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Another Crazy Day in AI: An Almost Daily Newsletter

Hello, AI Enthusiasts.


Midweek already. How’s your stamina holding up?


If you're steering a team, Sidecar Sync puts the spotlight on modern leadership, where IQ gets backup from emotional intelligence and adaptability. A renowned leadership expert and keynote speaker explains why the best leaders today are high in AQ.


Also making moves: Grammarly's getting serious about email, and Cloudflare’s slamming the door on AI data scrapers.


Catch your breath, then keep leading the charge.


Here's another crazy day in AI:

  • Three leadership quotients that matter most

  • Grammarly buys AI email client Superhuman

  • Cloudflare shuts door on AI crawlers

  • Some AI tools to try out


TODAY'S FEATURED ITEM: Beyond IQ and EQ in Leadership Success


A robotic scientist in a classic white coat with 'AI Scientist' on its back stands beside a human scientist with 'Human Scientist' on their coat, looking towards the AI Scientist.

Image Credit: Wowza (created with Ideogram)


What happens when an organization's survival depends not on what they know, but on how quickly they can learn, unlearn, and relearn?



In the latest episode of the Sidecar Sync podcast, hosts Mallory Mejias and Amith Nagarajan speak with leadership advisor John Spence about how leaders can respond to change, not in theory, but in practice. The conversation centers around three qualities Spence believes are essential for modern leadership: IQ (intelligence), EQ (emotional awareness), and AQ (adaptability). While IQ and EQ are well-known, AQ takes the spotlight here, particularly as organizations face more uncertainty and new technologies like AI become more embedded in day-to-day work.


Spence draws from decades of experience working with global companies, associations, and nonprofits. What makes the discussion engaging is his attention to both mindset and execution, how leaders help people navigate change, and how that plays out in culture, communication, and decision-making. He speaks openly about the discomfort that often accompanies change, from emotional resistance to uncertainty around new tools. But he also emphasizes that adaptability isn’t just individual, it’s something that can be reinforced or held back by the systems and behaviors modeled at the top.



Points that stood out in the conversation

  • Adaptability is increasingly seen as a foundational leadership trait as change becomes more frequent and complex

  • Teams are more likely to engage with new ideas when leaders model curiosity and openness

  • Building psychological safety allows space for disagreement, experimentation, and honest feedback

  • Associations are beginning to explore AI through small, focused projects that allow learning without high risk

  • Automation can support staff by taking on repetitive work, but it doesn’t replace context, empathy, or relationship-building

  • Learning opportunities that reflect real needs help ease anxiety and build confidence

  • Many members now evaluate digital experiences based on standards set by consumer platforms

  • A strong culture still relies on day-to-day behaviors like consistent communication, recognition, and support



The conversation reveals patterns that many leaders encounter but don't always recognize. Spence describes how organizations sometimes inadvertently create barriers to adaptation through policies or cultural expectations that prioritize consistency over experimentation. He shares examples from his consulting work where teams had good ideas for improvement but held back because they weren't sure how leadership would respond to suggestions for change. These situations highlight how organizational culture can either support or undermine a leader's stated commitment to adaptability.


What stands out in the discussion is Spence's focus on the practical challenges of helping people let go of familiar approaches, even when those approaches are no longer serving the organization well. He acknowledges that this process often involves genuine loss—of expertise that took years to develop, of processes that once worked effectively, of certainties that provided stability. For association leaders, this perspective offers a way to understand member expectations and organizational capabilities without getting caught in false choices between innovation and tradition. The conversation suggests that successful adaptation often requires maintaining core values while being willing to experiment with new methods, a balance that requires both strategic thinking and emotional intelligence from leadership.



Watch it on YouTube here.

Listen on Apple Podcasts here.

Listen on Spotify here.

OTHER INTERESTING AI HIGHLIGHTS:


Grammarly Buys AI Email Client Superhuman

/Ivan Mehta, Consumer Tech Reporter, on TechCrunch


Grammarly has acquired Superhuman, the sleek AI-powered email client, in a move to strengthen its productivity suite and expand its presence in email—one of its users’ top use cases. Superhuman’s founders and team will join Grammarly, with plans to build AI agents that collaborate within email workflows. The acquisition follows Grammarly’s recent $1B funding round and signals its intention to compete more aggressively in the productivity AI space. Email, according to both companies, is a natural frontier for intelligent agent integration.



Read more here.


Cloudflare Shuts Door on AI Crawlers

/Ryan Browne, Tech Correspondent, on CNBC


Cloudflare is taking a bold stand against unchecked AI data scraping by blocking AI crawlers by default on all new domains it services. Website owners will now have to explicitly opt in to allow bots access—and can even charge for it via a “pay per crawl” model. With Cloudflare handling 16% of global internet traffic, this shift could significantly limit what AI companies like OpenAI and Google can scrape for training purposes. The company frames the move as a defense of internet creators and the value of original content.



Read more here.

SOME AI TOOLS TO TRY OUT:


  • Mindly – Capture thoughts quickly with smart, automatic organization.

  • Proread – Turn dense documents into interactive research maps.

  • Leoforce – Boost hiring with outcome-based AI recruiting that integrates easily.


That’s a wrap on today’s Almost Daily craziness.


Catch us almost every day—almost! 😉

EXCITING NEWS:

The Another Crazy Day in AI newsletter is on LinkedIn!!!



Wowza, Inc.

Leveraging AI for Enhanced Content: As part of our commitment to exploring new technologies, we used AI to help curate and refine our newsletters. This enriches our content and keeps us at the forefront of digital innovation, ensuring you stay informed with the latest trends and developments.





Another Crazy Day in AI: An Almost Daily Newsletter

Hello, AI Enthusiasts.


Here’s something to read that won’t send you doomscrolling.


Google’s Gemini just became the quiet power behind Google Classroom. It won’t teach for you, but it might help you breathe easier while grading and planning.


Meanwhile, the Senate scrapped a proposed 10-year ban on state AI laws, clearing the way for local rules on safety, kids, and content protections.


And over at MIT, CIOs are done blaming the tools. The problem? Wishful thinking and misaligned teams.


Here's another crazy day in AI:

  • Google Classroom adds free teaching tools

  • Senate rejects AI regulation ban

  • Leadership missteps in AI planning

  • Some AI tools to try out


TODAY'S FEATURED ITEM: Google Expands Classroom Capabilities


A robotic scientist in a classic white coat with 'AI Scientist' on its back stands beside a human scientist with 'Human Scientist' on their coat, looking towards the AI Scientist.

Image Credit: Wowza (created with Ideogram)


What would your teaching look like if planning, grading, and differentiating support were a little less time-consuming?



Google has announced that Gemini in Classroom, their collection of over 30 educational tools, will now be available at no cost to all educators with Google Workspace for Education accounts, as part of Google's broader effort to support teachers in their daily work. Cinthya Mohr, Director of User Experience at Google for Education, shared this development in a recent post, detailing how these tools aim to transform both teaching preparation and student learning experiences by automating routine tasks while enhancing educational outcomes. Rather than replacing the role of the teacher, Gemini is positioned as a behind-the-scenes helper: assisting with lesson planning, content generation, tracking student progress, and giving students more ways to engage with learning materials.


After providing the target grade and topic, educators can get a first draft of a lesson plan and further refine it with the help of Gemini. They’ll also get suggestions for relevant videos and can generate a quiz or hook based on the lesson plan. | Source: Google
After providing the target grade and topic, educators can get a first draft of a lesson plan and further refine it with the help of Gemini. They’ll also get suggestions for relevant videos and can generate a quiz or hook based on the lesson plan. | Source: Google

Here’s a closer look at what’s being introduced:

  • Lesson Planning Assistance - Generate initial drafts of lesson plans, assignments, and rubrics based on grade level and subject matter, then modify them to fit specific classroom needs

  • Interactive Student Resources - Create personalized study guides, practice quizzes, and AI-powered tutoring tools using classroom materials through integrated NotebookLM and Gems functionality

  • Performance Analytics - Access dashboard insights that highlight which students might benefit from additional support and track progress against curriculum standards

  • Enhanced Reading Tools - Develop custom reading materials, select from different engagement modes, and monitor comprehension levels through expanded Read Along capabilities

  • Curriculum Alignment - Connect assignments directly to learning standards and view analytics on how students are meeting educational benchmarks

  • Teacher Feedback - Pilot program participants report substantial time savings, particularly for routine tasks like creating assessment rubrics and differentiated materials


Here, an educator is creating a study guide students can chat with, including a podcast-style Audio Overview with NotebookLM, to help students prepare for a test. Educators can highlight the NotebookLM resource at the top of the Classwork page so they’re always available for extra practice, support and learning opportunities. | Source: Google
Here, an educator is creating a study guide students can chat with, including a podcast-style Audio Overview with NotebookLM, to help students prepare for a test. Educators can highlight the NotebookLM resource at the top of the Classwork page so they’re always available for extra practice, support and learning opportunities. | Source: Google

The announcement reflects ongoing discussions about how technology can best serve education without disrupting the fundamental relationships between teachers and students. Many educators spend considerable time on administrative tasks that, while necessary, take away from direct instruction and student interaction. These tools appear designed to handle some of that background work, potentially allowing teachers to focus more on the creative and relational aspects of their profession.


Here, a science teacher is tagging their assignment with learning standards, generating standard-specific rubrics, then viewing learning goals analytics to track student progress. | Source: Google
Here, a science teacher is tagging their assignment with learning standards, generating standard-specific rubrics, then viewing learning goals analytics to track student progress. | Source: Google

However, the practical impact will depend heavily on implementation and adoption patterns. Educational technology has a mixed track record when it comes to delivering promised efficiencies, and teachers are often cautious about new systems that might initially require more time to learn than they save. The success stories from early users are promising, but broader rollout will reveal whether these tools genuinely integrate well with existing teaching workflows or create new challenges to navigate. The fact that Google is offering these features at no additional cost removes one barrier to adoption, though the real test will be whether teachers find them genuinely useful in their daily practice rather than just another set of digital tools to manage.



Read the full blog here.

OTHER INTERESTING AI HIGHLIGHTS:


Senate Rejects AI Regulation Ban

/Billy Perrigo and Andrew R. Chow, Correspondents, on TIME


In a sweeping bipartisan move, the Senate voted 99–1 to remove a proposed 10-year ban on state-level AI regulation from President Trump’s major tax and spending bill. The tech industry, including companies like OpenAI and Google, had lobbied hard for the moratorium, arguing that a unified federal approach would prevent conflicting rules. However, lawmakers across the political spectrum rejected the idea as a power grab that would block states from enacting meaningful protections—particularly for children and creative industries. The rejection signals a growing appetite for accountability and local governance over emerging AI systems.



Read more here.


Leadership Missteps in AI Planning

/Laurianne McLaughlin, Senior Editor (Digital), and M. Shawn Read, Multimedia Editor, on MIT Sloan Management Review


At the 2025 MIT Sloan CIO Symposium, business and tech leaders shared frustrations around AI efforts that fall short of expectations. Many cited projects that stalled after the pilot stage or failed to deliver value due to unrealistic assumptions, poor communication, or lack of organizational alignment. Experts like George Westerman, Monica Caldas, and Hannah Mayer warned against underestimating the cultural shifts required for successful AI integration. Their takeaway: AI strategy isn’t just about tools—it’s about people, leadership, and long-term thinking.



Read more here.

SOME AI TOOLS TO TRY OUT:


  • Songscription – Converts audio or MIDI into sheet music for any instrument.

  • Cora – Screens emails, drafts replies, and summarizes your inbox.

  • Glean – Automates tasks using your company’s knowledge base.


That’s a wrap on today’s Almost Daily craziness.


Catch us almost every day—almost! 😉

EXCITING NEWS:

The Another Crazy Day in AI newsletter is on LinkedIn!!!



Wowza, Inc.

Leveraging AI for Enhanced Content: As part of our commitment to exploring new technologies, we used AI to help curate and refine our newsletters. This enriches our content and keeps us at the forefront of digital innovation, ensuring you stay informed with the latest trends and developments.





Another Crazy Day in AI: An Almost Daily Newsletter

Hello, AI Enthusiasts.


Still shaking off the weekend? You’re not alone. But for some teachers, AI is already turning Monday chaos into something closer to manageable.


A new survey shows educators who regularly use AI are gaining back serious time, almost six hours a week. That’s like gaining an entire grading period back across the year. The challenge? Not every school gives teachers the training or tools to get there.


Meanwhile, one research team just found a way to measure exactly how wrong AI can get. It’s not for the big models (yet), but it could change safety standards in fields like medicine and autonomous vehicles.


And over in the world of bots, one logistics giant just deployed its one-millionth robot, and gave it a fleet-wide brain upgrade to speed things up even more.

Let's call that a strong start to the week.


Here's another crazy day in AI:

  • Survey reveals major time savings for educators

  • Researchers use geometry to calculate AI reliability

  • Amazon’s new AI model drives 1 millionth robot deployment

  • Some AI tools to try out


TODAY'S FEATURED ITEM: Teachers Find Extra Weeks Through Smart Tools


A robotic scientist in a classic white coat with 'AI Scientist' on its back stands beside a human scientist with 'Human Scientist' on their coat, looking towards the AI Scientist.

Image Credit: Wowza (created with Ideogram)


What if the solution to teacher burnout isn't more hours in the day, but smarter use of the hours we already have?



A recent national survey from Gallup and the Walton Family Foundation has uncovered something remarkable happening in classrooms across America. Teachers who regularly use artificial intelligence tools are saving nearly six hours each week—time that adds up to six full weeks over a school year. The research, conducted through comprehensive polling of educators nationwide, provides the first clear picture of how AI is beginning to reshape the daily reality of teaching. The Walton Family Foundation, known for its work in education reform and community investment, collaborated with Gallup's research team to understand this emerging trend in K-12 education.


Image Credits: Gallup
Image Credits: Gallup


The Numbers Tell a Story:

  • Weekly AI users save 5.9 hours per week compared to 2.9 hours for monthly users

  • Only 32% of teachers use AI tools regularly, while 40% have never tried them

  • Top applications include lesson planning (37%), worksheet creation (33%), and adapting materials for individual students (28%)

  • Administrative work and assessment creation follow closely at 28% and 25%

  • Most teachers report quality improvements: 64% see better customized materials, 61% gain clearer student insights, 57% provide more effective feedback

  • Schools with AI policies achieve 26% greater time savings, though only 19% have established such guidelines

  • Teachers expect AI's greatest future benefit will be improving accessibility for students with disabilities (57%)

  • Regular users show more optimism about student outcomes, with 48% predicting increased engagement versus 25% among non-users


Image Credits: Gallup
Image Credits: Gallup


The findings present both promise and challenges for American education. Teachers who have incorporated AI into their routines consistently report not just time savings, but genuine improvements in their work quality. They're creating more personalized materials, gaining deeper insights from student data, and providing more targeted feedback. Yet a significant adoption gap persists, with nearly half of all teachers either using AI infrequently or not at all. This disparity appears closely tied to institutional support, as schools with formal AI policies are seeing substantially better results across the board.


Perhaps most telling is how teacher attitudes toward AI correlate directly with their experience using it. Those who work with these tools regularly are twice as likely to support AI use in schools and far more optimistic about potential benefits for students. They envision AI helping students develop stronger problem-solving skills and maintaining higher engagement levels. This pattern suggests that concerns about AI in education may stem more from unfamiliarity than from actual drawbacks. However, the research also underscores that individual teacher initiative alone won't maximize these benefits. The schools seeing the greatest gains are those providing structured support, clear policies, and proper training. As education systems grapple with persistent challenges around teacher workload and retention, these findings offer a glimpse of practical solutions that could make teaching more sustainable and effective.



Read the full article here. Download the latest report here.

OTHER INTERESTING AI HIGHLIGHTS:


Researchers Use Geometry To Calculate AI Reliability

/Vienna University of Technology, on Phys.org


A research team at TU Wien has developed a mathematical method to precisely quantify uncertainty in AI outputs. Their new approach allows researchers to determine whether specific errors can or cannot occur within a defined input range. This breakthrough is especially promising for safety-critical fields like healthcare and autonomous vehicles, where rare mistakes can be costly. While it doesn’t yet apply to large models like ChatGPT, the method sets a new standard for making smaller neural networks more predictable and trustworthy.



Read more here.


Amazon’s New AI Model Drives 1 Millionth Robot Deployment

/Scott Dresser, VP, Amazon Robotics, on Amazon Newsroom


Amazon has reached a robotics milestone by deploying its one millionth robot, now joined by DeepFleet—a new generative AI foundation model designed to boost travel efficiency across its massive robot fleet. This smart coordination system reduces congestion, speeds up package processing, and cuts operational costs. Built with AWS tools and fueled by data from hundreds of facilities, DeepFleet enhances fulfillment while supporting safer, more skilled jobs. Amazon’s approach merges robotics innovation with real-world impact, shaping the future of delivery logistics.



Read more here.

Source: Amazon
Source: Amazon

SOME AI TOOLS TO TRY OUT:


  • Skywork – Boost productivity with an AI workspace agent.

  • Clarify – Auto-updates your CRM by reading emails and calls.

  • Doppl – Generate AI try-on videos from just a photo and product.


That’s a wrap on today’s Almost Daily craziness.


Catch us almost every day—almost! 😉

EXCITING NEWS:

The Another Crazy Day in AI newsletter is on LinkedIn!!!



Wowza, Inc.

Leveraging AI for Enhanced Content: As part of our commitment to exploring new technologies, we used AI to help curate and refine our newsletters. This enriches our content and keeps us at the forefront of digital innovation, ensuring you stay informed with the latest trends and developments.





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