In partnership with

The gap between what technology promises and what actually happens keeps widening. Governments are seizing control of chipmakers they don't trust. Workers are organizing to block acquisitions they didn't approve. Electric vehicles that were supposed to hold their value are cratering faster than gas cars. Meanwhile, the AI everyone's racing to adopt just got cheaper and faster, but the experts building it say we're still a decade from solving its core problems.

This week's stories share a common thread: the technology works, but the political, economic, and organizational friction around it matters more than the specs. Here's what you need to know.

The Dutch government seized control of Nexperia, a Chinese-owned semiconductor manufacturer, using emergency legislation to protect European chip access. This matters because governments are now willing to take direct control of private tech companies when national security is at stake. If you run international operations or rely on global supply chains, expect more interventions like this. The rules are changing mid-game.

Electric vehicles are losing value at alarming rates. India's BluSmart ride-hailing collapsed after its EVs lost 75% of their value. Tesla Model Ys dropped 42% compared to 20% for Ford F-150s. If you're managing a fleet or considering EV investments, this depreciation trend changes the math on total cost of ownership. Battery lifespan concerns are creating real financial risk.

Electronic Arts employees and their union formally protested the proposed $55 billion acquisition by Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund and Jared Kushner's Affinity Partners. They want a seat at the table. This shows how organized labor in tech is becoming a real force in M&A deals. If you're planning acquisitions, you'll need to think beyond shareholders and boards.

DoorDash started testing Waymo's autonomous vehicles for deliveries in Phoenix. They're also offering $10 monthly ride discounts to DashPass members in three cities. Autonomous delivery is moving from pilot to production. The economics of last-mile logistics are about to shift. If delivery costs matter to your business model, pay attention.

Apple announced its M5 processor—3-nanometer tech, 10-core GPU, 4x better AI performance than M4, 45% better graphics. This means mainstream computers can now handle serious AI workloads without cloud infrastructure. If you've been waiting for edge AI capabilities that actually work, this changes what's possible on a laptop.

Former Tesla AI Director Andrej Karpathy says we need a decade to solve AI's current problems—reinforcement learning challenges, model collapse in large language models, and autonomous driving complexities. Translation: pace your AI expectations. Plan for gradual adoption, not overnight transformation. The hype cycle doesn't match the engineering reality.

ProPublica's investigation reveals how Intuit spent 20 years blocking free government tax filing while protecting TurboTax's market. It's a master class in defensive lobbying and market protection. It's also a warning—when corporate interests look too self-serving, public backlash can erase years of goodwill. There's a fine line between strategic positioning and reputational risk.

Anthropic launched Claude Skills, letting you create specialized instruction sets for specific tasks—Excel work, brand compliance, whatever you need. Instead of generic AI, you can train it for your exact use case. This makes AI more useful and consistent across your organization. Finally, customization that doesn't require an engineering team.

Anthropic's new small model delivers performance matching their previous flagship (Claude Sonnet 4) at one-third the cost and twice the speed. Real-time chat, customer service, code assistance—all suddenly more affordable and responsive. This accelerates how fast AI can spread through your operations.

Steve Blank warns that current policies toward university research programs threaten the pipeline that feeds American innovation. Universities produce the fundamental research that becomes commercial applications. Cut that pipeline, and you cut tomorrow's competitive advantage. If you're betting on U.S. tech leadership continuing indefinitely, this is worth reading.

That's what I'm watching. What caught your attention this week?

-Eric

If you found this post helpful, consider sharing it with another executive grappling with AI, technology, and data. If you want to explore AI and other Technology strategies, grab some time on my calendar, and let's chat.

The Gold standard for AI news

AI keeps coming up at work, but you still don't get it?

That's exactly why 1M+ professionals working at Google, Meta, and OpenAI read Superhuman AI daily.

Here's what you get:

  • Daily AI news that matters for your career - Filtered from 1000s of sources so you know what affects your industry.

  • Step-by-step tutorials you can use immediately - Real prompts and workflows that solve actual business problems.

  • New AI tools tested and reviewed - We try everything to deliver tools that drive real results.

  • All in just 3 minutes a day

Newsletter Recommendations

The Magnus Memo

The Magnus Memo

A personal dispatch from my corner of the tech world, 25 years in the making, I write about a blend of tech wisdom, hard-won lessons, behind-the-scenes stories, and the occasional life hack — all t...

Westenberg.

Westenberg.

Where Builders Come to Think.

Brian Maierhofer

Brian Maierhofer

One decision to change your life; one decision to save your heart

Reply

or to participate

Keep Reading

No posts found