.

    A full moon always looks at its best when it first appears on the eastern horizon during dusk. The sight is optimized when the moon rises shortly after sunset, which it does this month in North America, with the moon rising about 25 minutes after the sun goes down.

    As well as rising late at night in the Northern Hemisphere, July’s buck moon is one of the lowest-hanging full moons of the year. That’s because the full moon is opposite the sun, by definition, so it mirrors the sun’s position — the full moon is at its lowest when the sun is at its highest. In practice, that means July’s full moon never gets very high in the sky.

    To see the full buck moon at its best at moonrise, find an elevated location, an open field or an east-facing coastline with a clear view of the eastern horizon.

    Best Time To See The Full ‘buck Moon’ Rise

    To find the best time to see it appear from where you are, consult a moonrise calculator. Here are some sample times :

    • New York: sunset at 8:29 p.m. EDT, moonrise at 8:54 p.m. EDT on Thursday, July 10.
    • Los Angeles: sunset at 8:07 p.m. PDT, moonrise at 8:33 p.m. PDT on Thursday, July 10.
    • London: sunset at 9:16 p.m. BST, moonrise at 9:46 p.m. BST on Thursday, July 10.

    The Iconic Image Of All Humans But One, From The ‘buck Moon’

    On July 21, 1969, the late Michael Collins — Command Module Pilot on NASA’s Apollo 11 spacecraft — took this image of the lunar lander Eagle as it returned Neil Armstrong, Apollo 11 Mission Commander, and Buzz Aldrin, Lunar Module Pilot, from the moon’s surface where they had become the first humans to walk upon it. In the background is Earth, making Collins the only human not featured. Technically speaking, those on Earth’s night side aren’t in it, either, but it remains an iconic image. Collins took it while he orbited about 60 miles (97 km) above the moon in Apollo 11’s Columbia command module, where he had remained alone for 22 hours.

    Background

    The buck moon is the seventh of 12 full moons in 2025. A solar year is 365.24 days, while a lunar year is around 354.37 days, so sometimes there are 13 full moons in one calendar (solar) year — as in 2023 and next in 2028. Of the 12 full moons in 2025, three will be “supermoons” and two “blood moon” total lunar eclipses (the first happened on March 13-14, and the next lunar eclipse is on Sept. 7-8).

    The next full moon is the sturgeon moon, which will occur on Saturday, Aug. 9. It will be the second full moon of summer in the Northern Hemisphere and winter in the Southern Hemisphere.

    Further Reading

    ForbesSee Two ‘Blood Moons,’ Three ‘Supermoons’ And The Biggest Full Moon Since 2019: The Moon In 2025ForbesWhen To See June’s ‘Strawberry Moon,’ The Lowest Full Moon Since 2006

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  • Everything You Should Know About iOS 18 Before Apple Releases iOS 26

    Everything You Should Know About iOS 18 Before Apple Releases iOS 26

    Here’s what you need to know about the software, as well as hidden tips and tricks.

    Headshot of Zachary McAuliffe

    Zachary McAuliffe Staff writer

    Zach began writing for CNET in November, 2021 after writing for a broadcast news station in his hometown, Cincinnati, for five years. You can usually find him reading and drinking coffee or watching a TV series with his wife and their dog.

    Expertise Web hosting | Operating systems | Applications | Software Credentials

    • Apple software beta tester, “Helps make our computers and phones work!” – Zach’s grandparents


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  • From Bloomers to Boxers to Bermudas, 8 Ways to Style Summer Shorts

    From Bloomers to Boxers to Bermudas, 8 Ways to Style Summer Shorts

    Long summer days call for, you guessed it, summer shorts. While classic denim cut-offs have long been a seasonal staple, we’ve been noticing more innovation in the category as of late. On the runways at Chloé, for example, models sauntered out in bloomers and frilly crochet, while at Paco Rabanne, striped boxer-like styles mingled with boyish separates.

    The key here is a departure from youthful pairs, with thoughtful styling that reflects a more considered mood. At times preppy, at times boho, other times polished—shorts this season have a truly elevated appeal. Here are eight fresh ways we’ll be wearing them all summer, and perhaps, you now, too.

    Vogue’s Favorite Summer Shorts

    Featured in this article
    The Romantic Eyelet

    Dôen Arbre broderie anglaise cotton shorts

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    Image may contain: Clothing, Shorts, Skirt, and Swimming Trunks
    The Sweet Stripe

    The Frankie Shop Lui striped cotton-poplin shorts

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    Image may contain: Clothing, Shorts, Skirt, and Underwear
    The Lightweight Linen

    Suzie Kondi Hera Bloomers linen-chambray shorts

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    The Mini Denim Short

    A peach mini short form Chloé takes on a Birkin-like attitude with a knit henley, basket bag, and gladiators.

    Nili Lotan

    Oaklynn striped silk-jersey top

    Madewell

    Millie thong lace up sandals

    The Pleated Bermuda Short

    Lean into the elegant appeal of pleated Bermuda shorts by pairing them with a classic belt and button up.

    Madewell

    The Essential leather belt

    The Jort

    Knee-length denim shorts and a linen halter make for a high-low ensemble that works day or night.

    Massimo Dutti

    linen crossover halter top

    The Lace Trim

    Double down on the eyelet trend with trimmed shorts and a breezy tank. Bonus points for adding Miu Miu’s lace bandana.

    Miu Miu

    poplin and lace logo scarf

    Christen

    mono leather T-strap flat sandals

    The Sporty Short

    Part sporty, part preppy–pair a pink and white polo with Adidas’s pinstripe satin shorts. Suede loafers and a paracord bracelet add balance to keep things interesting and fashion-forward.

    Adidas

    Originals pinstripe satin shorts

    The Knit Short

    Stripes are undoubtedly the print of the summer, and we love them here in the form of a cute knit set with flip-flops and a woven basket bag.

    La DoubleJ

    Veneziana ribbed cotton shorts

    The Linen Bloomers

    Emphasize the girlish innocence of bloomer shorts by adding a ruffled blouse and raffia Mary Janes.

    Suzie Kondi

    Hera Bloomers linen-chambray shorts

    Alaïa

    Leather-trimmed raffia ballet flats

    The Silk Short

    Aflalo’s long-line printed shorts join with a tube top and kitten heels for a cute girl’s night out ensemble.

    Faithfull

    Boe strapless shirred linen tunic

    Madewell

    The Chiara kitten heel sandals

    Shop More Shorts:

    Proenza Schouler White Label

    High Sport

    Savannah striped cotton-blend shorts

    Valentino Garavani

    embroidered ribbed metallic shorts

    Dôen

    Arbre broderie anglaise cotton shorts

    The Frankie Shop

    Lui striped cotton-poplin shorts

    Toteme

    embroidered silk-twill shorts

    Matteau

    pleated organic cotton-blend twill shorts

    Skims

    cotton-blend poplin boxers

    Faithfull

    Lila striped linen shorts

    Agolde

    Dame high rise baggy shorts

    Loewe

    Paula’s Ibiza jacquard-woven shorts

    Bode

    Lucky Baby embroidered cotton-poplin shorts

    Leset

    Arielle City crepe shorts

    Chloé

    organic silk crepe de chine shorts

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  • Chinese study uncovers cancer-fighting potential of impotence drugs like Viagra

    Chinese study uncovers cancer-fighting potential of impotence drugs like Viagra

    Men around the world dealing with sexual impotence have been treated for years with the drug sildenafil, sold under brand names including the well-known Viagra.

    A new Chinese study now suggests that the drug may perhaps also help to save lives.

    Sildenafil could combat cancer by strengthening a group of key anti-tumour immune cells, according to the study by researchers from China’s Westlake University, Zhejiang University, Peking Union Medical College and Shanghai Institute of Immunology.

    Dendritic cells, which act as the “intelligence agents” of the immune system, can become severely depleted or functionally impaired as the tumour progresses. According to the researchers, sildenafil could reverse the process and help to restore the cells.

    The researchers, led by Westlake cancer immunology specialist Zhou Ting, published their findings in the peer-reviewed journal Nature on June 25.

    In an article posted on its social media account the same day, the university hailed the discovery as a possible new “form of tumour immunotherapy strategy”.

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  • Positive Grid Launches Spark NEO Wireless Guitar Rig Built Into A Pair Of Headphones

    Positive Grid Launches Spark NEO Wireless Guitar Rig Built Into A Pair Of Headphones

    Positive Grid has announced the launch of Spark NEO, a wireless guitar rig that’s built directly into a pair of over-ear headphones. Designed to deliver a personal audio experience, Spark NEO includes Positive Grid’s award-winning guitar amp technology with a pair of true wireless Bluetooth headphones so you can practise in private.

    Spark NEO headphones have all the usual audio capabilities as well as AI-powered guitar tone customization. The headphones provide a private and convenient way to stream audio over Bluetooth while playing guitar.

    Using custom-designed 40mm drivers and an ultra-lightweight bio-fiber diaphragm, the Spark NEO delivers a balanced sound to suit most styles of music. For guitarists, it offers advanced tone-shaping tools, giving the freedom to play anywhere without disturbing others.

    The included wireless transmitter instantly pairs any guitar with the Spark NEO headphones, while a built-in 1/4″ input can also support traditional guitar cables for those who don’t want to go wireless.

    There are four onboard and customizable guitar presets. Spark NEO makes it possible to play anywhere and be free from space limitations or noise constraints. When connecting to the free Spark app, users can unlock additional presets, amplifiers, effects, as well as advanced tone controls.

    To ensure the headphones are easy to wear, ultra-soft and durable ear cups, along with advanced damping materials, tuned venting and precise port adjustments, provide a high level of passive noise isolation. This makes it easier to hear the music without being disturbed by unwanted sounds. Users can jam along to backing tracks or a favorite song without disturbing others.

    Spark NEO creates a bridge between a traditional guitar and modern wireless technology. Unlike using generic headphones with a guitar amp, Spark NEO has extras available via the Spark App. This app extends the capabilities of Spark NEO by providing access to 33 amplifiers and 43 effects. Users can also access more than 100,000 tones on Positive Grid’s online ToneCloud.

    Auto Chords helps players learn and jam to any song by displaying the chords in real time as the song plays. Customizable presets provide more creative possibilities when playing along with backing tracks or favorite songs.

    Pricing and Availability:

    Positive Grid’s Spark NEO will be available soon from Positive Grid’s website, Amazon and select retailers. The price will be $199 / £189 / €239 and includes headphones, wireless transmitter and full access to the Spark app.

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  • Today’s Wordle Hints for July 6, 2025 – The New York Times

    1. Today’s Wordle Hints for July 6, 2025  The New York Times
    2. Today’s Wordle Hints for July 5, 2025  The New York Times
    3. Today’s Wordle Hint, Answer for #1477 on Saturday, July 5, 2025  parade.com
    4. Wordle today: Answer and hints for ‘confusing’ brainteaser on July 5  The Mirror US
    5. Today’s Wordle answer for Saturday, July 5  PC Gamer

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